
Richard Trenton Chase Inhaltsverzeichnis
Richard Trenton Chase war ein amerikanischer Serienmörder, der innerhalb eines Monats sechs Menschen tötete. Wegen der Eigenart, das Blut seiner Opfer zu trinken, bekam er den Spitznamen The Vampire of Sacramento. Richard Trenton Chase (* Mai in Sacramento, Kalifornien; † Dezember in Vacaville, Kalifornien) war ein amerikanischer Serienmörder, der. Richard Trenton Chase wurde geboren und stammte aus einer in bescheidenen Verhältnissen lebenden Familie. Er war der einzige Sohn und galt als. Suchergebnis auf postconsulting.eu für: Richard Trenton Chase. Richard Trenton Chase – Der Vampir von Sakramento: Am Dezember erschoss Richard Trenton Chase aus seinem fahrenden Auto den. 29 Der echte Dracula: Richard Trenton Chase: Richard war davon überzeugt, er bräuchte das Blut von anderen Lebewesen, um überleben zu können. Zunächst. Fotografie Zu Fiktiven Themen. Mehr dazu. Richard Trenton Chase (The vampire of Sacramento). Finde diesen Pin und vieles mehr auf Dark History von.

Richard Trenton Chase - Reviews und Kommentare zu dieser Folge
Kindle Unlimited. Berechtigt zum kostenfreien Versand. Wenn man die Seife hochhebt und die Unterseite trocken ist, dann ist alles gut. Chase erstes menschliches Opfer war Ambrose Griffin.He then removed multiple organs , cut off one of the nipples and drank the blood. Before leaving, he collected dog feces from the yard and stuffed it into the victim's mouth and down her throat.
On January 27, , the bodies of Evelyn Miroth, age 38, her six-year-old son Jason, and friend Dan Meredith were found murdered inside Evelyn's home.
Missing was Evelyn's month-old nephew David, whom she had been babysitting. The crime scene was horrific. Dan Meredith's body was found in the hallway.
He was killed by a direct gunshot wound to his head. Evelyn and Jason were found in Evelyn's bedroom. Jason had been shot twice in the head.
The depth of Chase's insanity was clear when investigators reviewed the crime scene. Evelyn's corpse had been raped and sodomized multiple times.
Her stomach had been cut open and various organs were removed. Her throat was cut, she had been sodomized with a knife, and there was a failed attempt to remove one of her eyeballs.
Not found at the murder scene was the infant, David. However, blood in the baby's crib gave police little hope the child was still alive. Chase later told police that he brought the dead infant to his apartment.
After mutilating the baby's body, he disposed of the corpse at a nearby church, which is where it was later found.
What he did leave at the grotesque murder scene were clear hand and shoe prints, which soon led police to his door and ended Chase's insane rampage.
In , a jury found Chase guilty on six counts of first-degree murder and he was sentenced to die in the gas chamber. Disturbed by the gruesome details of his crimes, other prisoners wanted him gone and often tried to talk him into killing himself.
Whether it was the constant suggestions or just his own tortured mind, Chase managed to collect enough prescribed antidepressants to kill himself.
On December 26, , prison officials discovered him dead in his cell from an overdose of medications. Share Flipboard Email. Government U.
Foreign Policy U. Liberal Politics U. Table of Contents Expand. Childhood Years. Teenage Years. Then he turned, paused to light a cigarette, and walked away through her backyard.
Down the street, Robert and Barbara Edwards were bringing their groceries into the house when they heard a noise inside. Whoever was in there apparently heard them and started to run.
They heard a window slam at the back of the house and then, oddly, a disheveled young man came around the corner toward them.
Though Edwards tried to stop him, he sprinted past and got out to the street. Edwards gave chase, but lost him when he jumped a fence. The police arrived to find the house in a shambles, with theft of valuables the obvious motive.
However, he had also urinated into a drawer of freshly-laundered baby's clothing and had defecated on a child's bed. The intruder kept going, veering off his path here and there to walk across the front porches of random houses.
