El hecho de que la mayoría de la gente nunca haya oído hablar de estos horribles asesinos en serie es un crimen. Para esta lista, veremos a los asesinos más aterradores que no han recibido un reconocimiento generalizado.
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00:00And I thought to myself, you know, he fits perfectly the description of a serial killer.
00:06Welcome to Spanish Watchmojo. I am Jackie and today we will show you our list for the 20 most terrifying murderers that are not so well known by people in general.
00:18Back when I was smart, I would let them come to me.
00:23The Harp Brothers
00:25This duo occupies a special place in the history of real crime, but few people have heard of them.
00:32Perhaps that is due to the antiquity of their crimes.
00:36Micajah Big Harp and Wiley Little Harp are the first serial killers known in the history of the United States.
00:45Stories we heard make your blood run cold.
00:49I hear tell they move through the wilderness like the natives themselves.
00:55Silent, two lurking devils, just waiting to spring on any unsuspecting passersby.
01:02Their crimes spread throughout the entire southwest of the United States at the end of the 18th century.
01:08Taking advantage of the remote isolation of the Appalachians, the brothers would kill the settlers who arrived to the south after the American Revolution.
01:17The true number of victims is unknown, but most estimates place it between 39 and 50.
01:31Their actions attracted the attention of the judges and Micajah was brutally murdered by a gang in 1799.
01:40Wiley was finally captured and executed in 1804.
01:45Alexander Pichushkin
01:47Being one of the most notorious Russian serial killers in modern history,
01:52Alexander Pichushkin killed up to 60 people between 1992 and 2006.
01:58He became known as the killer of the chessboard or as Pizza Park Maniac,
02:04in honor of the park in Moscow where most of his crimes took place.
02:08It was here, exactly at this place, where we found one of the victims.
02:16Of course, when we found him, it wasn't a pleasant sight.
02:19Many of his victims were vagabonds, old men who he attracted with the promise of vodka, company and a good chat.
02:27Then he hit them with a bottle or a hammer.
02:31Pichushkin was finally captured in 2006 after killing his co-worker, Marina Moskaliova.
02:38The surveillance images of a train station captured Moskaliova with Pichushkin
02:44and finally took him to interrogate him.
02:47I only had one thought.
02:49I wanted him to show us as many as he could, to tell us everything.
02:53Where he dumped people, where he left them.
02:56I wanted as much evidence as I could get.
02:59He easily confessed his crimes and now spends a life sentence in prison.
03:03Dorothea Puente
03:05The serial killers don't usually get recognition even if they are as bad as Dorothea Puente.
03:12Known in the media as the owner of the house of death,
03:15Puente operated a pension in Sacramento that hosted advanced age tenants
03:21with developmental disabilities or substance abuse problems.
03:26This is where Dorothea would bring her victims after giving them the drug and alcohol combination
03:33and then bringing them in here and leaving them on the floor until she could prepare them at a later time.
03:38Between 1982 and 1988, Puente killed nine of his clients
03:43and committed fraud by charging their pensions and social security checks.
03:48Seven bodies were buried in the property of his pension
03:51and another was thrown in a box next to a river.
03:55Puente was finally captured after killing Álvaro Montoya
03:59since his social worker had denounced his disappearance.
04:03She was found guilty of three homicides and sentenced to life in prison.
04:08After deliberating for 24 days, the jury found Dorothea Puente guilty of three murders
04:15but were deadlocked on all the other charges.
04:18She died in 2011 at the age of 82.
04:22David Parker Ray
04:24Better known as the toy box killer, David Parker Ray
04:29is not officially a serial killer
04:31since he has never been legally linked to a homicide.
04:35However, many experts believe he is responsible for up to 60 murders.
04:41When Ray died in 2002 and took that knowledge to his grave,
04:45it left investigators searching for answers.
04:48We're convinced that there are remains.
04:50It's just a matter of locating them.
04:51Ray terrorized the Southwest of the United States from 1957 to 1999.
04:58He kidnapped women and tortured them in a trailer he called his toy box
05:03before drugging them, abandoning them or killing them.
05:07The toy box is where Ray's fantasies came to life.
05:11There he dominated his victims.
05:14The details are too horrible to get into here.
05:18Although he was never declared guilty of murder,
05:21Ray received 224 years in prison for kidnapping and torture.
05:26He died of a heart attack in 2002.
05:29Carl Panzram
05:30The horrible crimes of Carl Panzram
05:33range from theft and incest
05:36to sexual assault and murder.
05:38Born in 1891,
05:41Panzram had a difficult childhood with strict and abusive parents.
