Aileen Carol Wuornos
(February 29, 1956 – October 9, 2002) was an American
serial killer who
killed seven men in Florida
between 1989
and 1990, later claiming they raped or
attempted to rape her while she was working as a prostitute. She was convicted and
sentenced to death for six of the murders, and
executed via
lethal injection on
October 9, 2002.
Early life
Childhood
Wuornos
was born as Aileen Carol Pittman in Rochester,
Michigan
. She had one older brother named Keith, who
was born in February 1955. Her mother, Diane Pratt, was 15 years
old when she married Leo Dale Pittman on June 3, 1954. Less than
two years into marriage and two months before Wuornos was born,
Pratt filed for
divorce. Pittman was a
child molester who spent most of
his life in and out of prison. Wuornos never met her father, as he
was imprisoned for the rape and attempted murder of a
seven-year-old girl at the time of her birth. Leo Pittman
hanged himself in prison in 1969. In January 1960,
Pratt abandoned her children, leaving them with their maternal
grandparents – Lauri and Britta Wuornos. They were legally adopted
on March 18, 1960 by the Wuornoses and took their surname.
From a young age, Wuornos engaged in sex with multiple partners,
including her own brother. At the age of 13, she became
pregnant, claiming the pregnancy was a
result of being raped by an unknown man.
Wuornos gave birth at
a Detroit
home for
unwed mothers on March 23, 1971. The child, a son, was
placed for adoption. On July 7, 1971 Britta Wuornos died of
liver failure, after which Wuornos and
her brother became
wards of the court. At
age 15, Wuornos' grandfather threw her out of the house, and she
began supporting herself as a prostitute.
Early criminal career
On May 27,
1974, Wuornos was arrested in Jefferson County, Colorado
for drunk driving,
disorderly conduct, and firing a
.22-caliber pistol from a moving vehicle. She was later
charged with
failure to
appear.
In 1976,
Wuornos hitchhiked to Florida
, where she
met 70-year-old yacht club president Lewis Gratz Fell (June 28,
1907 — January 6, 2000). They married that same year, and
the news of their nuptials was printed in the local newspaper's
society pages. However, Wuornos continually involved herself in
confrontations at their local bar and was eventually sent to jail
for
assault. She also hit Fell with his own
cane, leading him to get a
restraining
order against her, after which she returned to Michigan.
On July
14, 1976, Wuornos was arrested in Antrim County,
Michigan
and charged with assault and disturbing the peace following an
incident in which she threw a cue ball at a bartender's
head. On July 17, her brother Keith died of
throat cancer and Wuornos acquired $10,000
from his
life insurance. Wuornos and
Fell divorced on July 21 after nine weeks of marriage.
On May 20, 1981, Wuornos was arrested in
Edgewater, Florida for the
armed robbery of a convenience store. She was
consequently sentenced to prison on May 4, 1982 and released on
June 30, 1983.
On May 1, 1984, Wuornos was arrested for
attempting to pass forged checks at a bank
in Key
West
. On November 30, 1985, she was named as a
suspect in the theft of a revolver and ammunition in
Pasco County.
On January
4, 1986, Wuornos was arrested in Miami
and charged
with grand theft auto, resisting
arrest and obstruction by false information (she provided
identification with the name Lori Grody, her aunt). Miami
police found a .38-caliber revolver and a box of ammunition in the
stolen car.
On June 2, 1986, Volusia County
deputies detained Wuornos for questioning after a
male companion accused her of pulling a gun in his car and
demanding $200. Wuornos was found to be carrying spare
ammunition and a .22 pistol was discovered beneath the passenger
seat she occupied.
Around
this time, Wuornos met Tyria Moore, a hotel maid, at a Daytona
gay bar. They moved
in together, and Wuornos supported them with her prostitution
earnings.
On July 4, 1987, Daytona Beach
police detained Wuornos and Moore at a bar for
questioning regarding an incident in which they were accused of
assault and battery with a beer
bottle. On March 12, 1988, Wuornos accused a Daytona Beach
bus driver of assault. She claimed that he pushed her off the bus
following a confrontation. Moore was listed as a witness to the
incident.
Murders
- Richard Mallory, 51 – November 30, 1989:
Wuornos' first victim was an electronics store owner in Clearwater
, a convicted rapist whom she claimed she killed in
self-defense. A Volusia
County
deputy found Mallory's abandoned vehicle on
December 1, 1989. Mallory's body was not found until
December 13, several miles away in a wooded area. He had been shot
several times.
- Dick Humphreys, 56 – May 19, 1990: Humphreys was a retired
Air Force major, a former child abuse investigator for the state of
Florida and former police chief. His body was found on September
12, 1990. He was fully clothed, and was shot six times in the head
and torso. His car was found in Suwannee
County
.
- David
Spears, 43: Spears was a Winter Garden
construction worker whose nude body was found on
June 1, 1990, along Highway 19 in Citrus County
. He had been shot six times.