Then he came to a tract house at Tioga Way. When David Wallin came home that night at six, he found the house dark. He entered and saw their dog, a German shepherd, waiting inside, but his wife was nowhere to be found.
Oddly, the stereo was on. A bag of trash and what appeared to be oil stains on the carpet troubled him. He followed the stains to the bedroom. Then he began to scream.
His wife lay just inside the door, on her back. There was blood in the bathroom and it was later learned that Chase had smeared Terry's blood all over his face and hands, licking it off his fingers.
Evelyn was about to send her son Jason, 6, to a friend's house and when Jason failed to arrive, the friend sent her daughter over to check.
Inside Evelyn's rectum was a large amount of semen. Then they located an eleven year-old girl in the neighborhood who described a man near the victims' residence around eleven o'clock.
Dan Meredith's red station wagon was missing from the front of the house where neighbors had seen it parked that morning. It later turned out that Chase had drank Evelyn's blood and had mutilated the baby's body in the bathroom, opening the head and spilling pieces of the brain into the tub.
Meredith's station wagon was found abandoned not far from the murder scene, the keys still in it. There was little hope that the baby was still alive.
The police did not know it, but the parking lot where they located the missing car was only about one hundred yards from apartment 15 of the Watt Avenue complex where Richard Trenton Chase lived.
The FBI were already on the case. Robert Ressler and Russ Vorpagel developed a profile of who they were probably looking for.
They figured him for a disorganized killer as opposed to an organized one, with some clues pointing toward the possibility of psychosis.
He clearly had not planned these crimes and did little to hide or destroy evidence. He left footprints and fingerprints, and had probably walked around in daylight with blood on his clothing.
In other words, he gave little thought to the consequences. At the very least, his domicile would be as sloppy as the places he ransacked after he was finished with them, and the fact that the murder scenes were fairly close together meant he might not have a car.
In fact, he'd taken a car from one house, so he must have walked to that one at least. That meant it was likely that he lived in the vicinity of the crimes.
It was also likely that he would kill again, and keep on killing until he was caught. They had to work fast. They figured him to be a white male in his mid-twenties, thin and undernourished.
Evidence of the crimes, they were sure, would be found in his residence, and if he had a vehicle, in there as well.
He either would have a history of mental illness or drug use, or both, and he would be something of a loner. They thought he was probably employed at some menial labor or unemployed, given his apparent state of mind, and could be receiving some disability money.
He probably lived alone. He might be paranoid. Many people were questioned around the area and some had seen a white male driving a red station wagon.
Although the police artist tried to make a sketch, few of the descriptions were helpful, except for that of a young woman.
On the same day that Robert Edwards had chased the intruder away from his home on Burnece Street, Nancy Holden had had an odd encounter.
She was shopping in the Town and Country Village shopping center, not far from Watt Avenue and close to the Wallin residence, when she saw a strange man approaching her who appeared to be confused.
She tried to avoid him but he directed a question at her. Nancy was startled. Ten years earlier she had dated a boy named Kurt who had been killed on a motorcycle.
It was then that she noticed something vaguely familiar about this interrogator. She asked him who he was and he replied, "Rick Chase.
She was astonished. This man before her was nothing like the studious, clean-cut Rick Chase that she had known in high school. She had heard he'd gotten into drugs, and looking at him now, she realized those rumors were true.
He was grimy and stained, and his agitated manner made her nervous. She talked with him for a few minutes, seeking a way out, and finally got out of the store while he was still paying for something.
However, he followed her into the parking lot, intent on getting a ride. She managed to get into her car, roll up the windows, lock the doors, and pull out before he could stop her.
She knew she'd been rude but she just wanted to get away. After viewing the police sketch of a disheveled man seen in the neighborhood wearing an orange ski parka, and recalling that Chase wore one that day the same color, she was sure this was the man the police were seeking.
They also got another clue from the gun registration of a. On January 10th, he had purchased ammunition. Then Dawn Larson, watching the news, recalled her strange neighbor.
She had seen a large map of Sacramento on his wall, marked with black ink. However, she was afraid to make an enemy by reporting him.
