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Ted Bundy

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By crazyhorsesghost


Who Was Ted Bundy

Theodore Robert "Ted" Bundy (November 24, 1946 – January 23, 1989) was one of the most notorious murderers in U.S. history. A serial killer, rapist, and necrophiliac, Bundy murdered scores of young women across the United States between 1974 and 1978. His total number of victims remains unknown to this day, and there is some speculation that he first began to murder in 1961 at age 15. After more than a decade of vigorous denials, Bundy eventually confessed to over 30 murders. Bundy is considered by some to be the archetypal serial killer, with the term "serial killer" having been coined to describe his crimes.

Bundy is believed to have been a sociopath. He is usually described as an educated and charming young man despite the brutality of his crimes. Typically, he raped then murdered, or murdered then raped, young women and girls by bludgeoning them, and sometimes by strangulation.

Ted Bundy

Ted Bundy
Ted Bundy

The Ted Bundy Ghost Story

In April of 2001 a guard retired from the Florida State Prison at Raiford, Florida. With the condition that no one reveal his name he told a story to a Tampa Newpaper reporter that was strange and spooky.

Ghost Of Ted Bundy Setting In The Electric Chair

He stated that shortly after Ted Bundy was put to death in the Florida Electric chair that guards including himself would go into the room where the electric chair was located and there would be Ted setting in the chair. He would not be strapped in or or anything he would just be setting there smiling at who ever came in the room like he knew a secret. When you would approach the chair or speak he would simply vanish. At one point the former guard said it got so bad that you could not get a guard to go into the room. Other guards began to report that they would see Ted in the area of his former cell where he spent the last hours of his life. Some claimed he spoke to them and all reported he said the same thing. It was " Well I beat all of you didn't I " The former guard said the Warden and Wardens staff went guard to guard and told them that any guard who reported what was going on at the prison would be fired. Several didn't have to be warned they quit after seeing Ted a time or two.

And the former guard said Ted was not the only ghost out at Starke haunting the prison.

Harmonica Playing Ghost At Florida State Prisons Death Row

Over the years several times stories of other ghosts had slipped out. He said another ghost seen by everyone at the prison was the ghost of Charlie Grifford who was 72 when executed in the Electric Chair Feb. 21 1989. Charlie plays the Harmonica. and guards on many occasins in the middle of the night have hunted for the man playing the Harmonica. Of course no one is. John Spenkelink a inmate who was executed in 1979 told on several occasins to anyone that would listen that Charlie Grifford's ghost spent time on several occasins in his cell with him telling him that he Charlie Grifford was innocent and that he was going to haunt the prison until his name was cleared. Prison officials said Spenkelink was trying to escape execution by playing crazy. And of course Charlie Grifford has never came foward with any information.

It only stands to reason that if you were innocent and executed by the State of Florida you might want to hang around and try to get even. A lot of the time where ghosts are reported it is associated with people who have died tragic deaths or people who won't pass on to the other side because they feel they still have something left to do in this life.

Ted Bundy

Bundy loses his temper during the Orlando trial for the murder of 12 year old Kimberly Leach.
Bundy loses his temper during the Orlando trial for the murder of 12 year old Kimberly Leach.

The Rest Of The Ted Bundy Story

Biography

Youth

Bundy was born on November 24, 1946, at the Elizabeth Lund Home For Unwed Mothers, where his mother lived, in Burlington, Vermont. His mother, Eleanor Louise Cowell, was a young department store clerk. His father's identity has never been authoritatively established. For the first nine years of his life, Bundy and his mother lived in Philadelphia with his maternal grandfather who, according to some family members, was mentally unstable and prone to violence. To avoid the stigma of an illegitimate pregnancy, many neighbors and friends were told that Eleanor's parents had adopted Bundy, and that he was actually Eleanor's younger brother. According to sources, Bundy was led to believe that his mother was actually his older sister throughout most of his childhood and adolescence.

Much speculation has been placed on Bundy's early formative years, though little is definitively known. However, in a 1987 court competency hearing, a psychologist who had interviewed Bundy related an incident involving his Aunt Julia in which she woke from a nap to find that her body was surrounded by knives, which someone had placed around her while she slept. When Julia looked up, she noticed her nephew, Ted Bundy, standing at the foot of her bed and smiling. Bundy was three years old at the time.

Bundy and his mother eventually moved to Tacoma, Washington, where Eleanor's uncle Jack taught music at the University of Puget Sound. Not long thereafter, she married Johnny Culpepper Bundy, a hospital cook from Pasquotank County, North Carolina, whom she met at a church social function.

Bundy was a good student at Woodrow Wilson High School, and was active in the local Methodist Church and the Boy Scouts. However, as he told Stephen Michaud and Hugh Aynesworth, authors of The Only Living Witness, he had no natural sense of how to get along with other people. "I didn't know what made people want to be friends. I didn't know what made people attractive to one another. I didn't know what underlay social interactions." Bundy remained shy and introverted throughout most of his high school and early college years.

