
05-22-2016, 04:10 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Guest
This country started going down hill when they did away with the draft. Younger generation has no respect, something you learned in the service.
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Murderers Who Have Served in the U.S. Military: A Database | American Journal of Arcane and Obscure Research
Quote:
The military is one of mainstream America’s most admired and respected institutions. It is also one of the very few mainstream American institutions that literally trains people, physically and psychologically, to kill other people. It is the only mainstream American institution that legally forces its members to kill others on command.
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Quote:
Robert James Acremant
Killed 3 people (1995)
William Andrews and Dale Selby Pierre
Killed 3 people (1974)
Committed their crimes while in the service. Pierre was suspected in another killing where the victim was a fellow airman.
Donald Jay Beardslee
Killed 3 people (1969-81)
Also went to a military school, where he was regularly humiliated, beaten and tortured by upperclassman as part of standard abuse and hazing.
Rudy Bladel (aka “The Railway Sniper”)
Killed at least 3 people, possibly up to 7 (1963-78)
William Bonin (aka “The Freeway Killer”)
Killed at least 21 people, possibly up to 43 (1979-80; some with accomplices)
Vietnam veteran gunner. Was awarded a good conduct medal.
Thomas Richard Bunday
Killed 5 people (1979-81)
Was in the service at the time of his crimes and was seeing a military psychologist. The psychologist committed a murder of his own, the hired killing of his own wife, which was done in a manner to look like part of Bunday’s then-unsolved string of killings, with the psychologist unaware that the killer was one of his own patients. Bunday hid at least one body on the base where he was stationed.
Peter C. Contos
Killed 3 people (1997)
Air National Guard. Committed his crime while in the service. Hid the bodies of two of his victims in a locker at the Air Force base where he served. According to a court appeal, he blamed his crimes on stress causing him to mentally go into “‘the zone,’ in which he reverted to his military training and eliminated anyone he perceived as a threat.”
James Michael DeBardelben
Killed at least 3 people, possibly 8 or more (1971-83)
Richard Eugene Dickens
Killed 2 people (1990)
Dennis Thurl Dowthitt
Killed 2 people (1990; with accomplice)
Robert Garrow
Killed 4 people (1973)
During service, was ridiculed for bed-wetting.
Donald Harvey
Killed at least 37 people, possibly 57 or more (1970-87)
Committed some of his crimes at a Veterans Affairs hospital while working there.
John Joseph Joubert IV (aka “The Woodford Slasher”)
Killed 3 people (1982-85)
Committed some of his crimes while living on a base. Also attended military college.
Patrick Wayne Kearney (aka “The Trash-Bag Killer,” “The Freeway Killer”)
Killed at least 21 people, possibly 28 or more (1975-77; possibly with accomplice)
His possible accomplice was an Army veteran.
Barton Kay Kirkham
Killed 2 people (1956)
Was discharged after committing a robbery while AWOL.
Randy Kraft (aka “The Freeway Killer,” “The Scorecard Killer”)
Killed at least 16 people, possibly up to 67 (1970-83)
Was entrusted with a “secret” security clearance. A former ROTC member who demonstrated in favor of the Vietnam War.
Gary Lewingdon
Killed at least 10 people, possibly up to 11 (1977-78; with an accomplice)
Dean A. Mellberg
Killed 4 people and unborn child (1994)
Committed his crimes at the base where he previously served.
Joseph Naso (aka “The Alphabet Murderer”)
Killed at least 4 people, possibly 6 or more (1970s-1990s)
Simon Peter Nelson
Killed 6 people (1978)
John Leonard Orr (aka “The Pillow Pyro”)
Killed 4 people (1984)
Kelsey Patterson
Killed 2 people (1992)
Dennis Rader (aka “BTK”)
Killed 10 people (1974-91)
Larry Keith Robison
Killed 5 people (1982)
Had paranoid delusions of being hunted by various government authorities, including the Air Force.
Daniel Harold “Danny” Rolling (aka “The Gainesville Ripper”)
Killed at least 5 people, possibly up to 8 (1990-91)
Worked in the former Strategic Air Command and as base security police. Honorably discharged. Used a Marine Corps Ka-Bar combat knife in his crimes. Also attempted and failed to enlist in the Navy.
