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Richard Chase | |
---|---|
Born | Richard Trenton Chase (1950-05-23)May 23, 1950 Santa Clara County, California, U.S. |
Died | December 26, 1980(1980-12-26) (aged 30) San Quentin State Prison, California, U.S |
Other names | The Dracula Killer The Vampire of Sacramento The Vampire Killer |
Motive | Blood drinking, sexual pleasure, necrophilia, schizophrenia |
Conviction(s) | First degree murder with special circumstances (6 counts) |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Details | |
Victims | 6 |
Span of crimes | 29 December 1977 – 27 January 1978 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | California |
Date apprehended | January 27, 1978 |
Richard Trenton Chase (May 23, 1950 – December 26, 1980) was an American serial killer, cannibal, and necrophile who killed six people in Sacramento, California, from December 1977 to January 1978. He was nicknamed The Vampire of Sacramento because he drank his victims' blood and cannibalized their remains.
Early life
Chase was a native of Sacramento, California. He was born shortly after his parents got married, and had a younger sister named Pamela. His parents were prone to arguing with each other during his childhood. On one camping trip in Oregon, his mother Beatrice accused her husband of having an affair with a woman hiding in the bushes, which is described as having ruined this trip. Chase's mother also said that her husband was annoying her in bed while she was sleeping, and that he must have somehow drugged her to do this. It has been claimed that Chase's father physically disciplined Richard as a child, but that his actions were not out of the ordinary for families during that era. By the age of 5, Chase privately exhibited evidence of all three parts of the Macdonald triad, a theory suggesting the development of violent psychopathy. The triad links cruelty to animals, obsession with fire-setting, and persistent bedwetting past the age of five, to violent behaviors, particularly homicidal behavior and sexually predatory behavior. These internal issues did not affect his early school life, with over 60 children coming to one of his birthday parties. In his adolescence, he was said to be a heavy user of drugs such as marijuana and LSD. As a teenager, Chase also discovered that he was impotent, which prevented him from having sexual relationships with women.
One of Chase's first instances of strange behavior as an early teen occurred when he started to believe he was a member of the James–Younger Gang. Chase even pasted his head onto photos of them. He tried to sell these photos to people, and wanted his mother to buy him a cowboy hat, but she refused. Chase would also sometimes sleep in his family's lounge room, and when he did this he would take off all his clothes, turn the heater on as high as it would go, and then open the windows. While Chase was described as being popular and clean-cut during his high school years, he started to become withdrawn once he entered adulthood, and had a more unkempt appearance. Chase got a girlfriend in high school, whom he began dating in 1965. In subsequent interviews, this woman used the pseudonym "Libby Christopher". They were unable to have sex the first time they attempted to do so due to his impotence. The relationship continued nonetheless, although his continual failure to achieve an erection led to their eventual split in 1966. Once graduating from high school, Chase attended American River College between 1968 and 1971. His grades were declining and he started not attending classes, eventually dropping out.
Early adulthood
Chase developed hypochondria as he matured. He often complained that his heart would occasionally "stop beating", or that "someone had stolen his pulmonary artery". He would hold oranges on his head, believing Vitamin C would be absorbed by his brain via diffusion. Chase additionally thought that his cranial bones had become separated and were moving around, so he once shaved his head to be able to watch this activity.
Chase first worked in a typing and phone answering job for Retailers Credit Association during 1969, while enrolled in American River College. In the next few years, Chase continued to find other odd jobs in Sacramento, but he was still using heavy amounts of drugs and none of them lasted long. Shortly before dropping out of American River College, Chase shared an apartment with Cyd Evans DeMarchi and Rachel Statum in 1971 — the two found him sitting on their front lawn one day in February 1971 and began talking, with Chase convincing them to let him become a roommate of theirs. His parents gave him 50 dollars each month to help him pay his share of the rent. DeMarchi and Statum both moved out due to Chase's behavior. He was usually high on drugs and walked around naked in front of visitors. He also barricaded himself in his room, explaining that he did this so no one would be able to sneak up on him. He then shared the apartment with Statum's brother and his friends. These new roommates had a rock band, and Chase often interrupted their jamming, wanting to play the conga with them. However, they didn't want him to since he didn't sound good. This caused arguments, and he joined in anyway. Statum's brother and his friends also eventually moved out, and Chase was unable to afford the rent by himself. Chase's parents divorced in June 1972, and he frequently fought with his mother. He believed that she was trying to poison him, something which she had accused her husband of doing to her when Richard was a child. During one lone trip to Utah in 1972, Chase was arrested for driving under the influence, and he told his parents that he had been gassed in the local jail, and that he wanted to sue the police. His father bailed him out of jail and convinced him against suing the police.