Bundy's criminal activities began at an early age, before he was even out of high school. He was a compulsive thief, a shoplifter, and on his way to becoming an amateur con artist. He was arrested twice as a juvenile, though these records were later expunged.

Bundy described the part of himself that, from a very young age, was fascinated by images of sex and violence as "the entity," and kept it very well hidden. However, by the time Bundy was talking about "other selves" he was trying to appeal his death sentence. Later, friends and acquaintances would remember a handsome, articulate young man. Bundy worked and campaigned for the Washington State Republican Party as an adult. He also worked as a volunteer at a Seattle suicide crisis center, alongside fledgling crime reporter Ann Rule. Ironically, at the time Rule wrote articles on the "Ted" murders that, unbeknownst to her, her young friend was committing. (Rule would go on to write a biography of Bundy, The Stranger Beside Me.)

Bundy had one serious relationship with a college freshman whom Rule referred to by the pseudonym "Stephanie Brooks." She ended the relationship, fed up with what she described as Bundy's immaturity and lack of ambition, and they separated for a period of roughly two years. He eventually came back into her life with a new look and attitude as a serious, dedicated professional man who had been accepted to law school; he courted her once more and then proposed, an offer she accepted. Two days later, Bundy unceremoniously dumped her by ceasing to return her phone calls. He would later dismiss the proposal and break-up as part of a challenge he undertook, saying "I just wanted to prove to myself that I could have her." It was shortly after this final breakup that Bundy began a homicidal rampage lasting three years. In her book, Rule notes that most of Bundy's victims had long straight hair parted in the middle just like Brooks, and speculates that Bundy's teeming resentment towards his first girlfriend was a motivating factor in his string of murders.

First murders

Among the still unanswered questions regarding Ted Bundy is when he began to kill. Many Bundy experts, including Rule and former King County detective Robert D. Keppel, believe Bundy may have started killing as far back as his early teens: an eight-year-old girl from Tacoma, Ann Marie Burr, vanished from her home in Bundy's neighborhood in 1961, when Bundy was 14. However, Bundy denied killing Burr, even after confessing to many other murders. His earliest confirmed murders were committed in 1974, when he was 27.

Shortly after midnight on January 4, 1974, Bundy entered the basement bedroom of an 18-year-old student at the University of Washington, Joni Lenz, and bludgeoned her with a metal rod from her bedframe while she slept. Bundy also sexually assaulted Lenz with a speculum (a gynecological tool). Lenz was found the next morning in a coma, with the speculum rammed deep into her vagina, and lying in a pool of her own blood. She survived the attack and had no memory of it, but suffered permanent brain damage.

Bundy's next victim was Lynda Ann Healy, a senior at the University of Washington and roommate of a friend of Bundy's. On January 31, 1974, Bundy broke into Healy's basement room, knocked her unconscious, dressed her in jeans and a shirt, wrapped her in a bed sheet, and carried her away. A year would pass before her decapitated remains were found in the mountains east of Seattle.

On March 12, 1974, Bundy kidnapped and murdered nineteen-year old Evergreen State University student Donna Gail Manson on her way to a jazz concert on campus.

Bundy's next victim was Georgeann Hawkins, a student at the University of Washington and a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, an on-campus sorority. In the early morning hours of June 11, 1974, she walked from her boyfriend's dormitory residence to her sorority house, a distance of approximately 90 feet. She was last seen by one of her boyfriend's fraternity members approximately halfway down the alley that separated the two buildings. A campus housemother reported hearing a scream around the time Hawkins left her boyfriend's room, though she initially believed it was due to students playing a joke and went back to sleep. Hawkins was never seen again.

Bundy confessed to Hawkins's murder shortly before his 1989 execution, stating that he was waiting in a parking lot behind Hawkins's sorority house, using crutches and pretending to have trouble carrying his briefcase to his car. Hawkins agreed to assist him, and he walked her to his waiting Volkswagen Beetle where he had laid a crowbar by the tire. When they approached the vehicle, Bundy hit Hawkins over her head, knocking her unconscious. He then handcuffed her, pulled her into his vehicle, and sped away. Bundy said that Hawkins awoke during a drive through the mountains and began talking to Bundy. During his confession to King County Detective Robert Keppel, Bundy stated that he thought it was strange some of the things his victims said to him prior to him murdering them. Bundy stated that Hawkins awoke and told him that she thought Bundy had come to help tutor her for a Spanish test she had to take the next day. He then knocked her unconscious again before strangling her to death with a piece of cord just as the sun was coming up. After the murder, Bundy said he panicked and began throwing out evidence from his car as he was driving away, including the briefcase, handcuffs, crowbar, and crutches. Regarding his decision to throw these items away, Bundy said, "I'd get mad at myself a few weeks later because I'd have to go out and buy another pair. I mean, it's not comical, but that's what would happen." Bundy claimed that one of Hawkins's bones had been discovered on September 6, 1974, approximately two miles from Lake Sammamish State Park in Washington, though her remains have never been identified.