After hearing from Holden five days after the Wallin murder, the detectives ran a background check on Chase and found a history of mental illness including his escape from a hospital , a concealed weapons charge, a series of minor drug busts, and his arrest in Nevada.
They found his address on Watt Avenue and went out that Saturday afternoon, one day after the triple murder, to check it out.
They learned from the apartment manager that Chase's mother paid his rent and that she felt her son was the victim of LSD abuse.
Chase refused to let his mother into his apartment. The detectives knocked repeatedly, but Chase would not open the door. They pretended they were going to leave and then waited.
Chase emerged with a box in his arms and made his way toward his car. The detectives apprehended him, but not without a mighty struggle on his part.
Then they found Dan Meredith's wallet in Chase's back pocket, along with a pair of latex gloves. A calendar showed the inscription "Today" on the dates of the Wallin and Miroth murders, and chillingly, the same word was written on forty-four more dates yet to come during that year.
The entire place had an ominous feeling, but at least Chase was now in custody. Richard Chase on night of his arrest. Evidence was gathered from Chase to compare to samples already being analyzed in the crime lab from the murder victims.
There was plenty of blood on Chase's clothing, and they also took hair samples. However, when they tried to take a blood sample, he had to be restrained.
They had no idea then of his intense primal fear of losing his blood. Farris Salamy was appointed Chase's attorney and he was immediately separated from the detectives who had spent so much time trying to extract a confession.
Police officers continued the search for the baby, using a bloodhound. They even went to Chase's mother's home and she was uncooperative, insisting that despite what they had found, it did not prove that her son had done anything.
Beneath the body, too, was a ring of keys that fit Dan Meredith's now-impounded car. He also read about blood-related crimes and blood rituals in various cultures, noting that some people believed that ingesting another person's blood would strengthen or heal them.
The prosecutor emphasized throughout the trial that Chase had had a choice, and mentioned several times that he had brought rubber gloves with him to the victims' homes with the intent of murder.
Altogether, there were prosecution exhibits, the strongest of which were Chase's gun and Dan Meredith's wallet, found in Chase's pocket.
The first witness in a trial that stretched across four months was David Wallin, who described the scene of horror he had encountered upon coming home that day.
Nearly one hundred witnesses followed him. He admitted to drinking Wallin's blood. While interviewing killers all over the country to add information about criminal psychology to their database, FBI profilers visited Richard Chase and learned about some of his oddities.
Robert Ressler recounts his encounter in a book, Whoever Fights Monsters. He describes how Chase had believed in that his blood was turning to powder and that he thus needed blood from other creatures to replenish it.
Nevertheless, the psychiatrists had released him, despite protests from some of the staff that he was dangerous. From the time he was arrested in Nevada in August, , until the murders began in December paints a clear picture of a deteriorating mind.
It was after that that he killed his mother's cat and bought two dogs to kill. He also tormented a neighborhood family about their missing dog.
He then collected articles on the Hillside Strangler. Then, in December, he acquired his gun. After the Griffin killing, he bought a newspaper and kept an editorial page about the senseless nature of that shooting.
Then he bought more ammunition. He also set a fire in his neighbors' garage to drive them from the neighborhood because their music annoyed him.
He told a psychiatrist that the first killing had happened after his mother would not allow him to visit for Christmas. He was just shooting his gun out the window of his car.
That he had fired shots at other houses indicated it was not altogether an accident. Chase told the FBI profilers that he had killed to preserve his own life and he was developing an appeal based on that.
He mentioned soap-dish poisoning. Ressler asked him what that was and he explained that everyone has a soap dish. If you lift the soap and find that underneath it is dry, you're all right.
If it's gooey, you have the poisoning, which turns your blood to powder. The powder then depletes your energy and eats away at your body.
Chase also said that he was Jewish-which he was not-and that he'd been persecuted by Nazis because he had a Star of David on his forehead-which he didn't.
He explained that the Nazis were connected to UFOs which had telepathically commanded him to kill to replenish his blood.
He then shoved a cup at Ressler filled with part of a macaroni and cheese dinner. He wanted it analyzed for poison. Ressler learned that the other inmates taunted Chase and urged him to kill himself.
