See also: Root of Corruption: Index / Table of Contents / Overview
Essentially, this thread is a direct (continuation from/bridge to) Stretching: Ed Gein, August Kreis III, Wisconsin: I smell a connection (thankfully, I was wrong about the incest in direct relation to Gein, for now... it's definitely in "the bloodline(s)", though, we'll get to that later...
The adoration of murder is an important factor of exposing motives and the egocentric arrogance(ultimate downfall) of the worldfuckers;
They have been bragging about their 'control' of organized corruption, right under our noses... Ed Gein's connection to "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", is but one of many connections to the 2003 remake of the original 1974 film ( Keeping 1975 in mind( Jimmy Hoffa, if nothing else ) ).
I can't believe I fucking missed this... one of the 'main' characters - ultimately a victim - in the 2003 film(memory hazy on 1974) was named Kemper
In both movies, "Leather Face"(symbolism = masked/merged identities + reference to ancient Assyria), is depicted as a socially-crippled lumbering raging 'giant', bastard child of an incest cannibal family. Yes, there's even another movie legacy which we can reference here, but, maybe later...
Before continuing, I want to state for the record that I have had the following theory buzzing in my head ever since 2009 or perhaps even earlier:
'Hollywood'(some entities/persons within it) has been using incarcerated 'mental patients' as the source of their murder/horror movie plots for quite some time. I also firmly believe in hauntings manifest as the 'echo' of extreme anguish and torture, etched into the very walls of a building - see haunted asylums, etc.
Edmund Kemper - STILL ALIVE!
Edmund Emil Kemper III (born December 18, 1948) is an American serial killer who committed the abduction and murder of several women in the early 1970s, as well the murders of his paternal grandparents and his mother. He regularly engaged in necrophilia and confessed to consuming the flesh of at least one of his victims, but later retracted this confession.
Born in California, Kemper had a turbulent childhood. He moved to Montana with his abusive mother at a young age before returning to California, where he murdered his paternal grandparents when he was 15. He was subsequently diagnosed by court psychiatrists as suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and sentenced to the Atascadero State Hospital as a criminally insane juvenile.
Released at the age of 21 after convincing Atascadero psychiatrists he was rehabilitated, Kemper was regarded as non-threatening by his victims. He solely targeted young female hitchhikers during his killing spree, luring them into his vehicle and driving them to quiet areas where he would murder them before taking their corpses back to his home to be decapitated, dismembered and violated. He then murdered his mother and one of her friends before turning himself in to the authorities. He was found sane and guilty at his trial in 1973, and requested the death penalty for his crimes. However, capital punishment was temporarily suspended in California and he instead received eight life sentences. Since then, Kemper has been incarcerated in the California Medical Facility.
Kemper is known for his large stature and high intelligence, standing 6 feet 9 inches (2.06 m) tall, weighing over 250 pounds (113 kg) and having a reported IQ of 145, features that left his victims with little chance to overcome him.[1]
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/bf/Kemper1.jpg/210px-Kemper1.jpg
The entirety of the wikipedia page is a must-read! GOT OF YOUR ARSES FUCKIN!