He alternated between living in his mother's residence and his father's new residence, since they were both finding it difficult to deal with his increasingly erratic behavior. When Chase's father kicked him out of his residence, neighbors reported that he would stand still by the property, blankly staring at it for extended periods of time. At this point, his father didn't believe that the troubles in his life were due to mental illness, but rather a lazy work ethic and misguided values. In late 1972, Chase's mother attempted to call the police on him during an argument, when suddenly Richard grabbed the phone and whacked her on the head with it. She was still able to call the police, and he ran outside and jumped over the fence. The police said they could press charges against her son, but she decided not to. Following this incident, Chase had two separate stints living with his grandmother in Los Angeles, who noted his odd behavior. During the first stay with his grandmother, Chase worked for his uncle, as a bus driver of mentally disabled children. However, he was fired for never cleaning the bus and letting it run low on oil. All he had to do to change the oil was to take it to a particular station, but he never followed through on this instruction. After getting fired from the bus job, he spent most of the day in his bed, roaming the house at night. He became convinced that someone was trying to enter his grandmother's house through a window. His grandmother heard him talking to himself, and also once found him standing on his head in the corner of his room. He told her that he was trying to get the blood to run back down to his head. At other times, he complained to her that his heart was hurting and spoke of pain in his legs. During his second stint in Los Angeles, he found a job working at a paint store, but was fired within a few days. Chase's grandmother said that both his mental state and physical appearance had deteriorated during his second stay with her.
When Chase returned to Sacramento for good in the summer of 1973, he began cutting out photos of human organs from a medical book, and pasting them all over his bedroom. This was in an effort to understand what was wrong with him. Around this time, Chase called an ambulance to his house, who arrived with a stretcher that he had requested. However, they refused to take him to hospital when they found out that he was not suffering from a medical emergency. Chase later went to his mother "begging" her for help with his supposed medical conditions. She responded by getting him in contact with two different doctors. Chase was dissatisfied with the prognosis these doctors gave him, so he went to see Doctor Donald Ansel. Ansel found there to be nothing physically wrong with him, and concluded that Chase had a "psychiatric disturbance of major proportion." In 1973, Chase killed one of his cats when he saw a television story about a cat that had received high quality medical treatments. The story aggravated him since he believed that he deserved these treatments.
Institutionalization
Chase spent two days in a psychiatric ward in December 1973, after walking into the emergency room of American River Hospital, complaining about a variety of imagined ailments. Chase said that he couldn't breathe, that the blood had stopped flowing through his body and that he was suffering cardiac arrest. He also mentioned that he'd lost his "pulmonary vein". Doctor Irwin Lyons noted in his report that Chase was "tense, nervous and wild eyed", describing him as a "filthy, disheveled, deteriorated and foul smelling white male". The hospital diagnosed Chase with acute paranoid schizophrenia, although they said that it was possible he was also suffering a drug-induced psychosis. Chase was discharged when his mother confronted the psychiatric ward staff. In his report, Lyons said she was "highly aggressive, hostile provocative", adding that she was "the so-called schizophrenic mother". After being discharged, Chase's mental health allegedly improved over the next two years, once he started taking the hospital's medication. He was given an oxygen tank, presumably to help him deal with panic attacks, and also added 20 pounds to his thin frame. Chase's mother claimed that his mental state deteriorated once he started using illegal drugs again. However, his father disagreed with this assessment. Chase's mother said that as his mental state grew worse, she would overhear him talking to himself, just as his grandmother had. According to his mother, he began to have trouble even signing his own name, and on two occasions, he also ordered her to stop controlling his mind, with Chase later accusing his sister Pamela of controlling his mind as well. Once Chase slapped his mother in the face, and sometimes when he argued with her, she would put his father on the phone, which led him to have fits of rage, causing damage throughout the house. Chase's mother would accuse her ex-husband of telling him to behave like this. Chase became too much for either parent to handle, so they got him his own apartment.
