Edmund Kemper Serial Killer

Edmund Kemper Serial Killer

Edmund Kemper is a serial killer who started early with the murders of his grandparents when he was still a teen.  Edmund would be sent off to a State Hospital where he would remain until he was twenty one years old and would be paroled against doctors advice.  A few years later Edmund would continue his murderous ways and started killing female college students and would end with the murder of his mother and one of her friends. 

Kemper wanted the death penalty however his trial would coincide with the temporarily ban of the death penalty and he would be sentenced to multiple life sentences.  Kemper has been up for parole though he refuses to attend stating the world is not ready for someone like him. A feature that made Edmund Kemper stand out is that he is six foot nine

Edmund Kemper 2023 Information

ed kemper 2022

Edmund Kemper – Current Facility – California Medical Facility

Parole Eligibility Date – 1979

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Edmund Kemper III, a psychopathic serial killer, and necrophile who became known as “The Co-ed Killer,” was born December 18, 1948, in Burbank, California. He was arrested in April of 1973, at the age of 24, after murdering six female students, his own mother, and her mother’s best friend.

Despite his relative youth upon capture, Kemper had actually committed his first two murders nearly a decade earlier. Kemper was an extremely intelligent child but he engaged in psychopathic behavior early on. For Kemper, this behavior included the torture and killing of animals, which is a common childhood practice among nearly half of all serial killers.

During childhood, Kemper was physically and emotionally abused by his alcoholic mother, Clarnell, who was divorced from his father. Clarnell frequently locked her son in a dark basement alone at night.

Not surprisingly, Edmund Kemper grew up to hate his mother and at the age of 14 ran away from home in search of his father in Van Nuys, California. After locating but being rejected by his father, young Edmund was sent to live with his paternal grandmother and grandfather in North Fork, California. Kemper claims that his grandmother, similar to his mother, was very abusive and he disliked her intensely.

In 1964, at the age of 15, Edmund Kemper shot his grandmother in the head allegedly just to see what it felt like. He then killed his grandfather, too, because he believed that his grandfather would be angry at him for killing his grandmother. Kemper was subsequently committed to the Atascadero State Hospital for the criminally insane. To his chagrin, he was released into his mother’s care in 1969 after less than five years of confinement and treatment. His juvenile criminal record was expunged.

As a young adult, Edmund stood six-foot-nine and weighed 280 pounds. He frequently thought about killing his mother by 1970 but was not yet ready to do so. The prospect of killing his mother without first perfecting his murder skills on others was too overwhelming for Kemper.

Between May 1972 and February 1973, Edmund embarked on a series of six shocking serial murders in which he picked up hitchhiking female students along the highway and then transported them to rural areas where he would kill and then decapitate them, and have sex with their corpses. He collected their dismembered heads in his apartment and would later have sex with them also.

Similar to other infamous serial killers such as Dennis Rader and the Zodiac Killer, Kemper sought public recognition and acclaim for his murders. This led him to socialize and drink in a bar called “The Jury Room” with the very law enforcement officers who unbeknownst to them were pursuing him. His law enforcement friends began calling him “Big Eddie.”

Edmund finally realized his ultimate fantasy and killed his mother with a claw hammer and strangled her best friend on Good Friday 1973. After having sex with his mother’s decapitated head, Edmund Kemper casually telephoned the local law enforcement authorities to confess what he had done.

The police initially refused to believe him, thinking that their friend “Big Eddie” was just pulling a prank on them. After several follow-up calls and the disclosure of information that only the “The Co-ed Killer” would know, Kemper finally convinced the police that he was the man they sought. He was quickly arrested without incident and charged with eight murders in the first degree. Edmund was found guilty and given a life sentence because there was a stay on the death penalty in the U.S. at the time of his conviction.