In the first half of 1974, Bundy stalked and killed at least eight young women in Washington State. Bundy's killing spree culminated on July 14 with the abduction, in broad daylight, of Janice Ott and Denise Naslund from Lake Sammamish State Park near Seattle. Five different women would testify about that day and about a man wearing a white tennis outfit and with his arm in a sling who called himself "Ted." The witnesses said the man had approached each of them asking for help unloading a sailboat from his car. One went with Bundy as far as his Volkswagen, where there was no sailboat, before refusing to accompany him further. Two more witnesses testified to seeing the man approach Janice Ott with the story about the sailboat, and to seeing Ott walk away from the beach in his company—the last time she was ever seen alive.

From the description of the individual described by witnesses at Lake Sammamish, King County detectives were able to get a description both of the suspect and his brown Volkswagen Beetle. Both Ted's girlfriend, Liz Kendall (a pseudonym) and Ann Rule reported him as a possible suspect, but the King County police, deluged with hundreds of tips, did not have any reason to pick out the unassuming Bundy from the long list of leads to be investigated.

The remains of Janice Ott and Denise Naslund were discovered months later at a site near the park. Additionally, an extra thigh femur bone and vertebra were found at the site, but police did not know to whom they belonged, though evidence would later suggest they belonged to Georgeann Hawkins.

That autumn, Bundy moved to Utah to attend law school in Salt Lake City, where he resumed killing in October. Nancy Wilcox disappeared on October 2. On October 18, Bundy murdered Melissa Smith, the 17-year-old daughter of Midvale police chief Louis Smith. Bundy raped, sodomized, and strangled Smith. Her body was found nine days later.

Next was Laura Aime, also 17, who disappeared when she left a Halloween party in Lehi, Utah on October 31, 1974. Her remains were found nearly a month later, by hikers on Thanksgiving Day, on the banks of a river in the American Fork Canyon. She was found naked, beaten beyond recognition, sodomized, and strangled with her own sock.

Further murders, first trial, and Bundy's escape

Bundy smiles as he is placed under oath at his murder trial, February 1976

Enlarge

Bundy smiles as he is placed under oath at his murder trial, February 1976

In Murray, Utah, on November 8, 1974, Carol DaRonch narrowly escaped with her life. Claiming to be Officer Roseland of the Murray Police Department, Bundy lured DaRonch into his car where he then attempted to slap a pair of handcuffs on her. Fortunately for DaRonch, he only got one wrist. She wrenched her door open with the other hand, rolled out of the car onto the highway and escaped with contusions to the head given to her via a blunt instrument that Bundy had taped underneath the car seat.

Frustrated in his attempt to kill DaRonch, Bundy snatched Debbie Kent, who was attending a school play in Bountiful, Utah, mere hours later. Kent, 17, disappeared after leaving the school play. She had left early and alone to pick her brother up, but her car never left the parking lot. Residents nearby reported hearing screams from the area of the lot, and a handcuff key that fit the cuffs left on DaRonch's wrist was later found on the ground nearby. Bundy had been clearly seen lurking in the back of the auditorium where the play was held and had boldly appeared backstage, confronting a drama teacher, Raelynn Shepard, with the demand that she accompany him to the parking lot with him to allegedly identify a vehicle—the same ruse Bundy had tried earlier in the day with DaRonch. Kent's body has never been found.

In 1975, while still attending law school at the University of Utah, Bundy shifted his crimes to Colorado. Caryn Campbell disappeared from the Wildwood Inn at Snowmass, Colorado, on January 12 where she had been vacationing with her husband. Her body was found on February 17. Julie Cunningham disappeared on March 15, and Denise Oliverson on April 6. Lynette Culver went missing in Pocatello, Idaho on May 6. Back in Utah, Susan Curtis vanished on June 28. The bodies of Cunningham and Oliverson have never been recovered.

Bundy was arrested on August 16, 1975, in Salt Lake City, for failure to stop for a police officer. A search of his car revealed a ski mask, a crowbar, handcuffs, trash bags, and other items that were thought by the police to be burglary tools. Bundy was arrested for this charge on 21 August. Utah police connected Bundy and his Volkswagen with the DaRonch kidnapping and with the murdered and missing women in Utah and Colorado. Following a week-long trial, Bundy was convicted of DaRonch's kidnapping on March 1, 1976. He was sentenced to 15 years in Utah State Prison. Colorado authorities, however, were pursuing their murder cases.