Pat Sherrill
(see Marines listing)
Michael Alan Silka
Killed at least 9 people (1984)
Ronald Gene Simmons
Killed 16 people (1987)
Decorated Vietnam veteran who earned a marksmanship medal and retired as a master sergeant after 22 years. Also served in the Navy.
John Floyd Thomas Jr. (aka “Westside Rapist”)
Killed at least 7 people, possibly up to 30 (1972-1986)
Richard Lee Tingler Jr.
Killed at least 6 people, possibly up to 7 (1968-69)
Began committing lesser crimes while in the service with a fellow airman as an accomplice.
Thomas Warren Whisenhant
Killed 3 people (1975-76)
While in the service, attempted to murder a member of the Air Force WAF.
Andrew Paul Witt
Killed 2 people (2004)
Committed his crimes on a base while in the service and while wearing full battle dress uniform worn for the purpose of the attack. Victims included a fellow airman. Later apologized for the impact of his crimes on the Air Force.
Yahweh ben Yahweh (aka Hulon Mitchell Jr.)
Killed at least 14 people (c. 1980s)
Edward J. Zakrzewski II
Killed 3 people (1994)
Was in the service at the time of his crimes.
ARMY
Hasan Akbar
Killed 2 people (2003)
Victims were a U.S. Army captain and a U.S. Air Force major in Kuwait during invasion of Iraq. Claimed he preferred killing fellow soldiers to killing fellow Muslims. Prior to the attack, he wrote, “I may not have killed any Muslims, but being in the army is the same thing. I may have to make a choice very soon on who to kill.” And after being arrested, he said, “You guys are coming into our countries, and you’re going to rape our women and kill our children.”
Rodney Alcala (aka “The Dating Game Killer”)
Killed at least 5 people (1977-79)
Albert Anastasia (aka “The Mad Hatter,” “The Lord High Executioner”)
Killed at least 2 people, probably 9 or more (1921-57)
Was a known member of the Mafia’s “Murder, Inc.” when he was admitted into the service.
Joseph Ernest Atkins
Killed 3 people (1969-85)
Vietnam veteran who reportedly saw heavy combat in covert missions and on “Hamburg Hill” and the Tet Offensive; witnessed severely mutilated civilian corpses; and heard a fellow soldier who had been captured being tortured to death. Committed his last killings on the anniversary of the day of his arrival in Vietnam, and wore combat fatigues during them. Defense attorneys said post-traumatic stress flashbacks might have contributed to his crimes, during which he was “in his own mind…back in Vietnam.”
Robert Bales
Killed 16 people (2012)
Was a soldier serving in Afghanistan at the time of his crimes, which were committed on civilians. His attorneys said his crimes were affected by post-traumatic stress from combat, a brain injury suffered while serving in Iraq, and drugs and alcohol provided to him by Special Operations troops at his military outpost.
Joe Ball
Killed at least 2 people (1930s)
George Emil Banks
Killed 13 people (1982)
During his crimes, changed into military fatigues and a military T-shirt that read, “Kill ’em all and let God sort ’em out.”
Cesar Francesco Barone
Killed at least 4 people, possibly up to 5 (1979-1993)
Army Ranger and veteran of the 1989 invasion of Panama.
Earl Russell Behringer
Killed 2 people (1986; with accomplice)
Came out of the Army “infatuated with weaponry,” according to a friend. When entering his plea at trial, clicked his heels together military-style.
David Berkowitz (aka “Son of Sam”)
Killed 6 people (1976-77)
During service, became an expert rifle shot.
William Bradford Bishop Jr.
Killed 5 people (1976)
Served in a counterintelligence unit.
Christopher Black Sr.
Killed 3 people (1998)
Had retired with the rank of sergeant.
Clifford H. Boggess
Killed 2 people (1986)
John Wilkes Booth
Killed President Abraham Lincoln (1865)
Temporarily joined the militia to witness the execution of John Brown.
Joseph Bozicevich
Killed 2 people (2008)
Victims were fellow soldiers on an Army base in Iraq during the war who criticized his battlefield performance.
Kenneth Lee Boyd
Killed 2 people (1988)
Vietnam veteran who claimed to suffer blackouts and memory loss after service and during his crimes. In his confession, he said of his killings, “It was just like I was in Vietnam.”
