David Allen Van Dyke | |
---|---|
Born | January 14, 1959 |
Criminal status | Incarcerated |
Conviction(s) | First-degree murder Attempted murder Armed robbery |
Criminal penalty | Life imprisonment (x6) + 40 years |
Details | |
Victims |
|
Span of crimes | July 19, 1979 –April 25, 1980 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | Wisconsin |
Date apprehended | May 23, 1980 |
Imprisoned at | Waupun Correctional Institution |
David Allen Van Dyke (born January 14, 1959) is an American serial killer who bludgeoned, beat, and stabbed six people to death at their residences in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, between 1979 and 1980. He was arrested in May 1980 after an attempted burglary, and subsequently connected to the murders through fingerprints. He was convicted of the murders in 1981, and received six terms of life imprisonment as well as an additional 40 years. He is now imprisoned at a maximum security penitentiary in Waupun.
Van Dyke was born on January 14, 1959. [1] One of five children, he was raised by his grandmother until she died when he was six. He then moved in with his mother, who had trouble raising him. [2] He refused to attend school, dropping out after seventh grade; broke windows; beat up weaker children; threatened his niece with a knife; and often threatened to harm his mother. Additionally, he stole money from his mother's purse and paid stronger children not to beat him up. He also used the money to buy a canary, which he strangled to death while laughing. Van Dyke was often teased about his obesity. He once punched a woman for calling him a fat pig. However, he later lost 40 pounds through a weight reduction program. As an adult, Van Dyke never held a job. He earned about $600 a month as a pool shark and a burglar. He often lived in cars and abandoned buildings. In April 1979, he was paroled for a burglary conviction. [3]
Between July 1979 and April 1980, Van Dyke murdered four women and two men at their residences in the same area of northern Milwaukee. Gaining entry into his victims homes by asking to use their telephone or bathroom, [4] he would then bludgeon, beat, or stab his victims to death using items in their homes. Afterwards, he burglarized them, stealing money, clock radios, televisions, or jewelry. He then fled the scene, leaving the weapons he used – a tire jack, ice pick, claw hammer, knives, or scissors – behind. His victims varied in age, race, and gender. [5]
Van Dyke's first victim, 69-year-old Della Mae Liggens, was stabbed to death on July 19, 1979. [6]
On August 10, 1979, Van Dyke stabbed 78-year-old Florence Burkard in her North Side home 43 times with a pair of scissors, the fatal wound being to her heart. Her body was discovered by two volunteers of a service organization for the elderly, who were there to deliver her a hot meal. Although the attack began in her kitchen, Burkard's body was found at the bottom of her basement stairs. [3] [7]
Van Dyke beat 79-year-old Helen Wronski to death in the living room of her East Side home. He then covered her body with a sheet and walked into her bedroom, where he rummaged through the drawers of her dresser. However, he did not steal anything from there. Her body was discovered by her son on November 9, 1979, and she had last been seen alive one day earlier. [8] Investigators found partial fingerprints, but failed to match them to any known suspects. [3]
On January 25, 1980, Van Dyke bludgeoned Charles Golston, 63, with a claw hammer. Golston's friend found him bleeding and unconscious. He spent more than three months in a coma before succumbing to his injuries in early May. [3]
On March 3, 1980, [6] 49-year-old Bernard Fonder died on his bed after receiving several blows to the head. A few days before his death, he gave a note to his downstairs neighbors with the name and address of Fonder's former roommate, who had beaten him the previous December. He forced the roommate to move out, but he returned one night in February because his girlfriend had kicked him out. The note instructed his neighbor to hand the note to police if something were to happen to him. In turn, the roommate was initially charged with Fonder's murder, but released after fingerprints found at the scene did not match his. [3]
On April 14, 1980, a 28-year-old woman let Van Dyke into her home after he expressed interest in buying her car. She went upstairs to find something and he followed her. When she turned opposite to him, he grabbed her by the throat and attempted to throw her on the ground, but instead tripped her. After she fell to the ground, he began stomping on her head. However, she managed to get up, so he hit her in the head with her ashtray. He then cut her with pieces of glass from the ashtray and a wine bottle, caressing her wounds with his fingers. [3] She managed to escape her house, first running to a nearby home, where the occupant shut the door on her, then to a tavern, where she received help. Van Dyke fled the scene after stealing $118. [2]
On April 25, 1980, Van Dyke sexually assaulted and beat 30-year-old Helen Louise Bellamy to death in her North Side home with a tire jack. Her 13-year-old son discovered her body partially covered with a sheet in the dining room when he returned home from school. [3] Police sought two men wearing overalls, who may have been impersonating television repairmen, in connection to her murder. [9]
Investigators linked the murders together, and compared the fingerprints found at the two murder scenes to every local burglary suspect. On May 23, 1980, Van Dyke was arrested for an attempted burglary and his fingerprints matched. He was subsequently taken to an interrogation room and questioned for hours until he confessed, at times crying. He was charged with six counts of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder, and one count of armed robbery. [2]
