Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer: Crime Scene Pictures.

Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer was born on May 21, 1960 to Lionel and Joyce Dahmer in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; he was the oldest of two boys, and had a little brother named David (born on December 18, 1966). Joyce was born on February 7, 1936 in Columbus, Wisconsin and Lionel was born on July 29, 1936 in Milwaukee. In Jeffrey’s younger years his father was a chemistry student at Marquette University, and he later worked as a research scientist; Joyce was a teletype machine instructor. It’s been reported that Mrs. Dahmer was a hypochondriac that was often greedy for attention, and multiple sources have claimed that Jeffrey was deprived of attention as an infant due to her intense struggle with mental illness and depressionOthers however, suggest that he was generally adored and doted on throughout his entire childhood by both of his parents.

As little Jeffrey grew into toddlerhood his mother was beginning to spend more and more time in bed, and by the time he was in first grade his father was mostly absent, as he was away at school. One time Joyce attempted suicide by taking too much of one of her medications called Equanil, which is prescribed to help treat symptoms of anxiety and nervousness. As an adult Jeff said that from a very young age he was ‘unsure of the solidity of the family,’ and that he recalled a large amount of tension in the family home, as well as many fights between his parents in his formative years.

In his early years, Dahmer was a normal, ‘energetic, and happy child,’ but he became visibly subdued after having a double hernia surgery right before his fourth birthday. While in elementary school, little Jeffrey was a timid, quiet child that had few friends, and one of his teachers remembered seeing early signs of abandonment due to Mr. Dahmer’s glaring absence (as well as his mother’s severe mental health issues). It didn’t help that Joyce’s condition got even worse when she became pregnant with David, and after his brother was born Jeff became even more withdrawn, and the family’s fairly-frequent moves didn’t help him establish roots either. The same year David was born Mr. Dahmer graduated from college and got a job as an analytical chemist in Akron, Ohio.

From a young age, Jeff was interested in studying and preserving animal bones, and learned how to clean and preserve them. His fascination may have started at the age of four, when he saw his dad removing animal bones from beneath the family home. According to Lionel, his son was ‘oddly thrilled’ by the sound they made and became preoccupied with bones, initially calling them his ‘fiddlesticks.’ On occasion Jeff would search underneath and around his family home looking for more animal bones, and would often explore the bodies of living creatures to help map out where certain ones were located. In May of 1968 the Dahmer’s moved to Bath Township in Ohio, which was the family’s third house in only two years. The residence stood on one and a half acres of thick trees and woods, complete with a small hut that was only a short jaunt from the home.

During dinner two years after his interest in bones began Jeff asked his dad what would happen if the bones from the chicken they were eating were placed in bleach. Lionel was pleased with what he thought at the time was scientific curiosity, and showed him how to preserve animal bones using bleach, and Jeffrey started incorporating these preservation skills into his collecting techniques. Later that same year, Joyce started taking more than the prescribed daily dose of her sleeping meds, laxatives, and Equanil, which only further alienated her family. Dahmer also started collecting the remains of dead animals (including roadkill), which he would then dissect and bury next to the hut on the family’s property, and on occasion he would place the skull on top of homemade crosses. According to one of Dahmer’s few friends, he shared with them that he was curious as to how animals ‘fit together,’ and on one occasion in 1975 he beheaded the carcass of a dog he found (just by chance) before he nailed its body to a tree then impaled its skull on a stick behind his house. Then later, as a ‘prank,’ he later invited a friend to look at what he did.

As a young child Jeffrey collected large insects, as well as the skulls of small animals that he expertly preserved in formaldehyde. In October of 1966 the Dahmer’s moved to Doylestown, Ohio and as a teenager Jeff was incredibly disengaged with his peers, and didn’t have very many friends. In later interviews he said that his strong interest in murder and necrophilia began around the age of fourteen, and it seems it was the end of his parents’ marriage and their bitter divorce that helped make him turn his desires into actions. Immediately beginning in his freshman year at Revere High School, Dahmer was seen as an outcast, and had started drinking beer and hard liquor at the age of fourteen, oftentimes concealing his booze inside his coat. When a school mate asked why he was drinking scotch during an early morning history class, he just shrugged his shoulders and told him the alcohol was his ‘medicine.’ Despite being mostly quiet and unwilling to communicate, during Jeffrey’s freshman year he was seen as polite and highly intelligent by teachers even though he earned only average grades. Fun Serial Killer Fact #1: during his time in secondary school he played competitive tennis and briefly played in the band.