- Charles Carskaddon, 40 – May 31, 1990: Carskaddon was a
part-time rodeo worker. His body was found June 6, 1990, in Pasco
County
. He had been shot nine times with a small
caliber weapon.
- Peter
Siems, 65: Siems left Jupiter
, traveling to New Jersey
in June 1990. His car was found in
Orange
Springs
on July 4, 1990. Tyria Moore and Aileen
Wuornos were identified as being the persons who left the car where
it was found. A palm print belonging to Wuornos was found on the
interior door handle. His body was never found.
- Troy
Burress, 50 – July 30, 1990: Burress was a sausage salesman from
Ocala
.
He was
reported missing on July 31, 1990 but was not found until August 4,
1990 in a wooded area along State Road 19 in Marion
County
. He had been shot twice.
- Walter Jeno (Gino) Antonio, 62 – November
19, 1990: Antonio's nearly nude body was found on November 19, 1990
near a remote logging road in Dixie County
. He had been shot four times. His car was found in
Brevard
County
five days later.
Justice system
Apprehension and sentencing
Wuornos and Moore abandoned Peter Siems' car after they were
involved in an accident on July 4, 1990, after which Wuornos' palm
print was found. Witnesses who had seen the women driving the
victims' cars provided police with their names and descriptions,
resulting in a media campaign to locate them. Police also found
some of the victims' belongings in pawnshops and retrieved
fingerprints, which matched those found in the victims' cars and on
Wuornos' arrest record.
On January 9, 1991, Wuornos was arrested on an outstanding warrant
at The Last Resort, a biker bar in Volusia County.
Police located Moore
the next day in Scranton, Pennsylvania
. She agreed to get a confession from Wuornos
in exchange for
prosecutorial
immunity Moore returned with police to Florida, where she was
put up in a motel. Under police guidance, Moore made numerous
telephone calls to Wuornos, pleading for help in clearing her name.
Three days later, on January 16, 1991, Wuornos confessed to the
murders. She claimed the men had tried to rape her and she killed
them in
self-defense.
Wuornos went to trial for the murder of Richard Mallory on January
14, 1992. Prior bad acts are normally inadmissible in criminal
trials, but under Florida's
Williams
Rule, the prosecution was allowed to introduce evidence related
to her other crimes in order to show a pattern of illegal acts.
Wuornos was convicted for Richard Mallory's murder on January 27,
1992 with help from Moore's testimony. At her sentencing,
psychiatrists for the defense testified that Wuornos was mentally
unstable and had been diagnosed with
borderline personality
disorder. She was sentenced to death on January 31, 1992.
On March 31, 1992, Wuornos pleaded
no
contest to the murders of Dick Humphreys, Troy Burress and
David Spears, saying she wanted to "get right with God". In her
statement to the court, she averred, "I wanted to confess to you
that Richard Mallory did violently rape me as I've told you. But
these others did not. [They] only began to start to." On May 15,
1992, Wuornos was given three more death sentences.
In June 1992, Wuornos pleaded guilty to the murder of Charles
Carskaddon and received her fifth death sentence in November 1992.
The
defense made efforts during the trial to introduce evidence that
Mallory had been tried for intent to commit rape in another state,
and that he had been committed to a maximum security correctional
facility in Maryland
which provided remediation to sexual offenders. Records obtained
from that institution reflected that from 1958 to 1962, Mallory was
committed for treatment and observation resulting from a criminal
charge of assault with intent to rape, and received an overall
eight years of treatment from the facility. The judge refused to
allow this to be admitted in court as evidence and denied Wuornos'
request for a
retrial.
In February 1993, Wuornos pleaded guilty to the murder of Walter
Gino Antonio and was sentenced to death again. No charges were
brought against her for the murder of Peter Siems, as his body was
never found. In all, she received six death sentences.
Wuornos told several inconsistent stories about the killings. She
claimed initially that all seven men had raped her while she was
working as a prostitute then later recanted the claim of
self-defense. During an interview with filmmaker
Nick Broomfield in which she thought the
cameras were off, she told him that it was in fact self-defense,
but she could not stand being on
death row
— where she had been for 12 years at that point — and wanted to
die.
Execution
Wuornos'
appeal to the U.S.
Supreme
Court
was denied in 1996. In 2001, she announced
that she would not issue any further appeals against her death
sentence.
She petitioned the Florida
Supreme Court
for the right to fire her legal counsel and stop
all appeals, saying, "I killed those men, robbed them as cold as
ice. And I'd do it again, too. There's no chance in keeping
me alive or anything, because I'd kill again. I have hate crawling
through my system...I am so sick of hearing this 'she's crazy'
stuff. I've been evaluated so many times. I'm competent, sane, and
I'm trying to tell the truth. I'm one who seriously hates human
life and would kill again." Some argued that she was in no state
for them to honor such a request.
Florida Governor Jeb Bush instructed three
psychiatrists to give Wuornos a 15-minute
interview. The
test for
competency requires the psychiatrist(s) to be convinced that
the condemned person understands that they will die and for which
crime(s) they are being executed. All three judged her mentally fit
to be executed.
