Sacramento Mad Killer

Last updated
Sacramento Mad Killer
Other namesSacramento-Sutter Mad Killer
Years active1940–1941
Details
Victims5–6+ killed
1 survived
CountryUnited States
State(s) California
Date apprehended
N/A

Between 1940 and 1941, a series of unsolved murders occurred in the Sacramento metropolitan area, in which a minimum of five middle-aged men were killed. [1] The "Mad Killer" responsible was never identified.

Contents

Murders

In June 1940, an unidentified murder victim was found in a field in Sutter County. The exact cause of death was not known due to the body's advanced decomposition. Another unidentified body was found a few hundred yards away on August 31, 1941. It was believed that they were both murdered at the same time. Although it was speculated that these murders were connected to those committed in 1941, this was never proven. [2] [3]

On August 18, 1941, two men were found badly beaten in a field in Sacramento. One, Alfred Reed [lower-alpha 1] of Davis, died eight days later in the hospital of a skull fracture. The other, John Saunders of Santa Barbara, was hospitalized with a pelvic fracture. Saunders later recovered but claimed to have no knowledge of what had happened or who his attacker was. [2]

On August 27, the battered remains of 41-year-old Raymond Rivas were discovered in a Natomas basin. His head had been crushed, and his pockets were turned inside out. [4] A close friend of Rivas, Tony Ochoa, was announced missing on September 3. Rivas and Ochoa had worked together on a farm in Clarksburg and recently moved to Sacramento together. Ochoa's last known contact with anyone was an interaction with detective A. J. Soulies, in which he informed Soulies that he would notify Rivas' parents in Mexico of his death. Contrary to this, another source claimed Ochoa was last seen on August 24, 1941, three days prior to the discovery of Rivas' remains. [5] Investigators stated that there was no evidence of Ochoa being involved in Rivas' death. [6]

On September 21, a body was recovered from the Sacramento River in Hood. The chin of the man's skull had a hole, which was either a bullet wound or a result of decomposition. Due to the flesh of his face being eaten away by fish, the cause of death and identity of the decedent were not able to be determined. It was estimated that the man was about 55 years old and had been in the water for two weeks. [1]

According to authorities, the victims had each been picked up at bars (or in Sacramento's West End) and driven to isolated locations, where they were subsequently robbed and murdered. [4] However, robbery was not suggested as a primary motive; authorities stated that it was more likely that the attacks were the works of an "insane murderer or a degenerate." [3] Law enforcement investigated a lead that the perpetrator may have been a paroled convict from Oakland, though it's unknown if anything came of this. Several other suspects, including one arrested for severely beating an elderly man, were questioned and let go. [7] [8] In September 1941, reporting on the investigation abruptly stopped, and the perpetrator was never identified.

See also

Notes

  1. One source names him as "Frank Reed" [1]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Wayne Gacy</span> American serial killer (1942–1994)

John Wayne Gacy was an American serial killer and sex offender who raped, tortured, and murdered at least 33 young men and boys in Norwood Park Township, near Chicago, Illinois. He became known as the Killer Clown due to his public performances as a clown prior to the discovery of his crimes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorothea Puente</span> American serial killer (1929–2011)

Dorothea Helen Puente was an American convicted serial killer. In the 1980s, she ran a boarding house in Sacramento, California, and murdered various elderly and mentally disabled boarders before cashing their Social Security checks. Puente's total count reached nine murders; she was convicted of three and the jury hung on the other six. Newspapers dubbed Puente the "Death House Landlady".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cleveland Torso Murderer</span> Unidentified American serial killer (1930s)

The Cleveland Torso Murderer, also known as the Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run, was an unidentified serial killer who was active in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, in the 1930s. The killings were characterized by the dismemberment of thirteen known victims and the disposal of their remains in the impoverished neighborhood of Kingsbury Run. Most victims came from an area east of Kingsbury Run called "The Roaring Third" or "Hobo Jungle", known for its bars, gambling dens, brothels and vagrants. Despite an investigation of the murders, which at one time was led by famed lawman Eliot Ness, the murderer was never apprehended.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carol Bundy</span> American serial killer (1942–2003)

Carol Mary Bundy was an American double murderer and suspected serial killer. Bundy and Doug Clark became collectively known as the Sunset Strip Killers after being convicted of a series of lust murders in Los Angeles during the late spring and early summer of 1980.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph James DeAngelo</span> American serial killer and serial rapist

Joseph James DeAngelo Jr. is an American former police officer, serial killer, serial rapist, burglar, peeping tom, and former mechanic who committed at least 13 murders, 51 rapes, and 120 burglaries across California between 1974 and 1986. He is responsible for three known separate crime sprees throughout the state, each of which spawned a different nickname in the press, before it became evident that they were committed by the same person.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herb Baumeister</span> American serial killer

Herbert Richard Baumeister was an American businessman and suspected serial killer. A resident of the Indianapolis suburb of Westfield, Indiana, Baumeister was under investigation for murdering over a dozen men in the early 1990s, most of whom were last seen at gay bars. Police found the remains of eleven men, eight identified, on Baumeister's property. Baumeister died by suicide after a warrant was issued for his arrest. He was later linked to a series of murders of at least eleven men along Interstate 70, which occurred in the early 1980s to the early 1990s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murders of Pamela Buckley and James Freund</span> Unsolved murders in Sumter County, South Carolina

James Paul Freund and Pamela Mae Buckley, commonly known as the Sumter County Does, Jock Doe and Jane Doe respectively, were two previously unidentified American murder victims found in Sumter County, South Carolina, on August 9, 1976. They had apparently traveled through various places in the United States before being murdered in South Carolina. This was inferred from some of their belongings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gilgo Beach serial killings</span> American serial killer case