By the time he reached puberty, Jeff realized he was homosexual, a fact he initially attempted to hide from his parents. During his early teen years he had a short relationship with another boy around his age (although the two never engaged in sexual intercourse). By Jeff’s own admission he had started fantasizing about controlling and dominating a completely submissive male partner in his early to mid-teens, and his masturbatory fantasies slowly evolved to him focusing on chests and torsos, which became interwoven with the idea of human dissection. Around the age of sixteen Jeff developed a fantasy of rendering unconscious a male jogger that he found attractive then making sexual use of his body. He even made an attempt to hide in some bushes with a baseball bat in an attempt to kidnap the man, but (lucky for him) he didn’t happen to pass by that particular day. After his arrest Jeff later admitted that this was his first actual attempt to attack a victim.

Even though he was mostly seen as quiet, Dahmer was considered by his peers and teachers to be a class clown that frequently staged pranks, which earned him a catch phrase: ‘doing a Dahmer.’ These ‘pranks’ included ‘bleating’ and faking epileptic seizures or cerebral palsy at both school and local stores, and on occasion he would perform these antics for cash so that he could buy alcohol. By 1977 Dahmer’s grades had plummeted and his concerned parents hired him a private tutor; this resulted in only limited success. In that same year in a desperate attempt to save their marriage, Lionel and Joyce started marriage counseling, but despite this they continued to fight constantly. When Mr. Dahmer discovered his wife had participated in a short affair in September 1977, they finally decided to divorce, telling both of their sons that they wished to do so ‘amicably.’ Lionel moved out of the family home in early 1978, and despite the best of intentions the process of their separating quickly became increasingly hateful and acrimonious.

By the time of Dahmer’s first murder at the age of eighteen his alcohol consumption had completely spun out of control. A few weeks before he graduated one of his teachers observed him sitting by the school parking lot, drinking several beers. When they threatened to report him, Jeff told them he was experiencing ‘a lot of problems’ at home and that the school’s guidance counselor was aware of them. That spring, Joyce (breaking a court order) moved out of the family home with David and relocated to Chippewa Falls, to stay with family (without informing her ex-husband); Jeff had just turned eighteen and stayed behind. His parents’ divorce was finalized on July 24, 1978, and Mrs. Dahmer was awarded custody of their younger son as well as alimony.

Jeffrey committed his first murder three weeks after he graduated from high school on June 18, 1978: eighteen-year-old hitchhiker, Steven Hicks. He lured the young man (who had been hitchhiking to a rock concert at Chippewa Lake Park) to his house with the promise of ‘a few beers,’ and according to Jeff the sight of the bare-chested young man pulled at his deepest, darkest sexual desires. Unfortunately when the young man began talking about women he immediately knew that any passes he made would be rejected, and after several hours of chatting he told Jeffrey that he ‘wanted to leave.’ Now, this was the exact opposite of what he wanted to hear, so he bludgeoned Hicks to death with a 10-pound dumbbell. Dahmer later confessed that he hit his victim from behind twice as he was sitting in a chair, and when he quickly was rendered unconscious, strangled him to death with the bar of the dumbbell. He then took the young man’s clothes off before he ran his hands along his chest then stood over his remains and masturbated. A few hours after the murder Jeff dragged the remains to his basement, and the following day dissected his body; he later buried it in a shallow grave in his backyard. Several weeks later Dahmer dug up Hick’s corpse and stripped the flesh off his bones then dissolved it in acid before flushing the solution down the toilet. He crushed the bones with a sledgehammer then scattered them in the woods behind his home, and tossed Hicks’ necklace as well as the knife he used to dismember him off of the West Bath Road bridge and into the Cuyahoga River. Six weeks after this murder Lionel (along with his new fiancé) stopped by his former home, where they found Jeff living by himself.