05:45As an adult, he changed residence several times
05:49and went in and out of prison for various crimes.
05:52In 1920, he bought a yacht,
05:54sexually assaulted and murdered 10 sailors in New York.
05:58His crimes continued in South Africa,
06:01where he pointed to young and vulnerable victims,
06:04which he continued to do on his return to the United States.
06:07From prison, he confessed to 21 murders,
06:10but may have killed more than 100.
06:13He was executed in 1930 at the age of 39.
06:17Do you think he was sincere in not having any remorse?
06:21Or was it just a guise?
06:23Well, I think he was so full of hatred
06:27and with such a need, a compulsion to kill,
06:31that perhaps it never entered his mind.
06:34Samuel Little
06:35When we think of the most infamous serial killers in the history of the United States,
06:40we think of Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer and John Wayne Gacy.
06:45Few mention Samuel Little,
06:48despite having the highest number of victims of any serial killer in the United States.
06:53And Little's criminal life lasted decades.
06:56The FBI believes all of his confessions are credible.
07:00Some of the bodies were never found.
07:02He was already serving a life sentence for three murders in the 1980s.
07:05His first confirmed victim was Annie Stewart, 32 years old,
07:10who was strangled to death on October 11, 1981.
07:15However, his wave of murders could have begun more than a decade earlier
07:20with the murder of Mary Jo Brosley in December 1970.
07:24After Little was arrested in 2012, he confessed to having killed 93 women.
07:31Mindy Lepree's murder was one of the few that did get reported.
07:34The deaths of most of the other women he claims to have killed never made the press.
07:39The FBI has officially linked Little to 60 of these 93 murders.
07:45In comparison, Bundy killed at least 20 people,
07:49Dahmer 17, and Gacy 33.
07:55Canada has also produced a good number of serial killers,
08:00including Robert Pickton.
08:02Son of pig breeders in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia,
08:06he and his brother David worked as bullies since they were kids
08:11for smelling pig manure at school.
08:14After inheriting the farm, the brothers held parties on the property in the 1990s.
08:29A police search carried out in 2002
08:32discovered the remains of several missing women.
08:36Pickton had been murdering women on the farm,
08:39especially sex workers and those with substance abuse problems.
08:43He was charged with 26 murders, but confessed 49.
08:48It is believed that Pickton fed his pigs with some remains.
08:52Some may have been mixed with pork and sold to the public.
09:07Luis Garavito
09:09Despite being the most prolific serial killer in modern history,
09:13Luis Garavito is little known outside of his native Colombia.
09:16When he was a child, his father beat him, tormented him at school,
09:20and his neighbors abused him.
09:22He became a bad-tempered and antisocial person with an alcohol consumption disorder,
09:27obsessed with torturing and abusing minors, mostly men.
09:36Sometimes he used a disguise to bring his victims to isolated places.
09:40The horrible nature of what would happen next is too scary to talk about here.
09:53In 1999 he was arrested and finally sentenced to a total of 12 years in prison.
10:00In 1999 he was arrested and finally sentenced to a total of 1853 years in prison.
10:09He is officially linked to 193 murders, but his confession would raise the figure to 221.
10:17Robert Hansen
10:18This serial killer was especially terrifying because of the way he hunted his victims.
10:24In his youth, Hansen was unpopular and obsessed with the idea of revenge,
10:29especially against women.
10:32In 1967 he moved from Iowa to Anchorage, Alaska, where he worked as a baker.
10:39However, in the 1970s he began to kidnap women, sexually assault them,
10:45and take them by plane to remote places.
10:48Then he would hunt them in the Alaskan desert.
11:00A victim who escaped, Cindy Paulson, warned the police,
11:03who at first took Hansen's word before hers.
11:07Fortunately, the famous criminal profiler John Douglas
11:11helped bring the investigators back to Hansen.
11:14It is believed that Hansen killed between 17 and 21 women.
11:30Some places on the map went unexplored.
11:33He died in 2014 while serving a life sentence.
11:36Clementine Barnabet
11:38Modern historians have questioned whether Clementine Barnabet
11:43really committed the murders for which she is blamed.
11:46However, she was officially convicted of a homicide
11:50and personally confessed to having killed 35.
11:54After his arrest, Barnabet claimed that a priestess of the Sacrifice Church
11:59gave him a magical talisman, hoodoo.
12:01Wanting to prove his validity, he embarked on a series of murders
12:05with an ax throughout the state of Louisiana.
12:07He was finally captured and sentenced to life imprisonment.
12:12However, he was released later in 1923
12:15and disappeared from history books.