The Gilgo Beach serial killings were a series of murders spanning from the early 1990s until 2011. Many of the victims' remains were found over a period of months in 2010 and 2011 during a police search of the area along Ocean Parkway, near the remote beach towns of Gilgo and Oak Beach in Suffolk County, New York. The search was prompted by the disappearance of Shannan Gilbert, who, like many of the known victims, was a sex worker who advertised on Craigslist. The perpetrator in the case is known as the Long Island Serial Killer, the Manorville Butcher, or the Craigslist Ripper.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Speed Freak Killers</span> American serial killer duo

The Speed Freak Killers is the name given to serial killer duo Loren Herzog and Wesley Shermantine, together initially convicted of four murders — three jointly — and suspected in the deaths of as many as 72 people in and around San Joaquin County, California based on a letter Shermantine wrote to a reporter in 2012. They received the "speed freak" moniker due to their habitual methamphetamine abuse. Herzog committed suicide in 2012. Shermantine remains on death row in San Quentin State Prison, in San Quentin, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Kibbe</span> American serial killer (1939–2021)

Roger Reece Kibbe was an American serial killer and rapist known as the "I-5 Strangler". Kibbe found all but one of his victims on freeways around Sacramento, California. In 1991, he was sentenced to 25 years to life imprisonment for the death of Darcie Frackenpohl.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wayne Nance</span> American serial killer (1955–1986)

Wayne Nathan Nance, known as The Missoula Mauler, was an American serial killer in the state of Montana. Nance was shot and killed while committing a home invasion of a co-worker's residence; thus, Nance was never formally charged, tried, or convicted of any murder. Authorities reported that physical evidence linked Nance to several unsolved murders and crimes. Law enforcement believe Nance committed at least six homicides although it is strongly suspected that he may have had many more undiscovered victims.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Unidentified decedent</span> Term used to describe a corpse of a person whose identity cannot be established

Unidentified decedent, or unidentified person, is a corpse of a person whose identity cannot be established by police and medical examiners. In many cases, it is several years before the identities of some UIDs are found, while in some cases, they are never identified. A UID may remain unidentified due to lack of evidence as well as absence of personal identification such as a driver's license. Where the remains have deteriorated or been mutilated to the point that the body is not easily recognized, a UID's face may be reconstructed to show what they had looked like before death. UIDs are often referred to by the placeholder names "John Doe" or "Jane Doe". In a database maintained by the Ontario Provincial Police, 371 unidentified decedents were found between 1964 and 2015.

The Redhead murders is the media epithet used to refer to a series of unsolved homicides of redheaded females in the United States between October 1978 and 1992, believed to have been committed by an unidentified male serial killer. The murders believed to be related have occurred in states including Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. The murders may have continued until 1992. The victims, many remaining unidentified for years, were usually women with reddish hair, whose bodies were abandoned along major highways in the United States. Officials believe that the women were likely hitchhiking or may have engaged in prostitution.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ivan Hill</span> American serial killer

Ivan Jerome Hill, also known by his nickname The 60 Freeway Killer, is an American serial killer who raped and murdered at least eight women in Los Angeles between 1986 and 1994. Hill dumped his victims' corpses along the East-West Highway, known as "California State Route 60", contributing to his nickname. Hill was captured based on DNA profiling nearly a decade after his last murder and was sentenced to death in 2007.

Dr. No is the nickname given to a suspected American serial killer thought to be responsible for the murders of at least nine women and girls in Ohio, between 1981 and 1990. As victims, Dr. No primarily chose prostitutes working in parking lots and truck stops located alongside Interstate 71. There are suspicions that he committed three similar killings in New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, between 1986 and 1988.

The Denver Prostitute Killer was an unidentified American serial killer responsible for the murder of at least 17 women and girls in Denver and its various suburbs between 1975 and 1995. In 2005, based upon results from DNA profiling, it was determined that the most likely killer was Billy Edwin Reid who was previously arrested and charged with the 1989 murder of Lannell Williams and Lisa Kelly. Reid was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for those specific murders. The killings were grouped together only in 2008 – until then, each of these crimes was considered to have been committed by different people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lloyd Gomez</span> Executed American serial killer

Lloyd Gomez, known as The Phantom Hobo Killer, was an American serial killer who robbed and murdered nine vagrant men across California from 1950 to 1951. The murders were only linked to Gomez after he was arrested for a different crime and confessed to them. He was subsequently tried, convicted, and formally sentenced to death for the murder of Warren Cunningham, his second victim. He was executed in the gas chamber at San Quentin State Prison in 1953.

The Great Basin Murders is the name given to a series of murders of at least nine women committed between 1983 and 1997 across the states of Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and Idaho. It derives its name from the Great Basin geographical area, as most of the victims had their bodies dumped near interstate highways that transverse it.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "River Gives Up Body; May Be Killer Victim". The Sacramento Union . September 22, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  2. 1 2 "Sutter Thug May Be Mad Killer". Stockton Evening and Sunday Record . September 2, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  3. 1 2 "Oakland Clues To Mad Killer Prove Empty". The Sacramento Union . September 7, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  4. 1 2 "Sacramento Police Hunt Mad Killer". Merced Sun-Star . September 3, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  5. "Police Comb Valley For Tony Ochoa". The Sacramento Union . September 5, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  6. "Missing Man Feared Fifth Victim of Sacramento-Sutter 'Mad Killer'". Stockton Evening and Sunday Record . September 3, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  7. "More Deaths Are Laid to Mad Killer". The Sacramento Union . September 2, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  8. "Clues Vanish In Killings". The Sacramento Union . September 16, 1941. Retrieved March 5, 2024 via newspapers.com.