Once living in this apartment, Chase began riding his bicycle to a rabbit farm, and after purchasing the rabbits he consumed them raw. Chase kept the apartment relatively clean, and his father would come over for games of chess. When Chase's father asked why he had live rabbits, Chase responded by saying that he was eating them, and his father never looked into this any further, having already grown accustomed to his strange statements. In 1976, he was involuntarily committed to a mental institution for the second time. This occurred when he was taken to the emergency room of American River Hospital, after injecting rabbit's blood into his veins. His father found him vomiting in his apartment and barely able to move, following blood poisoning. The emergency staff said that Chase gave them a "bizarre story" about eating a rabbit which had battery acid in its stomach, and they again concluded that he was mentally ill. He was sent to American River Hospital's psychiatric health facility, and there Chase complained of heart weakness and said his body was falling apart. He refused to participate in any group activities, eventually being transferred to the Beverly Manor Psychiatric Hospital. The staff at this institution nicknamed him "Dracula" because of his blood fixation. He broke the necks of two birds he caught through the institution window and drank their blood. He also extracted blood from therapy dogs with stolen syringes.
After undergoing a battery of treatments involving psychotropic drugs, Chase was deemed no longer a danger to society, and later in 1976, he was released to his mother's custody. The mental institution's staff disagreed with this decision, which was ordered by a doctor. Shortly after Chase's murders, one of the staff members told TV reporters that, "it was his turn to be released, and anything we had to say or do about it was irrelevant", adding that he thought that Chase was "sick and dangerous." Another female staff member who was interviewed said, "he needed extensive care. He was not receiving as much care as he should have gotten."
Without consulting doctors, Chase's mother weaned him off his medication, since she disliked how it made him "like a zombie". She got him another apartment, and in it, Chase progressed from eating birds and rabbits to eating dogs. He purchased puppies and hanged them in his apartment. Chase would then cut open their stomachs, drinking their blood and eating their raw guts. Some of the dogs he purchased were suspicious and didn't want to go with him. Chase's neighbor Dawn Larson said that he would aimlessly walk around their apartment complex with his mouth open, and that he didn't respond to her when she said hello. She also remembered seeing him bring dogs and a cat, even though pets weren't allowed. She never saw the animals again and didn't know what became of them. Initially, Chase only allowed his mother to enter the door of his apartment, but he soon would not allow anyone to come in, and would speak to his mother through a crack in the door.
Later investigation uncovered that, in August 1977, Chase was stopped and arrested on a Native American reservation in the Pyramid Lake, Nevada, area. His naked body was smeared with blood and a bucket with a liver was found in his truck, with police suspecting that a homicide had occurred. Witnesses reported that Chase had a dog with him earlier that day, but it was never recovered. When questioned by police at the scene, Chase claimed that the blood was seeping out of him and that he didn't know what had happened to the dog. The blood was determined to be cow's blood, and no charges were filed.
Murders
Lead up to the murders and Griffin shooting
Chase purchased a .22 caliber pistol in December 1977, and lied about his history of mental illness in order to do so. Neighbors soon heard shooting noises in his apartment. Chase later claimed that he had been shooting at voices that he heard, with bullet holes in the walls corroborating this story. Chase continued to kill and eat dogs, and would now shoot them in the head. Chase said this made it easier for him to collect the blood, since he could put cups next to the bullet wounds. After killing small dogs, including Labrador puppies, he eventually tried to steal a large St. Bernard from a residence, but was unsuccessful. On December 29, 1977, Chase killed his first known human victim in a drive-by shooting. The victim, Ambrose Griffin, was a 51-year-old engineer and father of two. Griffin had been unloading groceries in his driveway, with his wife initially believing that he had suffered a heart attack. The shooting baffled police, who viewed it as being a random, motiveless crime. Chase claimed that in the lead up to the murder, he was angered by his mother's refusal to allow to him to come over to her house for Christmas. She wouldn't allow him in her house since his sister had become afraid of him, following a recent incident where he ripped apart a cat in front of his mother during an argument, smearing its blood over his body.