After graduating from high school in August 1978 Dahmer went on to attend Ohio State University, where he planned on majoring in business but dropped out after only one quarter. He failed the majority of his courses, including Classical Civilizations, Administrative Science, and Introduction to Anthropology; the only class he did well in was Riflery, where he earned a B−. At the end of his only attempt at higher learning his GPA was a 0.45. On one occasion Lionel surprised his son with a visit only to find his dorm room a mess and was filled with empty liquor bottles. Despite the fact that he paid for two terms in advance, Jeff dropped out of school after just three months, and with no real plans for his life Mr. Dahmer insisted that his son join the military, and he enlisted in the Army in late December 1978 (I’ve also seen it listed as January 1979).

Dahmer was sent to basic training at Fort McClellan in Anniston, Alabama before beginning his training as a medical specialist at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, TX. On one occasion he was reprimanded for being drunk while stationed in Fort Sam Houston, which resulted in his entire platoon being punished, earning him a brutal beating from his fellow recruits. After training was completed Dahmer was sent to Baumholder, West Germany on July 13, 1979 and he served as a combat medic in the 2nd Battalion, 68th Armored Regiment, 8th Infantry Division. Reportedly during Jeff’s first year of military service he was an average or slightly above average’ soldier, and it’s speculated that his worsening alcohol abuse affected his performance and he was deemed to be ‘unsuitable for military service’ and in March 1981 he was discharged from the Army. Because Dahmer’s superior officers didn’t feel that any of the issues he had in the military would be applicable to civilian life, he received an honorable discharge.

On March 24, 1981 Jeffrey was sent to Fort Jackson, South Carolina for a military debriefing and afterwards was given a plane ticket for anywhere in the country. He chose Miami Beach in Florida because he was ‘tired of the cold’ and wanted to see if he could make it completely on his own. Dahmer also told investigators during his confession that he felt like he couldn’t go home to face his dad. While in Florida, Jeff found employment at a sandwich shop, and spent most of his money on booze. He was quickly evicted from the motel he was staying due to non-payment, and at first he spent his nights on the beach as he kept working at the delicatessen but he eventually reached out to Lionel in September and asked if he could come back to Ohio.

After Dahmer’s atrocities came to light, investigators in Germany looked into any possible links between him and any homicides that took place while he was stationed there, and it was eventually determined that he did not commit any murders while serving in the Army overseas. After returning to Ohio he lived with Lionel and his stepmother, and upon moving in he insisted on being given chores to help keep him busy while he was looking for a job. While at home Jeffrey continued to drink heavily, and two weeks after returning home he was arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct; he was given a suspended 10-day jail sentence and was fined $60.

Mr. Dahmer attempted to wean his son off alcohol but was unsuccessful, and in December 1981 Jeffrey was sent to live with his grandmother Catherine in West Allis, Wisconsin. Lionel’s mother was a retired elementary school teacher (specifically history), and she was the only member of the family that Jeff was affectionate with, and his parents hoped that a combination of her influence and the change of location might help convince Jeffrey to quit drinking, find a job, and be a contributing member of society. Initially this arrangement worked out beautifully: he accompanied his grandmother to church on Sunday’s and helped her around the house and yard, all while trying to find employment. He also was mindful of (most of) her rules (despite continuing to smoke and drink), and in early 1982 he got a position as a phlebotomist at the Milwaukee Blood Plasma Center, a job he kept for ten months before eventually getting laid off. After this Jeff remained unemployed for over two years, during which he lived off of whatever spare cash Catherine was able to part with. Unfortunately, old problems reared their ugly head and on August 8, 1982 Dahmer was arrested for indecent exposure at the Wisconsin State Fair Park when he was observed exposing himself ‘on the south side of the Coliseum in which 25 people were present including women and children.’ He was convicted and fined $50 plus court costs.