On June 7, 1977, in preparation for a hearing in the Caryn Campbell murder trial, Bundy was transported to the Pitkin County courthouse. During a court recess, he was allowed to visit the courthouse's law library. Bundy then jumped out of the building from a second-story window and escaped. The two-story fall injured Bundy's ankle, which caused him to remain in the area, and he was recaptured a week later. Back in jail awaiting the start of his trial, Bundy escaped again. He somehow acquired a hacksaw and, over time, sawed a square hole in the ceiling of his cell in the Glenwood Springs, Colorado, lockup. On the night of December 30, 1977, Bundy climbed out of the hole, managed to walk right out of the jail's front door (the jailer was out for the evening) and reach the main hallway. Bundy stole a car in the parking lot and drove off.

Bundy's final rampage — Florida

With around $510 in cash given to him by his friends during jail visits, Bundy bought a one-way plane ticket and flew TWA from Denver to Chicago the night he escaped. He then caught an Amtrak train to Ann Arbor, Michigan and stole a car that he abandoned in Atlanta before boarding a bus for Tallahassee, Florida. There, he rented a room at a boarding house under the alias of "Chris Hagen" and FSU graduate "Ken Misner", and committed numerous petty crimes including shoplifting, purse snatching, and auto theft, though he later professed that he had been determined to not so much as jaywalk while on the lam from prison. Despite his attempts to stop himself, Bundy was only in Tallahassee for six days when in the early hours of Super Bowl Sunday on January 15, 1978, he bludgeoned to death two sleeping women, Lisa Levy and Margaret Bowman, and seriously wounded Karen Chandler and Kathry Kleiner inside their Florida State University Chi Omega sorority house. He then clubbed and severely injured another young woman, Cheryl Thomas, in her home a few blocks away.

Levy and Bowman had been bludgeoned and strangled. Levy's right collarbone had been broken by a tremendous blow. There was a double bite mark on her left buttock where her killer had torn at her with his teeth, leaving four distinct sets of marks where his teeth had sunk in. (This bite mark would be pivotal evidence against Bundy during his 1979 trial.) Bowman had been struck repeatedly on the right side of her head so viciously that broken pieces of her skull were driven into her brain. The force dealt to Bowman's skull was so tremendous that her brain had been slammed against the left side of her skull when she was struck with the oak club on the right. A Hanes "Alive" pantyhose ligature cut from Bowman's neck had been buried so deep that it could be hardly seen in the flesh. Neither girl had any damage to their hands or nails, indicating that they had not been able to defend themselves in any way.

On February 9, 1978, Bundy traveled to Lake City, Florida. While there, he abducted, raped and murdered 12-year-old Kimberly Leach, throwing her body under a small shed. She would be his final victim. Shortly after 1 a.m. on February 15, Bundy was stopped by Pensacola police officer David Lee. When the officer called in a check of Bundy's license plate, the orange VW he was driving came up as stolen. Bundy then scuffled with the officer before he was finally subdued. On the way to the jail, Officer Lee said that Bundy had told him that he wished that Lee had just killed him. Lee said he did not know why Bundy, who was using a stolen identity, was so upset because he was only being charged with possession of a stolen vehicle. Before long, Bundy was identified and taken to Miami to stand trial for the FSU murders.

Conviction and execution

Bundy loses his temper during the Orlando trial for the murder of 12 year old Kimberly Leach.

Enlarge

Bundy loses his temper during the Orlando trial for the murder of 12 year old Kimberly Leach.

Bundy's trial for the Chi Omega murders was held from June 25 to July 31, 1979. Despite his five court-appointed defense lawyers, Bundy represented himself as his own legal counsel, even cross-examining witnesses. He was convicted on all counts. Judge Edward Cowart said, when sentencing Bundy to death:

"It is ordered that you be put to death by a current of electricity, that current be passed through your body until you are dead. Take care of yourself, young man. I say that to you sincerely; take care of yourself, please. It is an utter tragedy for this court to see such a total waste of humanity as I've experienced in this courtroom. You're an intelligent young man. You'd have made a good lawyer, and I would have loved to have you practice in front of me, but you went another way, partner. Take care of yourself. I don't feel any animosity toward you. I want you to know that. Once again, take care of yourself."

After the Chi Omega trial, Bundy was tried for the Kimberly Leach murder in 1980. He was again convicted on all counts and sentenced to death. During his trial for the Kimberly Leach murder, while Bundy was acting as his own attorney, he married former coworker Carole Ann Boone in the courtroom as the trial was being conducted. During his incarceration, Bundy received about two hundred fan letters each day from female admirers.

In October 1982, Boone gave birth to a girl. Eventually, however, Boone moved away, divorced Bundy, and changed her and her daughter's last name. Both of their whereabouts are today unknown.

In the years Bundy was on death row (at Florida State Prison), he was often visited by Special Agent William Hagmaier of the FBI's Behavioral Sciences Unit. Bundy would come to confide in Hagmaier, going so far as to call him his best friend. Eventually, Bundy confessed to Hagmaier many details of the murders that had until then been unknown or unconfirmed.