12:18Gerard John Schaeffer
12:21He's one of the most extreme cases of the modern serial killer
12:25that we have ever known in criminal history.
12:29In his police photograph, Gerard John Schaeffer
12:32looks like a common and ordinary man.
12:34His hair combed to the right
12:36and a friendly smile reflected on his face.
12:39However, a second look can be justified
12:42after knowing that he potentially killed 30 people during the 60s and 70s.
12:48Schaeffer was a sheriff's assistant in Florida
12:51when he kidnapped two teenage women
12:53and tied them to a tree in the forest.
12:55The women escaped after Schaeffer received a call on the radio.
13:00Had these two girls not been made of strong stuff,
13:04they would not have lived to tell the story
13:06and Schaeffer would have never been caught.
13:07Unfortunately, Susan Place and Georgia Jessop,
13:10whom he kidnapped two months later,
13:13were not so lucky.
13:15He takes the two young girls by force to the woods
13:18near some swamps that border the ocean.
13:20In 1973, Schaeffer was found guilty of his murders
13:25and sentenced to two life sentences,
13:28but it is suspected that he had more than 30 victims.
13:31Vickie Dawn Jackson
13:33Although her name was quite well known in Texas,
13:36Vickie Dawn Jackson never had national attention,
13:40despite killing at least 10 people
13:42in a span of three months between December 2000 and February 2001.
13:48Working as a nurse in northern Texas,
13:51Jackson used a paralyzer called Clorurodemivacurio
13:54on his advanced age patients,
13:57which prevented them from breathing.
13:59The deaths did not generate any warning signal
14:02due to the age of the patients,
14:04but the alarms began to sound
14:06once the administrators noticed the lack of Clorurodemivacurio.
14:10They came to suspect Jackson
14:12since he was often the last person reported
14:15in the victim's rooms before his death.
14:18Finally, a syringe used to administer Clorurodemivacurio
14:22was found in the victim's room
14:25and he was later charged and sentenced to life in prison.
14:29Ronald Dominick
14:31The inhabitants of Louisiana can recognize Ronald Dominick
14:35as the Bayou Strangler,
14:36a serial killer who killed at least 23 men
14:40between 1997 and 2006.
14:43Dominick frequented gay bars around Houma, Louisiana,
14:47and attacked and killed men he took home.
14:50We're not dealing with some very clever, conniving killer
14:54that has actually planned out his pleasurable activities
14:58in a meticulous way.
15:00Clearly, there is a method that works,
15:04but beyond that, there seems to be no care,
15:06consideration for these acts.
15:08However, in 2006, a survivor of Dominick
15:11contacted the police to express his suspicions about the man.
15:15Dominick was arrested after the DNA
15:18linked him to the recovered bodies,
15:21putting an end to his crimes.
15:23We went to court.
15:25Mr. Dominick pled guilty
15:27and he was sentenced to eight consecutive life sentences.
15:31When you get a life sentence in Louisiana,
15:33you leave jail in a pine box.
15:35Israel Keyes
15:37It's clear just how cold and calculating he was.
15:41Between 1998 and 2001,
15:43Keyes served in the US Army.
15:47His fellow soldiers described him as a calm alcoholic
15:51who drank entire bottles of whiskey.
15:53Keyes began a criminal life
15:55committing bank robberies and incendiary crimes.
15:58He also killed at least four people,
16:01although there are suspicions of another seven.
16:03Investigators say Keyes is a textbook serial killer.
16:06Like other famous killers in the past,
16:08he took pleasure in the act of taking a life.
16:12He talked about the rush that he got out of it,
16:14the adrenaline and kind of the high from doing it,
16:17and I think, unfortunately,
16:20I think he enjoyed what he was doing.
16:21Perhaps his most famous victim is Samantha Koenig.
16:25The 18-year-old was kidnapped from work,
16:28assaulted and murdered,
16:30and her body was abandoned in a dump
16:32while Keyes was on family vacation.
16:35He indicates to Samantha that his goal is to get money,
16:38and if he gets money, that he intends to let her go.
16:41There was no truth to that.
16:42When he returned, he took a picture of the rescue,
16:44pretending that she was still alive.
16:47Keyes was surprised using his debit card
16:50and was arrested,
16:51but he took his life while awaiting trial.
16:54The serial killer of Long Island.
16:57It is not common for serial killers of today
17:01not to be identified,
17:03but the serial killer of Long Island
17:05is still an exception.
17:08This may be a cold case for some time.
17:09It's unreal, and I'm just not...