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Edmund Kemper is currently incarcerated at the California Medical Facility

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Edmund Kemper is serving a life sentence

Scott Dyleski Teen Killer Murders Woman

Scott Dyleski

Scott Dyleski was sixteen years old when he murdered a woman. According to court documents Scott Dyleski would fatally stab Pamela Vitale after striking her with a rock and carving a symbol into her back. Dyleski would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole however due to Supreme Court rulings this teen killer would be eligible for parole in the future.

Scott Dyleski 2023 Information

Inmate NameDYLESKI, SCOTT EDGAR
CDCR NumberF46590
Age34
Admission Date10/31/2006
Current LocationCalifornia State Prison, Corcoran
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)10/2029

Scott Dyleski Other News

A former Lafayette resident originally sentenced to life without parole in the maniacal murder of his neighbor now has a shot at freedom in 2030, thanks to a new law that reduces life sentences for teens tried as adults.

Scott Dyleski, in Corcoran State Prison for the murder of Pamela Vitale, was given a reduced sentence of 25 years to life, in place of a prison term that gave him chance of parole. Dyleski’s reduced term, affirmed in an appellate court decision released Thursday, came after the passage of Senate Bill 394, which gives juveniles tried as adults and sentenced to life without parole a chance for eventual freedom.

Dyleski was 16 in 2005, when he broke into the home of his neighbors and stabbed to death Pamela Vitale, carving a symbol into her body and cutting a large wound into her stomach, according to prosecutors. During his trial the following year, prosecutors presented journal entries and eyewitness evidence that suggested Dyleski had fantasized about torturing and killing people.

In 2005, Vitale and her husband, prominent defense attorney Dan Horowitz, were refurbishing their home. Horowitz discovered his wife’s body and testified during trial. Contacted Friday, he said he lobbied against SB 394, but as a defense attorney understood its intent; he said he has seen cases where juvenile gang members were sentenced to life for things like sitting in a car during a drive-by shooting.

“I understand the sentiment behind that,” Horowitz said. “The trouble is they haven’t limited it, so you give people who enjoy torturing and murdering others the same rights as someone who didn’t hurt anyone and was just an aider and abettor.”

Proponents of the bill have pointed out that there is no guarantee of parole, and said the granting that possibility after 25 years would give juvenile offenders motivation to earn their freedom. They also cited studies saying juveniles’ minds are underdeveloped.

Lawmakers estimated there are roughly 300 juvenile offenders statewide eligible for sentence reductions. Many of them, including Scott Dyleski, were in the process of petitioning for re-sentencing under a 2014 state Supreme Court case that opened the door for juvenile offenders serving life without parole to be freed.

The sentence of 25 years to life is what Dyleski asked for at a court hearing last year at a re-sentencing petition. There, he took the stand and denied killing Vitale.

“I did not kill her,” Dyleski said in the June 2017 hearing. He then tearfully admitted to committing credit card fraud and said he dreamed of suicide, not murder, as a teen.

A judge firmly denied Scott Dyleskis petition the following month, pointing out the heinous nature of the crime and his refusal to accept responsibility. Dyleski appealed the decision, but when SB 394 came into effect — thereby reducing his sentence — the appeal became a moot point, appellate judges wrote in their decision.

Under the law, a parole board that denies suitability can set a new hearing as soon as three years down the line, or as long as 15 years, depending on the facts of the case.

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Scott Dyleski is currently incarcerated at Corcoran prison in California

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Scott Dyleski is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2029

Raul Castro Teen Killer Murders 4 Year Old Boy

Raul Castro Teen Killer

Raul Castro was fourteen years old when he murdered a four year old boy. According to court documents Raul Castro would lure a four year old boy into his home and would sexually assault him. When the boy started to cry Raul would put the child into a bathtub where he would drown the child. Castro would put the body of the child into the dryer where he would be discovered. This teen killer would be convicted and sentenced to life in prison with a chance of parole after thirty three years

Raul Castro 2023 Information

CDCR NumberAH0674
Age24
Admission Date10/05/2011
Current LocationSierra Conservation Center
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)08/2030

Raul Castro Other News

A Mendota teenager was sentenced Friday morning for the murder of his four-year-old neighbor.

