10 Women psychopath Recorded In History

Posted by Most Amazing Info 3 Comments

(1) Belle Sorenson Gunness
10 names of women in the world's most sadistic, Sorens Belle Gunness, was at first warning. This woman is considered a super villain for killing his victims in order to satisfy the pleasure and greed. Belle is estimated to have killed of 42 people. Horrible, this woman kill their victims because of their greed on the property. Some historians say, Belle also had killed two children in a way to poison them just so I can claim the insurance money on behalf of her two children. Children deaths reported as caused by the attack of colitis, but the symptoms of this disorder is very similar to the poisoning.

If we look Belle is not a woman who is living in poverty and berkekuarang. She was born in Norway, she moved to the United States, and married to a businessman in Chicago. Cunning brain, and insanity would make the money she burned his family's business, and insurance claims.

Does not stop there, she was also suspected to be behind the strange death of her husband, with the motivation of the insurance money.

Belle ensnare middle-aged men by pretending to fall in love, but when they are caught, the man will see 'death'. Usually, through strange accidents. She married again and again, with lonely men, they did not realize she was behind the charm of a cold-blooded killer. She could calmly, smiling at his victim, when the murder plan. No wonder when this case revealed a lot of doubts about whether Bella is really 'human' or the devil incarnate on earth.

Then the world was excited when the skeleton was found buried about 42 homes. Of these victims Bella success raising money for more than a quarter of a million dollars. Once, his body was found in tragic circumstances, his head severed and charred bodies. Who would treat her with sadistic? Is this because of revenge. About the gruesome discovery of the corpse is still controversy over whether it was true she was the Belle or other women. But certainly since the strange case of the discovery of the corpse, Belle never appeared again.

(2) Jane Toppan
This case was horrible because it happened in the hospital. Nurses who 'preys' of patients who had pain and weakness. It is said that the burly nurse, had a problem of childhood trauma, so she changed into a woman cruel. Jane, a sadistic nurse, has a father who was mad, she was growing up in an orphanage in Boston, and turned into a rough-and-personal. Then she collected the child by a foster parent.

Poor living with her adoptive parents make it worse her mental disorder. Interestingly, she successfully completed the school nurse, and began working as a nurse at the hospital. It turned out she was pleased with his new activities, and she got the nickname "Jolly Jane". The nice thing for him is, not because she can take care of the sick, but because she was doing sexual activity with his patients, Which kind of drugs have been given by him.

Jane's behavior was almost like raping his patients who are not aware of sexual activity because of the influence of drugs. Terrible, after that, she killed his victims.

Sometimes, she came to his victim, who was sleeping and raped. Selected patients who are weak and unable to resist his sturdy. Jane in sex and brutality of this killing, finally revealed after she killed 11 patients in 1885. It turned out after being arrested even lust murder she does not stop. She claimed to have killed 31 people.

And she was proud of what she had done. His name is recorded in history as one of the people who kill the most helpless victims in a condition such as pain - than any man or woman in the world. In court, Jane released because she suffered from mental illness and she lives in Taunton Insane the Asylum.

(3) Countess Elizabeth Bathory
Countess Elizabeth Bathory was a countess from the renowned Bathory family. Although in modern times she has been labeled the most prolific female serial killer in history, evidence of her alleged crimes is scant and her guilt is debated. Nevertheless, she is remembered as the "Blood Countess" and as the "Bloody Lady of Cachtice", after the castle near Trencin in the Slovakia (Kingdom of Hungary in past) ,where she spent most of her adult life.

After her husband's death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and young women, with one witness attributing to them over 600 victims, though the number for which they were convicted was 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted. In 1610, however, she was imprisoned in the Čachtice Castle, where she remained bricked in a set of rooms until her death four years later.

Later writings about the case have led to legendary accounts of the Countess bathing in the blood of virgins in order to retain her youth and subsequently also to comparisons with Vlad III the Impaler of Wallachia, on whom the fictional Count Dracula is partly based, and to modern nicknames of the Blood Countess and Countess Dracula.

Even her husband, Nádasdy Ferenc, is presumed to know his wife's crime, she was reportedly involved. In fact she gave mete out reward for his wife sebuat castle used as a place of torture and murder of young women.

