¡20 Aterradores Asesinos que, probablemente, NO CONOZCAS!
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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