Two weeks after the Griffin murder, he attempted to enter the home of a woman, but because her doors were locked, he walked away. Chase went on to tell detectives that he took locked doors as a sign that he was not welcome, but unlocked doors were an invitation to come inside. On one occasion, he was caught and chased off by a couple returning home as he pilfered their belongings; he had also urinated and defecated on their infant child's bed and clothing. He broke into another unoccupied house and attempted to set fire to one of the drapes. Chase later said that he believed the residents of this house had been spying on him, and that he wanted them to leave the neighborhood.
Wallin murder
On January 23, 1978, Chase broke into a house and shot Teresa Wallin (three months pregnant at the time). She had been taking out the trash, and he first shot her in the hand, as she attempted to protect herself. He then shot her in the cheek, breaking her jaw, before shooting her in the head, and rendering her unconscious. He had sexual intercourse with her corpse while stabbing her in the stomach with a butcher's knife from her kitchen. Multiple organs were removed, including the spleen, which was completely cut out of her body. Both her kidneys were severed, and Chase moved them around, placing them on the left side beneath her liver. He then cut off one of her nipples and drank her blood through a yogurt cup he found in her trash bag. He stuffed dog feces from Wallin's yard down her throat, before leaving her house. Despite wearing rubber gloves to the murder, Chase made no effort to cover up the crime scene, and he left behind the butcher's knife. It was determined that Wallin was still alive while some of the mutilation was occurring, and remnants of her unborn fetus were also found. Wallin's corpse was discovered by her husband, a truck driver who was at work when the murder happened. The husband only saw a split second of the corpse before screaming and getting out of there. He called his parents to come over and was hoping that they wouldn't have to look at her corpse, but they did eventually see it. Police called to the scene were told that the victim had been shot and "opened up with a knife". They did standard procedures to check if she was alive, such as putting a flashlight to her face, even though it was obvious she was dead. Wallin's eyes were open and her tongue was sticking out, with Detective Wayne Irey saying that the terrified expression on her face had continued to haunt him over the years. Irey added, "it was a horrific homicide, because not only had he killed her, but she was pregnant at the time, so he killed an unborn child." Sacramento officer Frank Davidson remembered in 2010, "I've been to a lot of homicide scenes and took a lot of pictures and done a lot of evidence, and he was the strangest I've ever seen, a lot of the other people have ever seen. You don't have everyday someone cutting somebody open, looking through their intestines and moving their things about." Chase later told a psychiatrist that he spent the rest of that day watching television in his apartment. In the following days, Chase had a phone conversation with his mother. She said that he talked about rockets, spaceships and "little green men".
Miroth family murder
On January 27, Chase entered the home of 38-year-old divorced mother Evelyn Miroth, and proceeded to murder everyone inside the building. Chase said he was only semi-conscious when this happened, so the exact sequence of events is unclear. Near the door, he encountered Miroth's friend, Dan Meredith. Meredith had been introduced to Miroth through his sister and was being treated for a brain tumor at the time. Chase shot him twice in the head, also fatally shooting in the head Miroth, her six-year-old son Jason, and her 22-month-old nephew David Ferreira, before mutilating Miroth with a knife from her kitchen and engaging in necrophilia and cannibalism. Like with Wallin, Chase cut open the organs of Evelyn Miroth, in addition to repeatedly stabbing her in the anus and attempting to cut out one of her eyes. Some of the stab wounds in her anus managed to puncture her uterus. Semen was found in Miroth's mutilated anus, suggesting that Chase was able to get an erection and have anal sex with her corpse, in spite of his impotence. Chase also stabbed Ferreira in the anus and cut open a section at the back of his skull, so it would be easier to drink his blood. Evidence suggests that Chase shot Ferreira in the head while he was in his crib, and that Evelyn's corpse was dragged to the bed in which it was found. There was a bathtub full of blood, meaning that Evelyn might have been having a bath when Chase entered the home. Investigators who worked on the case have said it is also possible that Chase was bathing in this bathtub full of blood. While the mutilations were occurring, six-year-old Tracy Grangaard began knocking on the door, since her family had a scheduled daytrip with Jason Miroth. Chase said that this startled him, and so he "took the baby and split". Three different knives were being used, with Chase leaving two behind at Miroth's house, and leaving another outside her yard. He fled in Meredith's car with Ferreira's body and took it to his apartment, saying that he had another blackout while fleeing. At his apartment, Chase went on to decapitate the baby and consumed parts of the brain. When subsequently asked why he did this, Chase claimed it was because he was hungry.