Wuornos later started accusing the prison matrons of
abusing her. She accused them of tainting her
food, spitting on it, serving her potatoes cooked in dirt, and her
food arriving with urine. She also claimed overhearing
conversations about "trying to get me so pushed over the brink by
them I'd wind up committing
suicide before
the [execution]" and "wishing to rape me before execution." She
also complained of strip searches, being handcuffed so tightly that
her wrists bruised any time she left her cell, door kicking,
frequent window checks by matrons, low water pressure,
mildew on her mattress and "cat calling ... in
distaste and a pure hatred towards me." Wuornos threatened to
boycott showers and food trays when specific officers were on duty.
"In the meantime, my stomach's growling away and I'm taking showers
through the sink of my cell."
Her attorney stated that "Ms. Wuornos really just wants to have
proper treatment, humane treatment until the day she's executed,"
and "If the allegations don't have any truth to them, she's clearly
delusional. She believes what she's
written".
During the final stages of the appeal process she gave a series of
interviews to Broomfield. In her final interview shortly before her
execution she claimed that her mind was being controlled by "sonic
pressure" to make her appear crazy and described her impending
death to being taken away by
angels on a space
ship. When Broomfield attempted to get her to speak about her
earlier claims to have killed her victims in self-defense, Wuornos
became livid, cursed Broomfield, and terminated the interview. She
began her attack on Broomfield by saying, "You sabotaged my ass,
society, and the cops, and the system. A raped woman got executed,
and was used for books and movies and shit." Her final words on
camera were "Thanks a lot, society, for railroading my ass."
Broomfield later met Dawn Botkins, a childhood friend of Wuornos',
who told him, "She's sorry, Nick. She didn't give you the finger.
She gave the media the finger, and then the attorneys the finger.
And she knew if she said much more, it could make a difference on
her execution tomorrow, so she just decided not to."
Wuornos was executed by
lethal
injection on October 9, 2002. She was the tenth woman in the
United States to be executed since the
Supreme Court lifted the ban on capital
punishment in 1976, and the second woman ever executed in Florida.
She declined a
last meal and instead was
given a cup of coffee. Her final statement before the execution was
"Yes, I would just like to say I'm sailing with the rock, and I'll
be back, like Independence Day with
Jesus.
June 6, like the movie. Big mother ship and all, I'll be back, I'll
be back."
After death
After her execution, Wuornos was
cremated.
Her ashes were taken by Dawn Botkins to her native Michigan and
spread beneath a tree. She requested that
Natalie Merchant's song "
Carnival" be played at her funeral. Natalie
Merchant commented on this when asked why her song was played
during the credits of the documentary
Aileen: Life and Death
of a Serial Killer:
Broomfield later stated:
About Wuornos
Books
FBI
profiler Robert K. Ressler mentioned Wuornos only briefly in
his autobiographical history of his 20 years with the FBI. Writing
in 1992, he said he often does not discuss female serial killers
because they tend to kill in sprees instead of in a sequential
fashion. He noted Wuornos as the sole exception. Ressler, who
coined the phrase
serial killer to
describe murderers seeking personal gratification, does not apply
it to women killing in
postpartum
psychosis or to any murderer acting solely for financial gain,
such as women who have killed a series of boarders or
spouses.
Documentaries
Filmmaker
Nick Broomfield directed
two documentaries about Wuornos:
Wuornos was the subject of an episode of the documentary TV series
Biography.
Film
The
2003 film Monster, starring
Charlize Theron and
Christina Ricci, tells Wuornos' story from
the moment she met Selby Wall (based on Tyria Moore) until her
first conviction for murder. Theron received the 2003
Academy Award for Best
Actress for her portrayal.
Jean Smart portrayed Wuornos in the 1992
TV movie
Overkill: The Aileen Wuornos Story.
Opera
An
operatic adaptation of Wuornos' life events
premiered at San
Francisco
's Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts
on June 22, 2001. Entitled
Wuornos,
the opera was written by
composer/
librettist Carla
Lucero, conducted by Mary Chun, and produced by the
Jon Sims Center for the
Performing Arts.
References
- The legal term is transactional immunity, meaning
complete immunity for crime or crimes committed. This is in
contrast to what is known as use immunity which prevents prosecutors from
using self-incriminating testimony before a grand jury.
- Stewart, Helen. "Monstrous end to tragic story".
The
Scotsman. 9 May 2004
- Cheshire, Godfrey. "Charlize Theron's career-making performance anchors a
harrowing tale". Independent Weekly. 14 Jan 2004
- Hall, K, ed. The Oxford Guide to the Supreme Court of the
United States. pages 323-4. Oxford University Press.
- Ressler, Robert K. and Tom Schachtman. Whoever Fights
Monsters: My Twenty Years Hunting Serial Killers for the FBI.
New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992, at p. 83. ISBN 0312078838.
- The Serial Killer Files by Harold Schecter ISBN
978-0-345-46566-5
Bibliography
External links