
John Wayne Gacy
(Killings between 1972 and 1978)
A respected member of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, a precinct
captain in the local Democratic party, the owner of a contracting
business and a performing joker at children's parties, John Wayne Gacy
is as normal as they come.
He came to be known as one of the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history.
Gacy was born on March 17th 1942 in Chicago, Illinois. His father was
an abusive alcoholic who degraded him, but he got along well with his
mother and two sisters. He developed a blood clot on the brain stemming
from an accidental head injury as a child and suffered from blackouts.
He later got married and had two kids, but his wife left him when he
was arrested for trying to coerce a fellow employee into homosexual
acts.He was always surrounded by young boys and supposedly made passes at
the ones that worked under him. In 1968, he as indicted for committing
sodomy to a minor named Mark Miller. Miller told the court that Gacy
tricked him into being tied up at Gacy's house and raped him. Gacy
defended himself by saying that Miller willingly had sex with him for
money and that Jaycee members against his campaign were trying to set
him up
.
A few months later, he was charged with hiring a man named Dwight
Andersson to beat up Mark Miller. He offered three hundred dollars to
Andersson to lure Miller to his car, drive him out of town, and spray
mace in his eyes before beating him. However, Miller fought back,
breaking Andersson's nose and running to safety. Andersson was arrested
and told the police about Gacy hiring him.
Gacy was ordered to have a psychiatric evaluation to determine if he
was competent to stand trial. Gacy was found to be antisocial, but
competent to go to trial, pleading guilty to the sodomy charges. Gacy
was given ten years at the Iowa State Reformatory and his wife divorced
him. In prison, he was well-behaved and given parole after eighteen
months. On June 18, 1970, Gacy was released and moved back to his
hometown of Chicago.
In 1972, Gacy married a woman named Carole Hoff, who was aware of his
crimes, yet believed he had changed. Carole had two daughters and they
moved into Gacy's new home. The neighbors began to notice a terrible
odor in the house, but Gacy blamed it on a moisture buildup in the
crawlspace.
In 1974, he started a business called PDM Contractors, which
performed painting and maintenance tasks. All of his employees were
young teenage boys and Gacy justified it by saying that it kept costs
down. However, Gacy was frequently attempting to seduce the boys and
his homosexual desires slowly made Carole drift away from him.
By 1975, Gacy and his wife were no longer having sex and Gacy became
very unpredictable. He would frequently have tantrums and throw things
around the house. He was rarely home at night and Carole found
magazines with naked men and boys laying around. Gacy admitted that he
liked boys more than women and they divorced in 1976.
Gacy started taking on jobs as "Pogo the Clown" to entertain
children and was given a job as secretary treasurer in the street
lighting commission. Gacy continued to cause problems with his sexual
advances, approaching a young boy named Tony Antonucci who fought his
advances with a chair. A month later, Gacy attempted to handcuff the
boy and undress him at his house, but the boy wrestled loose and
handcuffed Gacy, making him promise that he would never touch him again.
Gacy began to cause more problems when boys that worked for him
started disappearing. A number of his employees had gone missing before
the police brought him in for questioning. Gacy denied any knowledge of
the boys' whereabouts, but the police ran a background check and,
finding the sodomy charges, obtained a search warrant for Gacy's house.
On December 13, 1978, the police entered his house and found plenty
of incriminating evidence such as child pornography, handcuffs, rubber
dildos, and ropes. After being unable to charge Gacy on anything other
than drug possession, the police did some intense interrogations and
began to discover that some of the evidence had belonged to the boys
that disappeared. They questioned Gacy further, who admitted that he
had killed someone in self-defense and buried them beneath his garage.
The police eventually found nearly thirty bodies on Gacy's property,
as well as several other in nearby areas, such as the river. Police
discovered a total of thirty-three bodies and Gacy's trial began on
February 6, 1980. Gacy was found guilty after a short trial and
sentenced to death by lethal injection. On May 10, 1994, after a failed
appeal, he was executed, ending a criminal legacy that horrified the
nation.
"A clown can get away with murder." ~ John Wayne Gacy