Police investigation and capture
The family of the girl who startled Chase at Miroth's house alerted a neighbor, who called police. Dan Meredith was lying in a pool of blood near the door when police entered. Sacramento detective Ray Biondi described Miroth's residence as "a house of carnage", and said it was difficult to look at the dead body of six-year-old Jason Miroth, since he also had a six-year-old son at the time. Jason Miroth was wearing new clothes for the daytrip he was meant to go on with Grangaard's family. When police found Evelyn Miroth's mutilated corpse spread out on a bed, they noticed that Ferreira was missing from his crib, subsequently saying they had little hope that the missing baby was still alive. They discovered that the murderer had left complete handprints and shoe imprints in Miroth's blood, and due to the nature of the murder, immediately connected it to the Wallin slaying. Police had initially been exploring the possibility that Wallin may have been murdered by one of her husband's ex-lovers, but soon abandoned this theory.
Russ Vorpagel, a special agent of the FBI based in Sacramento, got Virginia-based FBI profiler Robert Ressler to assist police during their investigation. The two went on to create their own profile of the killer. They believed that the killer was a white male in his 20s, and that he was suffering from mental illness, due to how much evidence he had left behind during the murders. They theorized that the killer's mental health issues began at around age 15, and had grown in severity over the past 8 years, to the point of committing murder. Another reason mental illness was strongly suspected was due to the strange nature of the crime scenes. In a 1997 interview on crime program The New Detectives, Vorpagel said, "we know darn well that your normal everyday person is not going to fill a tub with water, and bathe in the blood. So here we see personality, here we see mental illness, we see mental deterioration." The FBI profile also said that as a result of this mental illness, the killer likely didn't take care of himself, and would have a dirty, disheveled appearance. During both murders, Chase was wearing an orange ski parka his father recently bought him. Neighbors later reported that a disheveled long haired man in an orange ski parka had been knocking on their doors on the day prior to the Miroth murder, asking if they had old newspapers. Police used these sightings and the FBI profile to create a sketch of this long haired suspect. Nancy Westfall (now Nancy Holden), an old high school acquaintance of Chase, later told police that a man in an orange ski parka had approached her while she was shopping. Westfall didn't realize it was Chase at first since his appearance had changed so much since he was a teenager. She noted that he had blood stains on him, and noticed a yellow crust encircled around his mouth. She also said it looked as though his eyes were sunken into their sockets. When Chase first approached Westfall, he asked her if she had been on the motorcycle when Curt was killed. Curt was an ex-boyfriend of hers who died in a motorcycle accident while the pair were in high school. She said no, and asked who he was. He introduced himself as Rick and she soon realized it was Chase. Westfall was shocked by his appearance and was so unsettled that she locked her car and drove off when he asked her for a ride. The encounter occurred shortly before Chase murdered Wallin.