17:11Also known as the Kragliss stripper
17:14and the killer of Gilgavich,
17:16it is suspected that the serial killer of Long Island
17:20killed up to 16 people between 1996 and 2010.
17:2510 victims have been officially linked
17:28with the serial killer of Long Island,
17:31since their remains were found
17:33between December 2010 and spring 2011.
17:37One by one the bodies were identified,
17:40and with each name
17:42came the story of a troubled life cut short.
17:45Of the 10, 4 were escorts
17:47who had ads through Kragliss.
17:50Although there have been several suspects
17:52highlighted in the last instance,
17:54the identity of the killer is unknown.
17:57He's gonna make a mistake, they all do,
18:00and we're gonna get this guy.
18:01Salvatore Peron.
18:03Sal, why did you do it?
18:04Nicknamed the son of Sal, Salvatore Peron,
18:08man of state in Iceland,
18:09turned his frustrations with life
18:11into a bloody massacre.
18:13His wife had abandoned him
18:15and his business was failing,
18:17leaving him bankrupt.
18:18In 2012 he began to wander the streets of Brooklyn
18:21and enter stores of middle eastern merchants.
18:25When it was time to close,
18:26when the stores were empty,
18:29Peron shot and killed 3 merchants
18:31with a rifle.
18:33His M.O. is still unclear,
18:34but police and witnesses say
18:36Peron was trying to sell women's clothing
18:38at the various locations,
18:40mostly small boutiques and 99-cent stores.
18:59I think it's reasonable to assume
19:01that he was going to continue doing this,
19:04and by arresting him
19:06we have saved lives.
19:08Peron was declared guilty of the 3 murders
19:11and sentenced to between 75 years
19:14and life imprisonment.
19:16Lydia Sherman.
19:17An old serial killer,
19:19also known as the Derby Poisoner,
19:22Lydia Sherman lived in the east of the United States
19:25between 1824 and 1878.
19:29Apparently she had no respect for human life,
19:32not even for her own children.
19:34According to reports, she killed 3 husbands
19:37with arsenic in a span of 7 years,
19:39and she killed 8 children in the same way.
19:43All these deaths were officially attributed
19:46to typhoid fever at that time,
19:48without anyone knowing Sherman's secret life
19:51as a serial killer.
19:52However, Sherman's crimes
19:54were finally revealed
19:56and she was sentenced to life imprisonment.
19:58She died of cancer at the age of 53 in 1878.
20:03Amelia Dyer.
20:05When it comes to serial killers of the 19th century,
20:08few are as prominent, or as sick, as Amelia Dyer.
20:13But even then, her name has been lost
20:15to a great extent in time.
20:17Dyer, who lived in Victorian England,
20:20was a babysitter,
20:21an old practice in which people
20:23welcomed orphaned children in exchange for money.
20:26Unfortunately, Dyer had hidden reasons
20:29to do so.
20:31Amelia Dyer was a murderer,
20:33and she knew what she was doing.
20:35This was a calculated career plan
20:37that she'd embarked on and sustained over 30 years
20:40come what may.
20:40Although Dyer has only been officially linked
20:43to 6 deaths,
20:44it is often theorized that the total
20:46is between 200 and 400 deaths.
20:49If that is true, it would make Dyer
20:52one of the most prolific killers in history.
20:55Dyer was finally captured in 1896
20:59and hanged in Newgate Prison in London.
21:02Her last words?
21:04I have nothing to say.
21:24When he was just over 20 years old,
21:26the Englishman Patrick Mackay
21:28became obsessed with Nazism.
21:29He had multiple substance abuse disorders
21:32and claimed to have committed his first murder
21:35by drowning a homeless man
21:37in the Tamesis River.
21:38A few years later, on March 21, 1975,
21:42he mortally attacked a priest with an ax.
21:58After Mackay's arrest,
22:00he became the main suspect
22:02of dozens of murders,
22:04most of which occurred
22:06after the victim was stolen.
22:08Mackay has been officially linked to 3 deaths,
22:12but he personally claims to have killed 11.
22:15He was sentenced to life in prison
22:17and remains there to this day.
22:28He believes Mackay should never be released.
22:58and consumed up to 42 homeless people
23:01between 1903 and 1924.
23:04Denke was a very beloved organist
23:07in his local Lutheran church
23:09and had a food store
23:11that sold various types of meat.
23:13Yes, you can guess
23:15what people suspect now.
23:17Denke was captured in 1924,
23:20but he took his own life
23:21before he could begin the interrogation.
23:24When the police searched his house,
23:26they found innumerable body parts.
23:29Their motives are unknown
23:31and much of his creepy story.
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