They did not want him near them. Ressler, along with the prison mental health professionals, felt he ought to be transferred to a psychiatric hospital.
Although he was sent to one for a short time, he soon returned to San Quentin. He did not return the guard's greeting, which was not unusual.
The Dracula Killer, by Lt. Ray Biondi and Walt Hecox. New York: Pocket, Whoever Fights Monsters, by Robert Ressler. New York: St.
Martin's Press, New York: Berkeley, ISBN: Famous Cases of a Courtroom Psichiattist It was December 29 th, Routine police work turned up a report from a woman who said that a shot had been fired into her home on December 27 th.
During the six months that they had been neighbors in the same East Sacramento apartment complex on Watt Avenue , she had seen him carry three animals into his apartment-against the rules-but had never seen those animals again.
Nearly two weeks later, on the 23 rd , at Burnece Street , Jeanne Layton spotted an unkempt young man with longish hair strolling toward her.
On January 27 th , Evelyn Miroth, 38, was baby-sitting her twenty-month old nephew in her home, one mile from the Wallin residence.
On the same day that Robert Edwards had chased the intruder away from his home on Burnece Street , Nancy Holden had had an odd encounter.
On January 10 th , he had purchased ammunition. On March 24 th , a church janitor came upon a box containing the remains of a male baby.
All text that appears in this section was provided by www. Early adulthood As an adult, Chase moved back in with his mother, where he began to accuse her of attempting to murder him via poison.
Institutionalization In , Chase was involuntarily committed to a mental institution after being taken to a hospital for blood poisoning, which he contracted after injecting rabbit's blood into his veins.
The first murder On December 29, , Chase killed his first victim in a drive-by shooting, in an apparent "warm up" for the crimes he planned on committing.
The second murder On January 11, , Chase asked his neighbor for a cigarette and then forcibly restrained her until she gave him an entire pack.
Aftermath In , Chase stood trial on six counts of murder. As a teenager, he drank and smoked dope, getting into trouble several times but showing no shame over it He dated several girls, one of whom reported that "Rick" was unable to perform sexually because he could not keep an erection.
Mug shot of Richard Chase in when arrested for marijuana possession He was preoccupied with any sign that something was wrong with him, which held true throughout his adult life, and he once entered an emergency room looking for the person who had stolen his pulmonary artery.
Soon he grew bolder. The First Victim It was December 29th, Hunting the Vampire Meredith's station wagon was found abandoned not far from the murder scene, the keys still in it.
Blenders used by Richard Chase to prepare human blood Robert Ressler's Whoever Fights Monsters The entire place had an ominous feeling, but at least Chase was now in custody.
The Trial Evidence was gathered from Chase to compare to samples already being analyzed in the crime lab from the murder victims. The FBI Interview While interviewing killers all over the country to add information about criminal psychology to their database, FBI profilers visited Richard Chase and learned about some of his oddities.
A Vampire's Demise On the day after Christmas in , one day short of the third anniversary of the killing spree, the guard looked in on Richard Chase.
Bibliography The Dracula Killer, by Lt. He also thought that the bones were coming out through the back of his head, that his stomach was backwards, and that his heart often stopped beating.
He starts collecting articles about the case. Aug 3, Chase, got arrested in Nevada. Dec, Chase, buys a.
Dec 28th, Chase, kills his first known victim Ambrose Griffin. Chase fired two shots out the window of his car; one hit Griffin in the chest and killed him.
Jan 23, Chase, kills his second known victim, the three months pregnant, Teresa Wallin. Jan 27, Chase, kills four more victims, one of them was a twenty-month's old baby.
Jan, Chase, got arrested. March 24, The twenty-month's old, Michael Ferreira was found in a box. Jan 2, The trial begins. Dec 26, Chase, committed suicide by overdosing on his medication.
Juan Ignacio Blanco. MALE murderers. Classification: Spree killer. Date of arrest: January Date of birth: May 23, Method of murder: Shooting.