Chase was arrested after this woman came forward and they checked his background. Police who searched Chase's apartment found that the walls, floor, ceiling, refrigerator, and all of Chase's eating and drinking utensils were soaked in blood. Several dog collars were also found, along with rotting organs, which belonged to animals and some of his victims. He had been reading gun magazines, psychology magazines, a book titled Psychic People and he had circled classified ads in the paper about dogs for sale. For the dates of the Wallin and Miroth murders, Chase had written the word "today" on a calendar, with the word "today" being written on 44 more dates throughout 1978. At first, Chase wouldn't let police in his apartment, so they loudly spoke to each other outside it, pretending that they were leaving. This tactic worked, and they got Chase once he left his apartment. When Chase saw police, he initially tried to run from them, and resisted arrest when they tackled him. Chase was armed at the time, and it wasn't known whether David Ferreira was still alive or not, so Detective Wayne Irey contemplated shooting Chase. He said in 2010, "that's when I found out I'm not like him. Even though it would have been a good shooting, it would have been a justified shooting, I couldn't kill him. And I would have been justified in doing it. Because the average person, cops included, are not like these people. He's a cold blooded killer, and we aren't."
Once captured, Chase was uncooperative with police, claiming that he had only killed some dogs, and that he was being framed by the Italians. He speculated that the murders had been committed by a blond man in an orange jacket, and that someone had been coming in and out of his apartment. It would take until March 1978 for the police to find Ferreira's decomposed corpse in a garbage bin; it had been placed inside a box. A few days after his January 1978 capture, Chase was interviewed by psychiatrists, and only went into vague detail about his mental health history. When they asked what was on his mind, Chase was not forthcoming. They rephrased the question and asked what was on the "screen" of his mind, as if he were watching his thoughts on a television. Chase said "normal things" and "an exploding 747 jetliner". He also said that he saw lights in the sky that might be UFOs, and incorrectly claimed that he was Jewish, saying that he was beaten up by gangs of Italians because of his ethnicity.
Aftermath
Trial
In 1979, Chase stood trial on six counts of murder. Due to his delusions of being a persecuted Jew, Chase wanted a lawyer from the Jewish Defense League, with this motion being denied. His defense attorney would end up being Farris Salamy, who was the son of Lebanese migrants and local to the Sacramento area. While in custody and awaiting trial, Chase claimed the food he was being served was poisoned. He ordered his defense attorney to have the food tested, and it came back negative. In order to avoid the death penalty, the defense tried to have him found guilty of second degree murder, which would result in a life sentence. Their case hinged on Chase's history of mental illness and the suggestion that his crimes were not premeditated. Farris Salamy remembered in 2010 that Chase was "the most deranged" person he'd ever met, and that his case was "one of mental disease". In more interviews with psychiatrists during the trial, Chase admitted his guilt, saying "I didn't kill anybody, just a few people." He remembered very little from the Miroth family murder, and regarding the Wallin murder, Chase explained to psychiatrists, "I was sick, poisoned by iodine or mercury I was trying to get free of poison place and go live with my grandmother's relatives. The car had broken down and I had no money, so I walked into somebody's house and killed them." Chase acknowledged that he needed blood, saying that he'd gone to several places to get some, but was unable to. He believed that his lack of blood was preventing him from living a normal life. Chase claimed that the blood from animals hadn't helped him, explaining, "I couldn't cope with the world anymore because every time I tried to get up and act like a human being I couldn't because of the weakness. I went on welfare and got in Beverly Manor, so now I've got a trial pending I guess." He went on to plead not guilty by reason of "temporary insanity", and requested he be seen by a heart specialist for his supposed stolen pulmonary artery. Chase told the jury that he was a good person, but had a weak heart and mind. Chase also said that he was afraid that his victims would come back from the dead. Teresa Wallin's husband was involved in the trial, giving victim impact statements. One day during the trial, Chase's mother confronted him, and criticized their German Shepherd for not protecting them the day the murder happened. This comment left Wallin's husband stunned, who responded by saying that she should have protected them from her son.
On May 8, 1979, the jury found Chase guilty of six counts of first degree murder and, rejecting the argument that he was not guilty by reason of insanity, sentenced him to die in the gas chamber. Lead prosecutor Ronald W. Tochterman convinced jurors that Chase, while mentally disturbed, still knew what he was doing was wrong. Tochterman subsequently said he knew that it was going to be a difficult task trying to convince jurors that Chase was legally sane. Some doctors who interviewed Chase during the trial had come to the same conclusions as Tochterman, which strengthened the case against him. The fact that Chase wore gloves during the murders helped prove there was a level of premeditation. Farris Salamy said in 2010, "he did a lot of things, which prosecutors will tell you, show that he was thinking. He took rubber gloves with him. But he never, on the other hand, cleaned himself up. People saw this blood on him all the time. He never got a haircut, he wandered in and out of people's yards. He never seemed to be trying to conceal this appearance, which is kind of the other side of it."