Lamar Brooks
Killed 2 people (1996)
Gulf War veteran.
Charles Noel Brown
Killed 4 people (1961; with accomplice)
Robert Charles Browne
Killed at least 2 people, possibly up to 49 (1987-95)
Claims his first victim was a fellow soldier.
Jerome “Jerry” Brudos (aka “The Shoe Fetish Slayer,” “The Lust Killer”)
Killed at least 3 people, possibly up to 12 (1968-69)
Attempted to impress potential victims by fraudulently calling himself a Vietnam veteran.
James N. Burmeister and Malcolm Wright
Killed 2 people (1995; with accomplice)
At the time of their crimes, they were serving on a military base where joined fellow soldiers in white supremacy and neo-Nazism that fueled their killings.
Michael Burnett
Killed 2 people (2011; with accomplices)
Committed his crimes while in the service as part of a secret crime/terrorism gang called Forever Enduring Always Ready (FEAR). One victim was another soldier who had been a FEAR member.
Samuel Byck
Killed 2 people (1974)
Committed his crimes while attempting to assassinate President Richard Nixon. His assassination plot was inspired by the stunt landing of a stolen military helicopter on the White House lawn by another soldier.
Harvy Louis Carignan (aka “The Want-Ad Killer,” “Harv the Hammer”)
Killed at least 3 people, possibly up to 18 (1949-1975)
Committed one of his killings while in the service and living on an Army base.
Joseph Christopher (aka “.22-Caliber Killer,” “Midtown Slasher”)
Killed at least 5 people, possibly up to 13 (1980)
Committed his crimes while in the service. Also attacked a fellow soldier.
Christopher Bernard Coleman
Killed 3 people (1995)
Gary Bradford Cone
Killed 2 people (1980)
Vietnam veteran. Blamed his crimes on the influence of drugs, a habit he acquired in the service.
Craig Conkey
Killed 2 people (1992-94)
Richard Wade Cooey II
Killed 2 people (1986; with accomplices)
Michael Corbett
Killed at least 3 people (1975; with accomplices)
Committed his crimes while in the service. Inspired by his bayonet training, killed one victim—a fellow soldier—with a bayonet as an experiment. Accomplices included a fellow soldier and a civilian worker at their Army base.
Dean Corll
Killed at least 27 people (1970-73; with accomplices)
Frederick William Cowan
Killed 6 people (1977)
During his crimes, wore an Army field jacket and combat boots.
Donald Lavell Craig
Killed 2 people (1995-96)
Jeffrey Dahmer
Killed 17 people (1978-91)
James Floyd Davis
Killed 3 people (1995)
Vietnam veteran who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder. A military rifle used in Vietnam was among the weapons he used in his crime. Received a good conduct medal and a Purple Heart belatedly while in prison, in a ceremony where they were pinned to his chest.
Albert DeSalvo (aka “The Boston Strangler”)
Killed 11 people (1962-64)
Carl C. Drega
Killed 4 people (1997)
Wayne Eugene DuMond
Killed at least 2 people, possibly up to 3 (1972-2001; with accomplices)
Vietnam veteran. Claimed to have participated in the killing of civilians in the war.
Kevin Wayne Dunlap
Killed 3 people (2008)
Also served in Kentucky National Guard. Committed his crime on a street named Military Road.
Paul Durousseau (aka “The Killer Cabbie”)
Killed at least 5 people, probably 7 or more (1997-2003)
Committed one of his crimes while in the service.
William Henry Theodore Durrant (aka “The Demon of the Belfry”)
Killed 2 people (1895)
National Guard. Committed his crimes while in the service.
Leonard John Egland
Killed 4 people (2011)
Iraq and Afghanistan wars veteran. Had just returned from a tour of duty and was living on an Army base at the time of his crimes.
William Duane Elledge
Killed 3 people (1974)
Larry “Bill” Elliott
Killed 2 people (2001)
Former counterintelligence officer. Was working for the Army as a civilian at the time of his crimes.
Dwayne Elton
Killed 2 people (1984)
A sergeant in the service at the time. Dumped victims’ bodies near a military hospital.
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And if you read the link, a whole lot more...........
I'm a veteran, but unless this country is under attack I do not believe in a draft.
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