(4) Rosemary West
Rosemary Pauline is an English serial killer, now an inmate at HMP Low Newton, Brasside, Durham, after being convicted of 10 murders in 1995. Her husband Fred, who committed suicide in prison while awaiting trial, is believed to have collaborated with her in the torture and murder of at least 10 young women, many at the couple's home in Gloucester, England.

Fred West is known to have carried out 12 murders. Rosemary West had no involvement in the first two; she had not met Fred at the time.

The crimes for which Rosemary West was convicted occurred mainly between April 1973 and August 1978. She murdered Charmaine West, the daughter of Fred's previous wife Rena, in June 1971, and buried her in their previous home of 25 Midland Road, Gloucester whilst Fred West was serving a prison sentence for petty theft. One of the bodies found at 25 Cromwell Street was that of their daughter, Heather, who was murdered in June 1987 at the age of 16, after being abused by Rosemary while Fred raped her. The Wests told friends and concerned parties that Heather had gone away to work at a holiday village.

In August 1992 Fred West was arrested after being accused of raping his 13-year-old daughter three times, and Rosemary West was arrested for child cruelty. This case against them collapsed in June 1993 when their daughter refused to testify in court. All of the Wests' children were removed from their custody to foster homes. This case brought to light the disappearance of Heather West, who had not been seen since 1987, and triggered the major investigation that followed.

(5) Aileen Wuornos
Aileen Carol Wuornos (February 29, 1956 – October 9, 2002) was an American serial killer who killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990, 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.

(6) Andrea Yates
Andrea Yates (born Andrea Pia Kennedy July 2, 1964) is a former Houston, Texas resident who killed her five young children on June 20, 2001 by drowning them in the bathtub in her house. She had been suffering for years with very severe postpartum depression and psychosis. Her case placed the M'Naghten Rules, a legal test for sanity, under close public scrutiny in the United States. Yates's 2002 conviction of capital murder and sentence to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years was later overturned on appeal.

On July 26, 2006, a Texas jury found that Yates was not guilty by reason of insanity. She was consequently committed by the court to the North Texas State Hospital, Vernon Campus, a high-security mental health facility in Vernon, Texas, where she received medical treatment and was a roommate of Dena Schlosser, another woman who committed filicide by killing her infant daughter. In January 2007, Yates was moved to a low security state mental hospital in Kerrville, Texas.

(7) Beverly Allitt
Beverley Gail Allitt (born 4 October 1968), dubbed the Angel of Death, is an English serial killer who murdered four children and injured nine others while working as a State Enrolled Nurse (SEN), on the children's ward of Grantham and Kesteven Hospital, Lincolnshire. Her main method of murder was to inject the child with potassium chloride (to cause cardiac arrest), or with insulin (to induce lethal hypoglycemia).

She was sentenced to life imprisonment at her trial at Nottingham Crown Court in 1993 and is currently being held at Rampton Secure Hospital.

Allitt had attacked 13 children in the space of 15 days before she was finally arrested. It was only following the death of Claire Peck that medical staff became suspicious of the number of cardiac arrests on the children's ward and police were called in. It was found that Allitt was the only nurse on duty for all the attacks on the children and she also had access to the drugs.

Four of Allitt's victims had died. She was charged with attempted murder and grievous bodily harm in November 1991. On Friday 28 May 1993 she was found guilty on each charge and sentenced to 13 concurrent terms of life imprisonment – to be served at Rampton Secure Hospital in Nottinghamshire.

Allitt's trial judge recommended she serve a minimum term of 40 years (one of the longest minimum terms ever suggested by a trial judge, High Court judge or politician), which would keep her in prison until at least 2032 and the age of 64, and even then she could only be released if she was no longer considered to be a danger to the public. In August 2006, Allitt launched an appeal on the length of her sentence. On 6 December 2007, the High Court ruled that Allitt would have to serve at least 30 years in prison, meaning she will now have to wait until at least 2022 and the age of 54 until she can apply for parole.

Allitt's motives have never been fully explained. According to one theory, Munchausen syndrome by proxy explains her actions. This controversial factitious disorder is described as involving a pattern of abuse in which a perpetrator physically falsifies illnesses in someone under their care, in order to attract attention.

In 2005, the BBC made a dramatisation of the story, "Angel of Death", in which Charlie Brooks played the role of Allitt.