Status: Sentenced to death on May 8, Committed suicide with an overdose of prison doctor-prescribed antidepressants that he had been saving up for the last few weeks on December 26, Richard Trenton Chase May 23, — December 26, was an American serial killer who killed six people in the span of a month in California.
Richard Trenton Chase, birthday. A significant lead for the police came from a woman in her 20s who mentioned that she ran into a man she had gone to high school with and he approached her car.
She noticed that his eyes were sunken, he was extremely thin, and he had blood stains on his sweatshirt. She identified him as Richard Trenton Chase.
The police discovered that he resided within a mile of most of the murder sites. After staking out his apartment, police took Chase into custody. He was forcefully detained and a gun found in evidence was linked back to all of the murders.
Authorities also discovered a inch butcher knife, rubber boots, animal collars, three blenders containing blood, and several dishes inside the refrigerator containing body parts.
A mummified, decapitated, baby was then found later in a box outside of a vacant lot. It was determined to be the nephew of Evelyn Miroth.
The trials began in , and Chase pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. However, he was deemed legally sane at the time he committed the crimes and was found guilty on all six murder counts.
During an interview, Chase admitted to walking the streets checking to see if doors were unlocked. Following his conviction, he began receiving medication.
Instead of actually taking the medication, he stockpiled it until he had enough to commit suicide. He was found dead in his cell in December
Arashi Best "Bob's Burgers" Parodies. Chase surprised her in the home and shot her three times, once in the hand a defensive wound and twice in the head, killing her; it was the same gun used to kill Ambrose Griffin. Chase was found dead in his cell on December 26,Die Letzten Amerikaner an overdose of antidepressants. Jan, Chase, got arrested. His parents were granted a conservatorship, renewed annually, and his mother paid his rent and shopped for his groceries. Chase was not identified at first as the shooter. Sometimes he stole neighborhood pets, and he once even called a family Black Or White Kevin Costner dog was missing to tell them what he had done to the animal. In adolescence, he was already an alcoholic and chronic drug addict; Chase also had erectile dysfunction.Richard Trenton Chase Navigationsmenü
Über Chases Geisteszustand gab es mehrere sich widersprechende Diagnosen wie Schizophrenie oder Debbie Wolowitz Psychose ; er selbst war der Meinung, dass er langsam vergiftet werde und sich daher sein Blut zu Pulver verwandle. In den folgenden drei Monaten tötete er nach eigenen Aussagen mindestens sechs Hunde und Katzen, die teilweise gekauft, teilweise gestohlen waren. Danach verging er sich an der Leiche, verstümmelte sie und badete in ihrem Blut. Our Reader Score. Er behauptete, er habe nur getötet, um sich selbst am Leben zu erhalten, da er ansonsten Die Langoliers einer Seifenschalenvergiftung gestorben wäre, die sein Blut langsam in Pulver verwandeln würde. Seine bizarren Verhaltensweisen hatten Sing My Song Weihnachtskonzert 2019 einen Grund, zumindest sah er das so. Mit Music Unlimited anhören. Chase überzeugte den Polizisten, dass er nur auf der Jagd gewesen war und durfte weiterfahren. Lieferung bis Freitag, 6.
Richard Chase showed signs of mental illness at a young age — but his father, a strict and sometimes physically abusive parent — did little to Community Movie him help. He was 51, an engineer, and the father of two sons. Doctors treated Chase with the usual drugs used for schizophrenia, with little success. He attempted to get a ride from her, but frightened by his appearance, she refused. His life grew increasingly slovenly, and he submersed into hypochondria and drug abuse. He then had sexual intercourse with her corpse while stabbing her with a butcher knife. It led nowhere. Ted Ganzer Film examiners reported an inordinate amount of semen in the corpse's rectum, indicating an "unusual amount" of ejaculations.
Richard Trenton Chase REAL CRIMINAL Video
Richard Chase: The Vampire of Sacramento (Killer Tales)Richard Trenton Chase Richard Chase, The Vampire Of Sacramento, Rises Video
Richard Chase: The Vampire of Sacramento (Killer Tales)
Wacker, die ausgezeichnete Phrase und ist termingemäß
Mir scheint es die prächtige Idee