15-year-old Raul Castro will spend 33 years in the Department of Corrections before he is eligible for parole.

Castro must also register as a sex offender for life.

In April, a Fresno County judge found him guilty of sexually assaulting and killing Alex Mercado in October 2009.

Alex’s body was found stuffed in a clothes dryer in Castro’s home.

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A state appeals court has reduced the prison sentence of a Central California teenager convicted of molesting and drowning his 4-year-old neighbor and then hiding the boy’s body in a clothes dryer.

The 5th District Court of Appeal ruled that the trial judge erred in adding eight years to Raul Castro’s sentence for his sex-crime convictions. The Mendota teen was convicted of forcible sodomy on a child and a forcible lewd act on a child in addition to first-degree murder in the 2009 slaying of Alex Mercado.

Authorities say Castro, then 14, drowned the preschooler in a bathtub after Mercado said he would tell his mother about the sexual assault.

The Fresno Bee reports that the appeals court reduced Castro’s sentence last week from 33 years- to-life to 25 years-to-life in prison

https://bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/central-valley-teens-sentence-reduced-in-dryer-killing

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Raul Castro is currently incarcerated at the Sierra Conservation Center

Raul Castro Release Date

Raul Castro is serving a life sentence however is eligible for parole in 2030

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f you’d asked the families of Alex Mercado and Raul Castro two years ago, where they thought they’d be today, they’d probably never say in the Fresno County Courthouse at their sons’ murder trial.

“It’s had, but I’m trying not to cry, just try to hang in there the best that I can,” Elsa Castro, Raul Castro’s mom, said.

Elsa is still in shock.

“My son is a really good person. He’s never been into trouble. I’m going through a lot, but I’m here, hanging in there,” she said.

But on a taped interview with investigators, Castro revealed the horrific details of exactly what happened October 30th, 2009.

{}”Did you have an urge to kill him? Or did you have an urge to do something sexual, or both?” An investigator asked. “The urge was just to kill.” Raul said.

Castro told detectives, he’d been having “urges” to kill for a couple of years.

And on that day in October, he saw an opportunity when Alex Mercado was playing outside.

That’s when he lured him into his house, then into the bathroom, where he sexually assaulted the four-year-old boy.

He told detectives he’d panicked when Alex started crying.

So he laid on top of him in the bathtub to drown him.

“Do you feel sorry for what you did?” The investigator asked on the tape. “I do feel sorry for what I’ve done. I should’ve taken his place instead of him dying.” Castro responded.

Raul told police he stuffed Alex’s body in the clothes-dryer, and then went to bed, hoping it would all go away.

The next day, police found him during a search of the neighborhood.

“I walked into the kitchen, I opened up the pantry, Elsa knelt down and opened the dryer,” Deputy Matt Hamilton, Fresno County Sheriff’s Office, said. “She started screaming uncontrollably.”

Castro is facing charges of first-degree murder, molestation and kidnapping.

He is being charged as an adult.

And if convicted, faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after 47 years.

Raul Castro waived his right to a jury trial earlier this month.

So the case is being heard by Fresno County Superior Court judge Jonathan Conklin.

The trial is expected to take three to five days.

https://kmph.com/archive/mendota-teen-says-he-had-urges-to-kill-before-4-year-olds-murder

Nolen Buchanan Teen Killer Murders Family

Nolen Buchanan

Nolen Buchanan was just sixteen years old when he murdered his entire family in California. According to court documents Nolen would open fire on his father, stepmother, younger half brother before setting the cabin on fire. This teen killer would be tried as an adult and after being convicted of the four murders would be sentenced to one hundred and fifty years in prison.

Nolen Buchanan 2023 Information

Inmate NameBUCHANAN, NOLEN KEITH
CDCR NumberBG9008
Age20
Admission Date07/25/2018
Current LocationIronwood State Prison
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)10/2039

Nolen Buchanan Other News

The Benicia teen who was accused of shooting and killing his father, father’s fiancee and 8-year-old half brother and then burning their bodies was convicted of the murders in El Dorado County Superior Court Wednesday.

