
Died at 84
male
John Wayne Gacy (March 17, 1942 – May 10, 1994) was a European-American serial killer and pederast who raped, tortured, and murdered at least 33 young men and boys. Gacy regularly performed at children's hospitals and charitable events as "Pogo the Clown" or "Patches the Clown", personas he had devised. He became known as the Killer Clown due to his public services as a clown prior to the discovery of his crimes. Gacy committed all of his murders inside his ranch house near Norridge, a village in Norwood Park Township, metropolitan Chicago, Illinois. Typically, he would lure a victim to his home and dupe him into donning handcuffs on the pretext of demonstrating a magic trick. He would then rape and torture his captive before killing him by either asphyxiation or strangulation with a garrote. Twenty-six victims were buried in the crawl space of his home, and three others were buried elsewhere on his property; four were discarded in the Des Plaines River. Gacy was convicted of the sodomy of a teenage boy in Waterloo, Iowa, in 1968 and was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment, but served eighteen months. He murdered his first victim in 1972, had murdered twice more by the end of 1975, and murdered at least thirty subsequent victims after his divorce from his second wife in 1976. The investigation into the disappearance of Des Plaines teenager Robert Piest led to Gacy's arrest on December 21, 1978. His conviction for thirty-three murders (by one individual) then covered the most homicides in United States legal history. Gacy was sentenced to death on March 13, 1980. On death row at Menard Correctional Center, he spent much of his time painting. He was executed by lethal injection at Stateville Correctional Center on May 10, 1994.

John Wayne Gacy

Serial Killers
for Serial Killers in Worldwide Tales of Terror
Suggested by benpopplewell

The history and folklore of Supernatural horror are filled with accounts of individuals and events so brutal, macabre, or unexplained that they have become synonymous with "real-life" horror. These figures and periods, ranging from the 15th-century Romanian "dracula" to modern American serial killers and Haitian dictators like Papa Doc Duvalier, frequently intersect with tales of the supernatural, demonic possession, and profound evil. The stories of possession often involve violent, superhuman strength, speaking in tongues, and intimate knowledge of observers' sins. These are often rooted in deep-seated fears of the unknown. The use of Voodoo in political repression in Haiti created a lasting image of a "living dead" army, blurring the lines between political brutality and spiritual nightmare. A creature that terrorized the Gévaudan region of France, killing over 100 people. While often believed to be a wolf or wolf-dog hybrid, the sheer scale of the carnage led to rumors of a supernatural entity, a werewolf, or a creature sent by God. Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, John Wayne Gacy, and Richard Ramirez are often discussed in the context of extreme evil, with some, particularly Ramirez (the "Night Stalker"), openly claiming influence from demonic forces. Charles Manson is another figure often associated with cult-like, apocalyptic evil.