In January 1985 Dahmer got a job as a mixer at the Milwaukee Ambrosia Chocolate Factory, where he worked third shift from 11 PM to 7 AM, six nights per week; he had a set schedule, and had Saturday nights off. Right after he started this position he had a run in at the West Allis Public Library, where he was propositioned by another man while reading who gave Jeffrey a piece of paper with an offer of fellatio. Although he did ignore him the event only stirred up familiar feelings of desire as well as fantasies of control and dominance, and after this event he began to visit the local gay scene, including bars, bathhouses, and bookstores. It’s also around this time that he stole a male mannequin, which he briefly used for sexual reasons until his grandma found it in a closet and forced him to get rid of it.

By late 1985, Dahmer had begun to frequent local bathhouses (which he felt were ‘relaxing’), but was growing increasingly irritated and frustrated during his encounters due to his partners’ moving, elaborating that: ‘I trained myself to view people as objects of pleasure instead of as people.’ It was because of this that in June 1986 he began giving his victims crushed up sleeping pills dissolved in liquor, then waited for them to pass out before he performed various sexual acts on their completely still, nearly lifeless bodies. To convince his physicians to keep him supplied with an adequate amount of this pharmaceutical, Jeff told them that he worked overnights and needed the medication to help him adjust to his new lifestyle. After roughly twelve reported instances of Dahmer acting inappropriately with other members, the bathhouses’ revoked his membership and he was forced to use hotel rooms to keep up with his habit.

It was around this time that Dahmer read an article in a local newspaper about an upcoming funeral of an 18-year-old male, and got the idea to steal his corpse and take it home (WTF?). He confessed that he went to the cemetery and attempted to dig up the remains but found the ground to be too hard and abandoned this particular project. On September 8, 1986 Jeff was arrested for lewd and lascivious behavior for masturbating in front of two 12-year-old boys near the Kinnickinnic River. At first he told police that he was simply urinating and had no idea there was anyone else around, but he quickly caved and admitted to what he did. The charge was changed to disorderly conduct and on March 10, 1987 he was sentenced to one year of probation and had to undergo mental health counseling.

On November 20, 1987 Dahmer encountered Steven Tuomo at a bar and convinced him to come back to the Ambassador Hotel with him, where he had rented a room for the evening. According to Jeff, he had no intention of killing the 25-year-old, and only intended to drug him then lie next to him and ‘explore his body.’ When he woke up the next morning he discovered that Tuomi was in bed next to him, and his chest was ‘crushed in,’ and was covered in ‘black and blue’ bruises. Dried blood was seeping out of his mouth, and Dahmer quickly noticed that his fists and one forearm were also covered in deep purple bruises. He later confessed that he had no recollection of killing the young man, and ‘could not believe this had happened.’

Jeffrey then went out and bought a large suitcase, which he used to take Tuomi’s remains out of the hotel room and to his grandmother’s house. One week later, he cut off Tuomi’s head, arms, and legs then fileted the bones off his body before cutting his flesh into small, easy to handle chunks. Dahmer then placed the skin inside plastic garbage bags then wrapped the bones inside a sheet and pounded them into dust with a sledgehammer. The entire dismemberment process took him approximately two hours and he got rid of everything except for the young mans head; he masturbated on the corpse before disposing of the remains. After having the head for roughly two weeks, Jeffrey boiled it in a mixture of bleach and Soilax (an alkaline industrial detergent) in hopes of preserving the skull, but it eventually became too brittle and he was forced to destroy it. He later admitted that after this particular event his ‘obsession with killing went into full swing’ and he ‘didn’t even try to stop it after that.’ Dahmer killed two more victims at Catherine’s house before she made him move out in 1988. She said that she had no knowledge of her grandson’s crimes but finally had enough of his drinking, his habit to bring young men home, and the horrible smells that started seeping from her basement.