Van Dyke's trial began in February 1981. On the first day of the trial, his surviving victim recounted her attack. Against the advice of his attorney, Van Dyke took the witness stand in his own defense. Although he admitted to 200 burglaries, he claimed that he would never harm a victim if confronted, and instead leave the property. He also confessed to hitting his surviving victim with an ashtray, but claimed it was in self-defense after she cut him with a broken vase. When asked to explain the cuts on the woman's arms, he proposed that she injured herself by falling on a broken bottle. He further accused the police of fabricating his confessions, asking the jury how he could confess to crimes that he claimed to have no knowledge of. After deliberating for four-and-a-half hours, the jury found Van Dyke guilty on all charges, and he was given six life sentences. [3] [4] At the time, Van Dyke was sentenced to the longest term in state history, surpassing mass murderer Douglas Dean, who had been given five life sentences. [10] He is now imprisoned at the Waupun Correctional Institution in Waupun, Wisconsin. He will be eligible for parole in 2048, when he is 89-years-old. [1]
Peter William Sutcliffe, also known as Peter Coonan, was an English serial killer who was convicted of murdering thirteen women and attempting to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980. He was dubbed in press reports as the Yorkshire Ripper, an allusion to the Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper. He was sentenced to twenty concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which were converted to a whole life order in 2010. Two of Sutcliffe's murders took place in Manchester; all the others were in West Yorkshire. Criminal psychologist David Holmes characterised Sutcliffe as being an "extremely callous, sexually sadistic serial killer."
Carl Eugene Watts, also known by his nickname Coral, was an American serial killer dubbed "the Sunday Morning Slasher" who murdered numerous women and girls over an eight-year period. He is suspected of being the most prolific serial killer in United States history. He died of prostate cancer while serving two sentences of life imprisonment without parole in a Michigan prison for the murders of Helen Dutcher and Gloria Steele.
William George Bonin, also called the Freeway Killer and the Freeway Strangler, was an American serial killer and sex offender who raped, tortured, and murdered young men and boys between November 1968 and June 1980 in southern California. He was convicted of 14 murders, but he confessed to 21 and is suspected of even more.
Jesse Michael Anderson was an American criminal. Anderson was convicted of the murder of his wife, Barbara Anderson, and in attempting to escape blame for the murder, he wounded himself and claimed to police that the couple had been attacked by two black men.
Tommy Lynn Sells was an American serial killer, often referred to as "the Coast to Coast Killer" due to his claims of committing murders across the United States. Though convicted of only one murder, for which he received the death penalty and was eventually executed in 2014, he is believed to have committed at least 22 murders, with Sells himself claiming over 70 victims.
The Deltona massacre was a residential murder which occurred on August 6, 2004, in a home on Telford Lane in Deltona, Florida, United States. Four men broke into the home and bludgeoned six victims to death. The four attackers, apparently inspired by the film Wonderland, tortured and killed four men, two women, and a dog inside the home, making it the deadliest mass murder in Volusia County history. Their primary motive for the murders was revenge on Erin Belanger, who had evicted a squatter, Troy Victorino, from her grandmother's then-vacant house, with the secondary motive of recovering an Xbox game console and some clothing that Victorino had left behind. Victorino was able to further motivate his accomplices by pointing out that the attack would likely allow them to kill an additional person they had grievances with, who ended up not being at the house that night.
The Nighttime Killers is the media epithet for the killers responsible for a string of brutal murders in Kyiv, Ukraine, between 1991 and 1996. Two men, Vladyslav Volkovich and Volodymyr Kondratenko were arrested and charged with 16 murders. Most victims were shot with a .22 sporting rifle and stabbed or bludgeoned with a wide variety of weapons ranging from stitching awls to bricks and iron bars. The killers claimed that they began the murder spree in order to prepare themselves for an eventual career as contract killers, practicing on the homeless, and continued killing for profit and for fun. Kondratenko killed himself in prison during the trial. Volkovich was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
Scott Edgar Dyleski is an American murderer, convicted of murdering his neighbor, Pamela Vitale, the wife of prominent attorney Daniel Horowitz. He received the maximum penalty allowed by the law, life in prison without parole. As a juvenile at the time of the murder, he did not qualify for the death penalty. The murder was committed on October 15, 2005, when Dyleski was 16 years old. He is currently serving his sentence in California State Prison, Corcoran. In 2018, Dyleski's sentence was reduced to 25 years to life in prison, after the state of California passed Senate Bill 394, which gives juveniles tried as adults and sentenced to life without parole a chance for eventual freedom. He will be eligible for parole in 2030.