The jury deliberated for two hours before returning the verdict, the El Dorado County District Attorney said in a press release.

On the morning of Sept. 13, 2015, then 16-year-old Nolen Buchanan used a .22 caliber rifle to shoot his father, Adam Buchanan 38; his fiancee, Molly McAfee, 37; and their 8-year-old son, Gavin at their vacation cabin along Highway 193 in Greenwood. He then doused the bodies and cabin in gasoline and set them ablaze, burning the cabin to the ground, the district attorney’s office said.

Buchanan drove his family’s truck back to their home in Benicia and denied being at the cabin that weekend. In court, he said his father shot his stepmother and half-brother and tried to shoot him, but Buchanan said he wrestled the gun away from his father and shot him in self-defense.

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September 13, 2015 was the worst day in the lives of the Molly McAffe, and Adam and Gavin Buchanan families. They lost a son, grandson, sister, daughter, aunt, nephew, cousin, and their lives will be forever haunted by the heinous acts of another relative, Nolen Buchanan.

It was a very emotional afternoon in El Dorado County Superior Court Judge Suzanne Kingsbury’s court Thursday during the sentencing of the now 18-year-old responsible for shooting his father, his father’s fiancé and his 8-year-old brother and then setting their cabin on fire in Greenwood, Calif.

On June 13 a South Lake Tahoe jury found Benicia, California teen Nolen Buchanan guilty on three counts of first degree murder and three special allegations that he personally used a firearm with intent to discharge, causing death; used a firearm in a violent offense; used a firearm to cause great bodily injury.

“I don’t think any other case has affected me more than this one,” said Judge Kingsbury who has spent decades on the bench and in the district attorney’s office. “This is a case that has impacted me.”

As family members got up to read their victim’s statements to the court, Nolen Buchanan sat straight in his seat between his lawyers, dressed in a prison orange jumpsuit and a new jailhouse haircut. He stared straight ahead as his grandfather and Molly’s parents and sister got up to speak. They spoke of their lives, once filled with happiness and family, but now filled with sleepless nights, PTSD, depression, sadness, depression and despair.

In sentencing, Kingsbury described case law and California SB394 in how she arrived at her decision. Had Nolen been older when he committed the murders he would not be seeing any chance of getting out of prison in his lifetime. But, with the passage os SB394 in October, 2017, Nolen will have a chance at parole.

Kingsbury reflected on a homelife Nolen was faced with, one where his dad both verbally and physically abused him, and the emotionally abuse he lived with inside a chaotic house. She also spoke about the premeditation of the murders and subsequent fire, and the calculating method in which he used his friends to cover for him, plan for a future as taking over the family business and home as a 16-year-old, an entitled way of reacting while in the Juvenile Treatment Center in South Lake Tahoe after his arrest, lack in ability to follow rules.

The judge sentenced Nolen Buchanan to 150 years in prison for the three counts of murder and three special allegations, but, if approved, he could get out on parole in 25 years due to the Senate Bill and Supreme Court rulings for minors that commit felonies. He gets credit for 1,016 days served.

“He will have a chance to rehabilitate,” said the judge. “It’s up to him.”

“Everybody has the capacity to change,” Judge Kingsbury told Nolen. “I hope you do everything in your power to do so.”

If he ever does parole out of prison he will face hefty amounts of restitution to the victims and court, the total unknown at this time.

Buchanan can appeal her decision within the next 60 days. In the meantime he is being transferred to the Deuel Vocational Institution in Tracy, California.

http://southtahoenow.com/story/07/12/2018/buchanan-sentenced-150-years-prison-murdering-family-could-get-parole

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Nolen Buchanan is currently incarcerated at the Ironwood State Prison

Nolen Buchanan Release Date

Nolen Buchanan is serving over a hundred years however is eligible for parole in 2039