In September 1988 Dahmer moved into his own apartment, a one-bedroom located at 808 North 24th Street in Milwaukee, and just two days after moving in he lured a 13-year-old Laotian boy to his residence by telling him that he wanted to take naked pictures of him. This  act resulted in charges of second-degree sexual assault as well as sexual exploitation. Jeffrey pleaded guilty and said that to him the young victim looked much older, and while he was awaiting sentencing he once again put his grandmothers basement to use: in March 1989 he lured, drugged, strangled, sodomized, photographed, dismembered, and disposed of Anthony Sears. Dahmer found the aspiring model particularly attractive, and after his arrest he confessed that he didn’t want to ’lose him,’ and because of this he preserved a select few of his body parts, even going so far as to mummifying his head and genitals.

In May 1989 while on trial for child molestation, Dahmer was the very definition of sorrow, arguing poignantly in his own defense that he had seen the ‘error of his ways’ and even marked the event as a ‘turning point in his life.’ His counsel told the court that his young client needed treatment, not jail time, and to this the judge agreed: he handed down a one-year prison sentence with a day pass (of sorts), which allowed him to leave and go to work during the day on the condition that he returned to the prison at night. After his release he was also given five-years of probation. Dahmer was granted an early release after serving only 10 months of his sentence; when released he briefly lived with Catherine.

Over the next two years Dahmer would go onto murder twelve more young men. After his short stint in prison his next victim was Raymond Smith, a prostitute that Jeffrey lured to his home for sex. He gave the young man a drink laced with sleeping pills then strangled him to death; Jeff then took pictures of him in suggestive positions before dismembering him. When he murdered his next victim (Edward Smith) he accidentally destroyed his skull while trying to dry it out in the oven, which made it blow up. Dahmer later told LE that he felt ‘rotten’ about this particular murder because he was unable to keep any ‘mementos’ from his body, which to him felt like a real waste.

As Jeff progressed with his hobby he began developing rituals, and started experimenting with different chemicals and eating the flesh of his victims. He also attempted lobotomies, and drilled into the skull of Errol Lindsey while he was still alive and injected him with muriatic acid (which is another term for hydrochloric acid), which is a colorless solution with a very particular and pungent aroma that is technically classified as a ‘strong acid.’ He hoped this would put his victim into a permanent submissive state, but he woke up halfway through and said, ‘I have a headache; what time is it?’ After that, Jeffrey gave up in his attempt and strangled him to death.

A neighbor in Jeffrey’s building named Sandra Smith called the police on May 27, 1991 and told them that there was a young boy of Asian descent that was running around naked in the streets. Despite the fourteen-year-old being incoherent when officers arrived on the scene, they took Dahmer for his word that the boy was his lover and was 19-years-old. The cops, not wanting to get involved in a homosexual domestic dispute, simply escorted the two home. When arriving at Jeffrey’s apartment one of the officers ‘peeked his head around in the bedroom but didn’t really take a good look,’ then left after telling him to ‘take care’ of the boy. After they left, Dahmer injected hydrochloric acid into his brain, killing him. If the police even bothered conducting even a basic search of the residence they would have discovered the body of Tony Hughes.

Between 1978 and 1991 Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer took the lives of 17 boys and young men. When choosing his victims he was careful to choose men on the ‘fringes of society,’ that were borderline criminal or ‘runaways,’ which helped make their disappearance less noticeable which helped to reduce his chance of getting caught. During the murder process Dahmer would frequently stop what he was doing and take Polaroids of his victims so he could relive the experience over and over again.