Rodney James Alcala was an American serial killer and sex offender who was sentenced to death in California for five murders committed between 1977 and 1979. He also pleaded guilty and received a sentence of 25 years to life for two further murders committed in New York and was also indicted for a murder in Wyoming, although charges were dropped due to a technicality. While he has been conclusively linked to eight murders, Alcala's true number of victims remains unknown and could be as high as 130.
Ondrej Rigo was a Slovak serial killer and necrophile who targeted women in Bratislava, Munich and Amsterdam from 1990 to 1992. He served a life sentence until his death for nine murders and one attempted murder in Leopoldov Prison in Slovakia. Rigo was diagnosed with a schizoid personality disorder and an antisocial personality disorder as well as necrophilia, finding pleasure in having intercourse with women with mutilated heads. Rigo remains the Slovak murderer with the highest number of victims and he is also the most prolific serial killer in modern Slovak history.
Kenneth Erskine is a British serial killer who became known as The Stockwell Strangler. He committed the murders of 7–11 senior citizens in London between April and July 1986.
Ricardo Leyva Muñoz Ramirez, better known as Richard Ramirez, and nicknamed The Night Stalker, was an American serial killer and sex offender whose killing spree occurred in Greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area in the state of California. From April 1984 to August 1985, Ramirez murdered at least fourteen people during various break-ins, with his crimes usually taking place in the afternoon, leading to him being dubbed the Night Stalker, the Walk-In Killer, and the Valley Intruder. He was convicted and sentenced to death in 1989 and died while awaiting execution in 2013.
Gao Chengyong was a Chinese serial killer and rapist. He mutilated the corpses of his victims, leading to his nickname of the "Chinese Jack the Ripper" in Chinese media. He is thought to have killed eleven women between 1988 and 2002.
Jeong Nam-gyu was a South Korean serial killer, who from 2004 to 2006 killed 14 people.
Roy Allan Melanson was an American serial killer and rapist, conclusively linked to three murders and numerous rapes in three states, and remains the prime suspect in at least two other murders. Melanson was convicted of two 1974 murders, for which he received two life sentences, and died in May 2020 at the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility, in Cañon City, Colorado.
Taylor Morris Teaford is an American fugitive, murderer and suspected serial killer who was added to the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list in 1968. Teaford was last seen after shooting his grandmother to death as well as wounding his sister and another individual. In 1972, despite not being captured, he was charged for the 1969 murder of a Jane Doe, who was murdered in a hotel room in Oakland, California. Teaford was also suspected of committing additional murders of women in Northern California.
Norman Keith Flowers is an American serial killer who killed three women by beating and strangling them in their Las Vegas apartments from March to May 2005. DNA left at each crime scene eventually linked him to the killings and he was arrested. Flowers was tried in 2008 and convicted, receiving a life sentence without parole. He entered an alford plea for the remaining charges in 2011 and received two more life sentences.
James B. Grinder (1945–2010) was an American serial killer and rapist who murdered three teenage girls in Arkansas and a woman in Missouri between 1976 and 1984. Grinder was not apprehended until his confession in March 1998. However, authorities still had little evidence tying Grinder to the murders, so they used a technique known as brain fingerprinting to help prove his guilt. In 1999, Grinder was convicted of the four murders and sentenced to life imprisonment. He remained imprisoned until his death in 2010.
Billy Lee Chadd is an American serial killer and rapist. Raised by two alcoholics, he began committing crimes at a young age, first getting into trouble with the law for a rape he committed when he was 15. Between 1974 and 1978, he raped and fatally stabbed two women in California. After being arrested for those crimes, he confessed to murdering a man at an apartment in Nevada and a male hitchhiker in Kansas, the latter claim never being verified. Initially sentenced to death for one of his murders, his sentence was appealed, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment at his retrial. He is now serving his sentences at a California state prison.
Johannes van Rooyen and Dumisani Makhubela are a pair of South African serial killers, rapists, and mass murderers who murdered seven people in Mhluzi over the autumn and winter of 2005. Although most infamous for murdering a family of four, they also killed a woman and a young couple, all in the Mpumalanga province. They were arrested soon after their final two murders and each sentenced to 445 years imprisonment.