Incarceration and death
Chase's inmates in San Quentin prison, aware of the extremely violent and grisly nature of his crimes, feared him and, according to prison officials, often tried to persuade Chase to commit suicide. Chase was described as behaving psychotically from the moment he entered prison, and was temporarily sent to a facility for the criminally insane in Vacaville, California during December 1979. This was suggested by psychiatrists, who said he was "psychotic, insane, and incompetent, and chronically so." He was eventually sent back to San Quentin in April 1980, once he was deemed to be stabilized. Chase wanted to be transferred to a prison on the east coast in 1979, so he could be closer to the government and safe from UFOs, and that same year he had also written several documents, in which he blamed the murders on UFOs, the CIA, the mafia and airline disasters. In one of the documents, Chase wrote that UFO intelligence began tracking him six months prior to the murder spree, also theorizing that he was born as a result of UFO cloning experiments, and claiming that his mother had been secretly poisoning him since he was a year old. Chase also wrote that he had been born with a Jewish Star of David symbol on his forehead, and that this was as a result of the UFO cloning experiment. During late 1979, Chase was considering appealing his death sentence, since he thought his life was under threat when the murders happened, which could have made his actions justifiable under Californian law.
In 1979, Robert Ressler conducted an interview with Chase at San Quentin. A reason Ressler did this interview was since he wanted to validate the original criminal profile he had made of Chase, while the murders were occurring during 1978. When Ressler met Chase, he noted that he was very thin, and described his eyes as being like black dots rather than normal pupils, saying that they resembled those of a shark. In this interview, Chase spoke of his fears of Nazis, UFOs and being poisoned. He told Ressler that he was going to appeal his death sentence, and this was since he was the victim of soap-dish poisoning. Chase explained to Ressler that everyone has a soap-dish, and if they lift up the soap and the part underneath the soap is dry, they are fine, but if it's gooey, that means they have soap-dish poisoning. When Ressler asked what the soap-dish poisoning had done to Chase, he responded by saying it had turned his blood to powder, and that the reason he killed was to replenish his blood. Chase added that the soap-dish poisoning was being perpetuated by Nazi UFOs, and asked Ressler to give him access to a radar gun, with which he could apprehend the Nazi UFOs, so that the Nazis could stand trial for the murders. Chase again claimed that he was Jewish, and said that there was a Star of David symbol on his forehead. He handed Ressler a large amount of macaroni and cheese, which he had been hoarding in his pants pockets, believing that the prison officials were in league with the Nazis and attempting to kill him with poisoned food. Chase wanted Ressler to have the food tested at the FBI lab in Quantico, and Ressler said he would do this. During the interview, Ressler went along with the statements Chase was saying. For example, Ressler said he couldn't see the Star of David symbol on Chase's forehead since he hadn't brought his glasses with him that day, but didn't question the statement as being false. In 1992, Ressler said, "the rule is, you stay out of commenting on the fantasy, and, by your comments, urge him to continue. So I couldn't say about soap-dish poisoning, 'There isn’t any such thing,' because that wouldn't have helped. Neither could I say, 'Oh, yes, I know people who’ve had soap-dish poisoning.' I merely accepted his explanation and didn’t debate him about it." When Chase was temporarily sent to the Vacaville facility for the criminally insane shortly afterwards, Ressler was supportive of this decision. Ressler had also opposed the initial decision to send Chase to San Quentin in May 1979, believing that he should have been permanently institutionalized instead.