In 1984, the very manipulative Bundy, likely hoping for some leverage in delaying his death sentence, contacted former King County homicide detective Robert D. Keppel and offered to assist in the ongoing search for the Green River Killer by providing his own insights and analysis. Keppel and Green River Task Force detective Dave Reichert traveled to Florida's death row to interview Bundy. Both detectives later stated that these interviews were of little actual help in the Green River investigation; they provided far greater insight into Bundy's own mind, and were primarily pursued in the hope of learning the details of unsolved murders that Bundy was suspected of committing but had never been charged with, let alone tried or convicted.

Bundy contacted Keppel again in 1988. With his appeals exhausted and execution imminent, Bundy confessed to eight official unsolved murders in Washington State, for which he was the prime suspect. Bundy told Keppel that there were actually five bodies left on Taylor Mountain, and not four as they had originally thought. Bundy said that the fifth body was that of Donna Manson, the Evergreen State University student missing since 1974. Bundy also admitted that the extra femur bone and vertabrae discovered beside the road two miles from Lake Sammamish State Park was all that was left of Georgeann Hawkins. After the interview, Keppel reported that he had been shocked in speaking with Bundy, and that he was the kind of man who was "born to kill". Keppel stated:

"He described the Issaquah crime scene (where Janice Ott, Denise Naslund, and Georgeann Hawkins had been left) and it was almost like he was just there. Like he was seeing everything. He was infatuated with the idea because he spent so much time there. He is just totally consumed with murder all the time."

Bundy had hoped that he could manipulate the revelations and partial confessions into another stay of execution or possibly commutation to life imprisonment. At one point, a legal advocate working for Bundy, Linda Barker, had asked many of the families of the victims to fax letters to the Florida governor and ask mercy for Bundy in order to find out where the remains of their loved ones were. To a person, all the families refused. Keppel and others reported that Bundy gave scant detail about his crimes during his confessions, and promised to reveal more and other body dump sites if he were given "more time". The ploy failed and Bundy was executed on schedule.

The night before Bundy was executed, he gave a television interview to Dr. James Dobson, head of the evangelical Christian organization Focus on the Family. During the interview, Bundy made repeated claims as to the pornographic "roots" behind his sexually driven violence. He stated that, while pornography didn't cause him to commit his crimes, the consumption of violent pornography helped "shape and mold" his violence into "behavior too terrible to describe." He said that he felt that violence in the media, "particularly sexualized violence," sent boys "down the road to being Ted Bundys". In the same interview, hours before his execution, Bundy stated:[1]

"You are going to kill me, and that will protect society from me. But out there are many, many more people who are addicted to pornography, and you are doing nothing about that."

While embraced by Dobson and others, many found Bundy's allegations to be fabricated and another last ditch effort to elicit sympathy. According to Hagmaier, Bundy also contemplated suicide in the days leading up to his execution, but eventually decided against it.

At 7:06 a.m. on January 24, 1989, 42-year-old Ted Bundy was executed in the electric chair, "Old Sparky", by the State of Florida for the murder of Kimberly Leach. His last words were, "I'd like you to give my love to my family and friends." Then, more than 2,000 volts were sent through his body for less than two minutes. He was pronounced dead at 7:16 a.m.

A&E Biography - Ted Bundy - Part 1

A&E Biography - Ted Bundy - Part 2

A&E Biography - Ted Bundy - Part 3

A&E Biography - Ted Bundy - Part 4

A&E Biography - Ted Bundy - Part 5

What Do You Think About Ted Bundy. What Made Him Do What He Did

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Angela Harris profile image

Angela Harris  says:
14 months ago

He was a true monster, evil incarnate. I guess no one will ever know what made him so evil.

BrainFire profile image

BrainFire  says:
14 months ago

I believe he was severely Chemically, and Hormonally Imbalanced frorm Child on. It was left unattended, and never addressed as problem. Coupled with the fact that he was shuffled around, didn't know who his mother was, among many other factorrs. Mix all of that together...and you have a ticking time bomb.

When Chemical/Hormonal issues are left to festerr, it actually alters our personalities permanently, unles you correct in time. I have personal experience with the positive results that can be achieved when manipulating the bodies chemical make up. It changes everything.

I have trouble finding the right words to describe just how incredibly important it is. It's absolutely critical people aknowledge this main aspect of the human bodies ability to function. Without that main component being in place, correctly...This is the result we have to look forward to in our unravelling society of people who are indeed out of control.

Have Chemical Balance...will travel...

Thanks for exposing this, I think it's important for people to know the facts, and what is lurking out there.

Stop by and visit me, myabe I can add to cheer to your life!

Take care!

Dawnn

iklan  says:
14 months ago

wow....scarry man......

Agro Donkey  says:
14 months ago

A true monster indeed but I think it was an extra chromazone. It had to be something like that. You just don't get that screwed up from a bad home life.