On July 22, 1991 Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer’s rampage through the streets of Milwaukee ended when he was arrested after two police officers were led to his home after picking up his latest intended (escaped) victim, Tracy Edwards. The 32-year-old black man was wandering the streets with handcuffs hanging from his wrist, and officers decided to investigate his claims that a ‘weird dude’ had drugged then restrained him (God, finally). When they got to Dahmer’s apartment he calmly offered to get the keys for the cuffs, and Edwards claimed that the knife he threatened him with was in the bedroom. When the officer went in to look for it he noticed numerous Polaroids of dead bodies lying around, and after he was apprehended and brought into custody he softly muttered: ‘for what I did, I should be dead.’ As investigators searched his apartment they found a head in his refrigerator, three more in the freezer, as well as various additional horrors, including preserved skulls, and jars with formaldehyde-soaked genitalia. During interviews Dahmer said that he planned to build a private altar made out of the skulls of his victims’ (complete with globe lights and incense), which he hoped would be ‘a place where I could feel at home.’

After his arrest in Wisconsin, the Summit County Sheriffs as well as the (local) Bath Township PD combed the property of the Dahmer family’s former home, and unearthed hundreds of bone fragments in the wooded area behind the residence (located at 4480 West Bath Road), specifically a vertebra and two molars of his first victim (Steven Hicks). Jeff was charged for his murder three days later.

Dahmer’s trial of the century began in January 1992, and given that the majority of his victims were black there was a great deal of racial tensions surrounding it, therefore strict security measures were taken, including an eight-foot wall of bulletproof glass separating him from the public. The fact that there was only a single black juror only seemed to make matters worse. Even though he confessed to the atrocities during interviews with police, Dahmer pleaded not guilty to all charges in the beginning… but he eventually changed his plea to ‘guilty by virtue of insanity.’ His defense argued that his gruesome behavior was proof that only someone that was insane would be able to commit such atrocious acts, but thankfully the jury believed the prosecution’s assertion that Jeff was completely aware that what he did was evil, but he chose to do it anyway.

On February 15, 1992 after only ten hours of deliberating, a jury of his peers found Jeffrey Dahmer guilty (and sane) on all counts. He was sentenced to fifteen consecutive life terms in prison, with a 16th one tacked on later that May. It’s been reported that he adjusted well to his new life at the Columbia Correctional Institution, and despite initially being kept away from the general population he was able to convince the jail administration to let him slowly integrate more with other inmates. He found religion in the form of books and photos sent to him by Lionel, and he was even given special permission by the prison to be baptized by a local pastor.

One day for his work assignment Jeffrey was instructed to work with two other inmates: convicted murderers Christopher Scarver and Jesse Anderson. After being left alone by guards to finish their work, Scarver brutally beat both men with a metal rod he swiped from the prison’s weight room, and on November 28, 1994 Dahmer was pronounced dead after roughly one hour; Anderson passed away a few days later. Right after the murders occurred a guard came out and publicly stated that Scarver (a suspected schizophrenic) said that ‘God told me to do it.’ After Jeff’s murder Scarver was bounced around from prison to prison, and eventually landed up in the Centennial Correctional Facility in Colorado, where he remains to this day; he is currently 59 years old. In 2012 an agent representing the killer announced that he planned on writing a tell-all book about how he killed Jeffrey Dahmer; as of March 2024 that book remains unpublished. 

In 2015 Christopher Scarver did an interview with The New York Post about why he killed his two fellow inmates. He told them that he was disturbed not only by Dahmer’s crimes but also because he had a habit of creating ‘severed limbs’ out of prison food as a way to antagonize his fellow inmates. After being ‘taunted’ by both of his victims during their work detail, Scarver said that he confronted Jeffrey about what he did before beating him and the second inmate to death. He also claimed that prison guards allowed the murders to happen because they left the three men alone together.

Joyce Dahmer passed away on November 27, 2000 at the age of 64 in Fresno, CA. Lionel and Shari Dahmer lived in Seville, Ohio until their deaths: Shari passed away on January 13, 2023, and Lionel died eleven months later from a heart attack on December 5, 2023. Jeff’s little brother David is still alive, but doesn’t seem to go out in public very much (or at all, really). I did find some recent pictures of him from the one time he recently ventured out and about, but the way they were taken I’m not including them here because it feels very intrusive and invasive.