Early life
Edmund Emil Kemper III was born in Burbank, California on December 18, 1948.[2] He was the middle child and only son born to Clarnell Elizabeth Kemper (née Stage, 1921–1973) and Edmund Emil Kemper II (1919–1985).[3][4] Edmund Emil Kemper II was a World War II veteran who, after the war, tested nuclear weapons in the Pacific Proving Grounds before returning to California, where he then worked as an electrician.[5][6] Clarnell complained about Edmund's "menial" electrician job regularly,[6] and Edmund later stated that "suicide missions in wartime and the later atomic bomb testings were nothing compared to living with [Clarnell]" and that she affected him "as a grown man more than three hundred and ninety-six days and nights of fighting on the front did."[7]
Weighing 13 pounds (6 kg) as a newborn, Kemper was already a head taller than his peers by the age of 4.[8] He was also intelligent but exhibited antisocial and psychopathic behavior such as cruelty to animals: at the age of 10, he buried a pet cat alive; once it died, he dug it up, decapitated it and mounted its head on a spike.[9][10] Kemper later stated that he derived pleasure from successfully lying to his family about killing the cat.[11] At the age of 13, he killed another family cat when he perceived it to be favoring his younger sister, Allyn, more than him, and kept pieces of it in his closet until his mother found them.[12][13]
Yes, I know what movie you're thinking of now, stop, I'll get to that later! Halloween
First murders
On August 27, 1964, Kemper's grandmother, Maude Matilda Hughey Kemper, was sitting at the kitchen table working on her latest children's book when she and Kemper had an argument. Enraged by the argument, Kemper stormed off and grabbed the .22 caliber rifle which his grandfather had given him for hunting. He then returned to the kitchen and, when Maude told him not to shoot any birds, fatally shot her in the head before firing twice more into her back.[23] Some accounts allege that Maude Kemper additionally suffered multiple post-mortem stab wounds with a kitchen knife.[24][25] He then dragged her body out of the kitchen and into her bedroom. When Kemper's grandfather, Edmund Emil Kemper, came home from grocery shopping, Kemper went outside and fatally shot him in the driveway.[21] He was unsure of what to do next and so phoned his mother, who urged him to contact the local police. Kemper then called the police and waited for them to take him into custody.[26]
When questioned by authorities, Kemper said that he "just wanted to see what it felt like to kill Grandma," and that he killed his grandfather so that he wouldn't have to find out that his wife was dead.[9][26] Psychiatrist Donald Lunde, who interviewed Kemper at length during adulthood, wrote that with these murders, "In his way, [Kemper] had avenged the rejection of both his father and his mother."[3] Kemper's crimes were deemed incomprehensible for a fifteen-year-old to commit, and court psychiatrists diagnosed him as suffering from paranoid schizophrenia before sending him to the criminally insane unit of the Atascadero State Hospital.[27]
Later murders
Between May 1972 and April 1973, Kemper embarked on a murder spree that started with two college students and ended with the murders of his mother and her best friend. He would pick up female students who were hitchhiking and take them to isolated areas where he would shoot, stab, smother or strangle them. He would then take their lifeless bodies back to his home where he would perform irrumatio on their severed heads, have sex with their corpses, and then dissect and dismember them.[39] During this 11-month spree, he killed five college co-eds, one high school student, his mother and his mother's best friend. Kemper has stated in interviews that he would often go hunting for victims after his mother's outbursts towards him, and that she would not introduce him to women attending the university she worked at. He recalled: "She would say, 'You're just like your father. You don't deserve to get to know them'."[40] Psychiatrists, and Kemper himself, have espoused the belief that the young women were surrogates for his ultimate target, his mother, and that the humiliating acts he committed with his mother's corpse support this hypothesis.[38][41]
In popular culture
Film and literature
- Patrick Bateman in American Psycho mistakenly attributes a quote by Kemper to Ed Gein, saying "You know what Ed Gein said about women? ... He said 'When I see a pretty girl walking down the street, I think two things. One part of me wants to take her out, talk to her, be real nice and sweet and treat her right ... [and the other part of me wonders] what her head would look like on a stick'."[74]
- Kemper was one of five serial killers (Jerry Brudos, Ed Gein, Ted Bundy, Gary M. Heidnik and Kemper) who served as an inspiration for the character of Buffalo Bill in Thomas Harris' novel The Silence of the Lambs and its subsequent film adaptation. Like Kemper, Bill begins his criminal life by fatally shooting his grandparents as a teenager.[75]
Trivia
- At the time of Kemper's murders, two other killers, John Linley Frazier and Herbert Mullin, were also perpetrating their own crimes in the area, resulting in Santa Cruz receiving the ignominious nickname as the "Murder Capital of the World" in the press.
@Vindicator @Wisconsin_Is_Corrupt @Commoner @cantsleepawink @VictorSteinerDavion
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JesusRules ago
I think all those late 1960's 70's and early 80's were MK Ultra'd at various hospitals and military bases. The book Programmed to Kill makes these connections
argosciv ago
you better have done your homework re: dragons!