Hannah  says:
14 months ago

What a badass. I love Ted Bundy.

nameless  says:
12 months ago

I always felt a weid connection with Ted Bundy because he was born exactly 30 years before me. He was a manic who hurt a lot of people including his own family. What he did was unforgivable. I still think that they should have given him more time to relate the information that he possessed to help families of missing girls find out what happened to their children. In the end he deserved what he got and I find it amazing that the person who pulled the switch that ended his life was a woman. See ya Ted!

nUy  says:
11 months ago

ted bundy is one hell of serial killer..

but whyyy he's so cute.. why o why God?

Natasha   says:
10 months ago

He is monster. I think he was worst thing in th world

mitch  says:
10 months ago

he just wanted to be whole

no-name  says:
9 months ago

Why? That is my question. Why do people kill. It is bad, don't they have any compassion at all. And finally Ted was good looking he could have had any girl why would he kill all these woman and a few young little girls. Stupid I tell. Stupid.

Theo  says:
8 months ago

You gotta kinda feel sorry for Ted. I'm sure he wasn't that bad of a guy. They shouldn't have killed him, a lot could have been learned from him. :(

Seattle Roxx  says:
8 months ago

This guy had two hundred female"fans"write him every day? Some women are sick i guess............

crazyhorsesghost profile image

crazyhorsesghost  says:
8 months ago

Oh yes there are some very sick people in this world. A lot of the Serial Killers in prison have girlfriends on the outside. Some of them have huge followings. Its crazy for sure.

Flutterby  says:
7 months ago

I did research on Bundy in college and to get that much detail about thirty plus monsterous homocides, I guess I believed he was truly insane. This was a person severly in need of some kind of medical attention. He was obsessed with CONTROL. That was his #1 motive I believe. Those poor, unfortunate, women, wondering, seconds before their painful death, "what did I do, Lord, to deserve this?" That IS something the Lord only knows.

june  says:
7 months ago

heartbreak started it all

ellipirelli  says:
7 months ago

a lot of these serial killer "groupies" have been sexually molested as children.

...  says:
6 months ago

he's just sick. i mean how can anyone be that horrible i know a lot of people have bad lives but there are places to get help for that and he might have had a somewhat better life if he'd gotten help

Joe  says:
6 months ago

ted bundy no doubht screwed up in the head theres no question about that. he was verry smart in every way its a shame to see it go to waste he could have done alot of good for the counrty had he chose to go to school instead of murdering morre than a hundred women we all have had a broken heart but next to none of us have chose to kill over our heart break many good and bad will learn from ted bundy he could have been great but he chose to live the life of a sadistic nymphomaniac and i agree with bundy pornography causes alot of good people to do bad things but all in all its the persons choice so you really cant blame pornagraphy

Sam  says:
6 months ago

He had a sick mind and im glad they killed the bastard!!!!!!!!!!!

CJ  says:
6 months ago

Ted Bundy is a sick minded, hipacritic, mentally unstable, freak of nature! He deserved the electric chair! How could anyone even think of him as handsome! Take one look at that mongrel, and you'll be runnin'! HE WAS NOTHING BUT A MURDERER A RAPIST AND A SERIAL KILLER!!!

the other view point  says:
6 months ago

hes not a monster, look at what he went through. all people do is look at the obvious and they never look at it from the "villian's" point of view. there is a reason for everything and nobody cared to attempt to see the story from his view.

yet another point   says:
5 months ago

His point of view was that women are objects. His point of view was that he found it sexually arousing to bludgeon women to death. What else do you need to know?

Lola   says:
5 months ago

Yes, women didn't seem real to him but it wasn't all women, many of his victims were similar in appearance. I think if there was a way, even though there is not, it would be interesting to know who his father was. Was his father mentally unstable? No one will ever know. I find the Bundy story interesting, not because of it's brutality but more so from a psychological standpoint. It shows that not all killers are alike. He was not a random killer, his killings were methodical and carefully planned and he remembered intricate details and names of his victims like the crimes had just occured. How do you remember all that detail? He was obviously intelligent but with a genetic or mental disorder of some type. He could use his looks and his smarts to easily entrap these girls. Scary how fragile the human mind is.

h0tkiss  says:
5 months ago

Jesus, he's so fucking sexy. I wish he was still alive so I can write to him and go see him......... AND NO, i never got molested or sexually abused as a child or anything like someone had stated - very perfectly healthy baby, child and now adult - just some sexual quirks i have since i was little ... nothing crazy, just somewhat deviant of the norm

HotCakes   says:
5 months ago

I love Jesus!!! So did Bundy! I wonder if he went to heaven or hell???!!! Even though he killed about 120 people. He should still have the right to go heaven....also his mother shouldn't have pretended to be his sister thats just wrong as hell!!! And possum's mom is hotttttt!!!!! Finally i love eggs!!!!!!