At 11:05 a.m. on December 26, 1980, Chase was found dead in his prison cell at San Quentin. An autopsy revealed that he died from an overdose of sinequan, a drug that was prescribed to treat depression and hallucinations. Chase took 36 times the normal dose, and had been secretly hoarding the pills in his cell, unbeknownst to officers. He was lying on his stomach with his head buried in the mattress, and his legs extended off his bunk. Next to the bed were four sheets of paper covered in handwriting. Two of them contained drawn squares filled with an unknown code. On the other two pages was a message in which Chase indicated that he might drink some pills which could cause his heart to stop beating. Earlier that morning, an officer who checked on Chase observed that he was lying on his back and breathing normally The exact reasons for Chase's apparent suicide remain unknown. Ressler stated in 1992 that some believed Chase's death was accidental rather than a suicide, and that he had taken the large dose of pills in an effort to quiet the voices in his head.
See also
References
- ^ Sullivan, Kevin (2012). Vampire: The Richard Chase Murders. WildBlue Press. ISBN 978-1942266112.
- ^ Born to Kill episode on Richard Chase, 2010.
- Criminal & Behavioral Profiling Archived October 29, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Curt R. Bartol, Anne M. Bartol, 2013, Sample Materials: Chapter 2: Crime Scene Profiling. SAGE Publications, Inc
- Childhood firesetting, enuresis and cruelty to animals as cultural lore. Published on May 2, 2012 by Karen Franklin, Ph.D.
- ^ Bovsun, Mara (January 2, 2010). "Just crazy for blood: Richard Trenton Chase, a.k.a. the Vampire of Sacramento". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved September 15, 2016.
- "Local serial killer leaves his mark at ARC".
- Amanda Howard, Martin Smith: River of Blood, Universal Publishers (August 30, 2004), ISBN 978-1-58112-518-4, pp. 82 accessed via Google Books Archived May 2, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
- Goldfarb, Kara (February 5, 2022). "Delusional Serial Killer Richard Chase Believed He Was A Vampire — And We're Not Sure He Wasn't". All That's Interesting. Retrieved March 8, 2024.
- ^ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356596339_Richard_Trenton_Chase_A_Psychobiography_of_the_Dracula_Killer_H_NEL_IS_MAIN_RESEACHER-_PROF_PAUL_JP_FOUCHE_IS_SUPERVISOR_NAIDOO_IS_CO-SUPERVISOR
- Ressler, Robert; Thomas Schachtman (1992). Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI (First ed.). St. Martin's. p. 14. ISBN 0-312-07883-8.
- The Trial of Richard Chase KCRA-TV, 1979
- ^ "Richard Trenton Chase". Crime Library. Archived from the original on December 9, 2008. Retrieved December 30, 2008.
- ^ "Mind Hunters", The New Detectives, 1997.
- ^ "Richard Chase", World's Most Evil Killers, 2020.
- ^ "Inside the Warped Mind of the Vampire of Sacramento", 35 Serial Killers The World Wants to Forget, Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- "Article clipped from the Sacramento Bee". The Sacramento Bee. May 15, 1979. p. 1.
- https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/obituaries/article2590748.html
- "The Story of Richard Trenton Chase, the "Vampire of Sacramento"". April 11, 2024.
- "Richard Trenton Chase – Profile of Serial Killer Chase". Crime.about.com. Archived from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
- ^ Ressler, R. K., Shachtman, T. (2015). Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI. United States: St. Martin's Publishing Group.
- ^ https://vault.fbi.gov/richard-chase/richard-chase-part-01
- K. Frasier, David (1996). Murder Cases of the Twentieth Century: Biographies and Bibliographies of 280 Convicted Or Accused Killers. McFarland & Company. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-7864-0184-0. Retrieved September 11, 2024.
- Keppel, Robert D.; Birnes, William J. (2003). The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations: The Grisly Business Unit. Academic Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0124042605. Archived from the original on December 24, 2020. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
Cited works and further reading
- Biondi, Ray; Hecox, Walt (1992). The Dracula Killer. London: Mondo. ISBN 978-1-852-86455-2.
- Evans, Colin (1996). The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 160–163. ISBN 978-0-471-07650-6.
- Sullivan, Kevin (2012). Vampire: The Richard Chase Murders. WildBlue Press. ISBN 978-1942266112.
External links
- Richard Chase at the Crime Library
- Robert Ressler on profiling the Vampire Killer at the Wayback Machine (archived October 11, 2007)
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