(8) Karla Homolka
Karla Leanne Homolka, also known as Karla Leanne Teale (born 4 May, 1970 in Port Credit, Ontario, Canada), is a Canadian convict who attracted worldwide media attention when she was convicted of manslaughter following a plea bargain in the 1991 rape-murders of two Ontario teenage girls, Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French, as well as the rape and death of her own sister Tammy.

Paul Bernardo was arrested in 1993 and in 1995 was convicted of the two teenagers' murders. He received life in prison, the full maximum sentence allowed in Canada. Homolka, however, "portrayed herself as the innocent victim of a murderous monster. [In 1993], she struck a deal with prosecutors (later dubbed the "Deal with the Devil") and pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the deaths in exchange for a 12-year prison sentence. But videotapes of the crimes, found after the plea bargain, showed her to be a more active participant. Public outrage about Homolka's sentence had barely cooled by the time of her extremely high-profile release from prison in 2005. She lived in the province of Quebec for a time and in 2007, was speculated to have left Canada for the Antilles, new partner and baby in hand. In December 2009, La Presse claimed that Homolka was back in Ontario studying Law and living with her partner Luka Magnotta.

(9) Susan Smith
Susan Leigh Vaughan Smith (born September 26, 1971) is an American woman sentenced to life in prison for murdering her children. Born in Union, South Carolina, and a former student of the University of South Carolina Union, she was convicted on July 22, 1995 of murdering her two sons, 3-year-old Michael Daniel Smith, born October 10, 1991, and 14-month-old Alexander Tyler Smith, born August 5, 1993. The case gained worldwide attention shortly after it developed, due to Smith claiming that an African-American man stole her car and kidnapped her sons. Smith later claimed that she suffered from mental health issues that impaired her judgment.

According to the South Carolina Department of Corrections, Smith will be eligible for parole on November 4, 2024, after serving a minimum of thirty years. She is currently incarcerated at South Carolina's Leath Correctional Institution, near Greenwood.

(10) Diane Downs
Elizabeth Diane Frederickson Downs (born August 7, 1955) is an American convicted murderer. She shot her three children, killing one, and then told police a stranger had attempted to carjack her and shot the children. After her conviction in 1984, she was sentenced to life in prison.

Downs briefly escaped in 1987 and was re-captured. She is the subject of a book by Ann Rule and a made for TV movie under the same name, called Small Sacrifices. She was denied parole in December 2008.

On May 19, 1983, Downs shot her three children: Stephen Daniel Downs (born 1979, age 3), Cheryl Lynn Downs (born 1976, age 7) and Christie Ann Downs (born 1974, age 8). Downs drove the children in the blood spattered car to the McKenzie-Willamette Hospital. On arrival Cheryl was already dead. Downs herself had been shot in the left forearm. Downs claimed she was carjacked on a rural road near Springfield, Oregon, by a strange man who shot her and her three children. Investigators, however, became suspicious when they noticed her manner was too calm to have experienced such a traumatic event.

Their suspicions heightened when Downs went to see Christie for the first time, Christie's eyes glazed over with fear and her heart rate jumped. They also discovered that she called a man in Arizona named Robert Knickerbocker immediately upon arriving at the hospital, a man with whom she had been having an affair. Author Ann Rule gave Knickerbocker the pseudonym of Lew Lewiston. The forensic evidence did not match Downs' story, there was no blood on the driver's side of the car, nor was there any gunpowder residue on the driver's panel. Downs did not tell police she owned a .22 caliber handgun, but both Danny Downs and Knickerbocker said she did own one.

Investigators later discovered she had bought the handgun in Arizona, and found unfired casings that had been worked through the same gun that shot the children, although they were unable to find the actual weapon. Most damaging, witnesses saw Downs' car being driven very slowly toward the hospital-Downs had claimed that she drove there at high speed after the shooting. Based on this and other evidence, Downs was arrested nine months after the event, on February 28, 1984, and charged with murder, attempted murder and criminal assault.

3 Comments:

Anonymous said...

In english please?

Jake said...

She ! she ! not he ! You're writing about a WOMAN murderer but keep referring to her as HE. What's wrong with you, can't accept that a SHE can be a mass murderer ?

Anonymous said...

The gramatical mistakes are staggering. Jesus.

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