Summer  says:
4 months ago

ARe you kidding me! Seriously, he killed 30 "reported" women, and you guys stilll say you loved him! What has this world come to? Women declaring their love for killer who could have killed their mothers if they were there at the time????????? ARe seriously joking? How could he have fan mails from girls????????????? I don't get it, so seriously all those girls didn't care how vile his murders were? I bet they would have if they had had their vagina destroyed and damaged, then tell me you would've sent him a fan mail. Come on girls, where's your dignity, intelligence, and most of ALL SYMPATHY! for his poor victims, that twelve year old girl. Did those girls who sent the fan mail have no sympathy and pain for the poor girl who didn't even seen one fourth of her life?

pat  says:
4 months ago

He definitely was mentally ill, he was like a wild animal,


he was not treated like a lovely child, surely he suffered a lot


but he was not important to his father neither loved by his


"mother"/sister, he was tremendously confused and angry


for his very bad situation, he was angry with the whole world


he couldnt act like a human being. He acted as he was treated.


Im not justifying him but I can understand more or less what happened to him.

vampy  says:
3 months ago

This guy is just plain sick and he should have been executed beforehand. He managed to postpone his execution for 10 whole years. The only reason that he actually started cooperating with the authorities was so he could put off even longer. He was sick but he was also smart and that is probably what helped him get away with everything but the evil are always brought down and he was just plain evil so he deserved it.

no victim  says:
3 months ago

Just think about the victims. These were women going about there day to day activities. Totally unsuspecting. Its so unfair. Some of them had no chance AT ALL because this punk bitch ass bastard BROKE INTO THEIR HOMES and killed them while they were SLEEPING. WTF people? And to make it even worse the motherfucker traveled and escaped out of prison so noone was safe. I tell u what. I went out and purchased me a nice pistol yesterday after seeing the movie on his life and it will be kept on me at all times. I will sleep with it. So should any sick bastard try and kidnap me I'm going to get them before they get me. FUCK THAT! NOONE is going to steal my life. If they try and succeed I swear I won't go out without a fight.

Marilyn  says:
3 months ago

I have read the entire story about Ted Bundy and thought that he would have been a successful law student in law school but he stayed out late and was killing innocent young college and University women but why?


He just threw his entire future away with becoming a Lawyer and would have become a very successful lawyer but he just destroyed his own life and future all for the sake of taking the lives of those young Innocent women.


during the early 1970's I was just a child growing up and never even heard of what was really happening back then.


I never even heard of Ted Bundy until I saw the movie The Deliberate Stranger and for the first time that's when I heard of Ted Bundy in The summer of 1988 and the movie was playing on NBC the Spokane,Washington station.


I've done my own research on Ted Bundy and read Ann Rules book about his life and I've read different books about him too.


I just don't understand why this bright and intellegent young man became a monster and he's just so sickening too.


Americans aren't the only ones with the worst serial killers,we have serial killers up here in Canada.

Marilyn  says:
3 months ago

Over twenty one years ago I had watched a Movie called The Deliberate Stranger based on the story about Ted Bundy.


I have read many different books about his life and he had no right at all to just kill those Innocent lives of those poor young women and tore apart the lives of the victims loved ones.


With what right has Ted Bundy to kill and kill again all because he wanted to satisfy his own sexual addictions and the need to take a life of a young woman some where and just don't give a damn about.


I read that Ted Bundy's quiet intelligent and very handsome too and wanted to just study inlaw school to become a lawyer some day and practise law for life,but he just messed up his own life and the lives of the victims families for taking the lives of their Daugthers and loved ones.


How will the families of the missing and murdered girls ever get over this kind of loss that Ted Bundy has brought into their lives during the 1970's.


I hope for the sake of victims families that God has sent his holy angels to comfort those who are still hurting today and my prayers go out to the families of the missing and the murdered girls families.


I have a tender heart for those who are hurting and will never recover from their grief and their pain.


I wish that the families will read this and know that theres someone who will be a shoulder to lean on for life.


Ted Bundy deserved to die in that electric chair at Starke,Florida's Raiford prison for what he's done to those innocent women and the little girl Kimberly Leach....


My heart just goes out to those who have never truly recovered from their Loss.

catherine  says:
3 months ago

I'm obsessed with learning about Bundy. I am NOT a sick groupie, I'm speaking academically. I am so curious and interested in knowing what he felt, and what he thought. I wish I knew what drove him to do what he did. I agree with everyone else, that he was really smart and from what I have seen and read about him, he would have made a really good lawyer. I am just so interested in him, in an academic and curious way. It fascinates me how the human mind works and how some of us deviate from society and do such atrocious things, and don't regret them. How did he always seem so nonchalant about what he did? He just murdered as if it was a normal part of life...so intriguing and so puzzling...although I truly agree that he got what he deserved, a part of me wishes that he was sent to a mental institution like he said he wanted, to be studied. I definately feel we could have learned a great deal about him. Or maybe we wouldn't have, since he was smart and cunning perhaps he would have lied until he died of a natural death. Who knows, no one knows except Bundy and that's what drives me crazy with curiousity. I am also really interested in his wife Carole, I can't comprehend how in the hell she married him and had his baby. That sickens me and confuses me a lot...something was really wrong with that lady.

Sandrine  says:
3 months ago

I'm sure Ted Bundy was very strongly compelled by his homicidal urges, given the fact that he was mentally unbalanced. Yet he was not insane. He knew well enough to hide his crimes. I sympathize with his upbringing, but he's not the only person who's had a less then desirable childhood. Many people have had far worse and haven't taken their anger and hostility out on others by murdering innocent young women. Ted Bundy deserved what he got. My sympathy ultimately is with the victims who unfortunately happened to cross Bundy's path.

Hayden  says:
3 months ago

I agree with Marilyn, Catherine and Sandrine here. My heart goes out to the victims' families and I could never fully understand what they had to go through because of the crimes Ted committed. Yes he was a very disturbed man, inhumane, manipulative and psychopathic and what he did was beyond our understanding. While he deserved what he got, I am very interested in his development. I wish they could have studied his cases more, to establish a precedent as to how a seemingly normal can develop into this type of a serial killer. I don't deny the linkage between hardcore pornography and violence but what did really drive him to do the things he did, what did made him really snap and act out on his desires? It's a shame that they didn't have time to get the answers from him because it seems that every time he was asked about his state of his mind at the time of the crime, he just avoided to give them direct answers. Yes, he might have tried to manipulate us into believing his lies even if we had given him more time. But with him dead, there's nothing we can study about his mind and behavior. Like he said in his last interview, to his family and friends, he was normal to them and there are potential candidates for serial killers out there with addiction to hardcore pornography and they are doing nothing about them. Now whether he used it to get a stay from his execution or not, I think he had a point there. I know the ratio of the serial killer to the general population and it is very rare we get to study how this type of person's mind works. I think it was crucial for us to study from him from an academic angle but we lost the chance and what we got is only the fact that he had a sick mind but that's not enough for us to protect ourselves and even better, prevent us from making another serial killer in our very neighborhood. Also, I can't believe they left the unidentified victims remain buried. They should have continued the investigation no matter how much it seemed like a lost cause. Their families deserve to know what had happened to them and the authority neglected it by hurrying in putting him on the electrical chair.

Gary  says:
3 months ago

He got what he deserved. You idiots who idolize him aren't thinking about the women he tortured and murdered nor the surviving families. He was a murdering scumbag...nothing more.

shane  says:
2 months ago

an archetype for the organized serial sexual predator, a sociopath/psychopath. i believe that his grandfather was an abusive tyrant, accompanied with his illegitimacy leading to feelings of inferiority, savage narccisisim and then the girl that he believed was to good for dumped him and i think that was the precipitating stressor.... he deserved what he got, though i think he should have been given the time to confess for the sake of closure for the families. he wasnt particularly special with his crimes or his mindset, they didnt need him in particular to be studied they had many like him. he happened to be good looking and a talented orator

Reita 61  says:
2 months ago

Just finished reading the book by Ann Rule-the Stranger Beside Me-


I read the first book she wrote about 20 + years

FLGhostHunet  says:
2 months ago

Anyone who feels sorry for that man bothers me.... He was a murderer with no remorse for what he did. Some of you women think he is HOT? That he is Cute? He's was a serial killer! Get your heads examined!

umesh  says:
2 months ago

HI

unknown  says:
2 months ago

i think ted bundy was truely a monster. i wonder why no one ever stopped to aask why however, and maybe he could have got help instead of being fried in the electric chair( which is truely cruel and unusual punyshment).

san  says:
2 months ago

I think he was just evil and insane ! Cant understand why some people thought he was good looking though, he was nothing out of the ordinary. Quite ugly in fact (but maybe a evil ,sadistic like this looks ugly to you !?)Glad they executed him, before he escaped prison again, and harmed some other poor women.

AL  says:
2 months ago

Freak

J Pinder  says:
6 weeks ago

Ted Bundy is a right sicko, I am glad he is not in this world anymore!

sushi  says:
5 weeks ago

Ted Bundy was a very sick man. What I can't undersand is how he could have had a wife AND a kid. It's not like it was before the trials or anything but after a few of them. And those of you who think he was hot have a very serious issue.


My sympathy goes out to all the victims and thier families and I can understand why they wouldn't have wanted his execution to be held of any longer; the prospect of what he might have done to those poor women/girls is scary.

dlm  says:
3 weeks ago

ya just never know

Dolores Monet profile image

Dolores Monet  says:
10 days ago

I don't get the women who are so fascinated with Bundy and other serial killers. I guess that's where the phrase 'sympathy for the devil' comes from

samantha  says:
2 days ago

i love him soooo much ! ted i love you,rest in peace. hes sooo hot!

scales  says:
23 hours ago

Worm food. Well not even that now.. Bones

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