Works Cited:
https://finwise.edu.vn/jeffrey-da-1693995524238782/ Retrieved on March 1, 2024.
Hicks, Tony (April 27, 2012). ‘Hicks: Jeffrey Dahmer’s killer is shopping a memoir.’ Contra Costa Times. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Dahmer Retrieved on March 19, 2024.
Smith, Jo (September 18, 2023). ‘Jeffrey Dahmer Brags About Mummified Genitals in Box in Newly Released Prison Call.’ Retrieved on March 19, 2024 from https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/jeffrey-dahmer-brags-mummified-genitals-30967305

Joyce Dahmer with a baby Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Lionel, Joyce and a young Jeff. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Lionel and a baby Jeff. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Lionel, Joyce and a baby Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Joyce and baby Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Lionel and a young Jeff. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Another shot of Lionel and a young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A young Jeffrey Dahmer. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
An early shot of the Dahmers. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A screenshot of Lionel and a young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Another screenshot of Lionel and a young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A screenshot of a young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Jeffrey with his mom and baby brother David. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Jeffrey giving David a kiss. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Jeff and his dad on a bike. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A B&W shot of a young Jeff. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Another B&W shot of a young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A young Dahmer standing next to a flower. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A screenshot of little Jeffrey Dahmer at an amusement park. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Little Jeffrey holding the family dog. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Jeff holding his dog. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A picture of Joyce, Lionel, and Joyce. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A young Jeffrey, playing. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A young Jeffrey. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Jeff, Lionel, and David Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A B&W shot of the Dahmer family. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A young Jeff. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Jeffrey and David Dahmer. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
A young Jeffrey Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A young Jeffrey in a swimming pool. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Jeffrey Dahmer in a swimming pool. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A teenage Jeffrey Dahmer.
A teenage Jeffrey Dahmer from his time at Revere High School.
The Dahmer’s sitting around their kitchen table. Photo courtesy of Netflix (I apologize for the poor quality, it was the only one I could find).
Dahmer in a photo for NHS, which he did not belong to. He would frequently sneak into yearbook photos for clubs and organizations he didn’t belong to.
Dahmer is blacked out in a NHS picture he snuck into.
Jeffrey Dahmer from the 1978 Revere High School yearbook.
Dahmer making a face. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Dahmer with a schoolmate from Revere High School.
Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Dahmer at prom, with his date. Apparently during the event Dahmer left and went to McDonald’s. Photo courtesy of ‘Maniac Nanny.’
Jeffrey Dahmer on the day of his graduation from Revere High School. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Jeffrey Dahmer with his father on the day of his high school graduation. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Jeffrey, Lionel, and David Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Jeffrey Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
There’s a few pictures of Dahmer floating that are supposedly from his days in the military that are bogus, this is apparently one of the few that exist. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A photo of Dahmer passed out during his time in Germany. He’s drinking Thunderbird brand wine, which apparently is super cheap.
Jeff and Lionel. I’m not sure who the woman is. Photo courtesy of the Dahmer family archives.
Jeffrey, Lionel, and David Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Jeffrey Dahmer in a screen grab from an (infamous) old video recording. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Dahmer walking into court after his arrest. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A shot of Dahmer being escorted into court. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A shot of Dahmer during his trial. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Lionel and Jeff doing an interview. Photo courtesy of MSNBC.
Lionel and Jeff during Jeff’s time in prison. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Jeffrey Dahmer in a booking shot from Bath, Ohio in 1981. Photo courtesy of Agence France-Presse Handout.
Jeffrey Dahmer in a booking shot from August 1982. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Department.
Dahmer’s 1991 mugshot
Jeff while in prison. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Another view of the Oxford Apartments at 924 North 25th Street where Dahmer lived and committed a large amount of his murders. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The flag flying at half-staff outside the Oxford Apartments after Dahmer was arrested. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
A photo of the hallway outside of Dahmer’s apartment. Screenshot courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of the hallway outside of Dahmer’s apartment. Screenshot courtesy of Netflix.
Dahmer’s former neighbor Pamela Bass stands outside his apartment. Photo courtesy of Oxygen.
A shot of Dahmer’s apartment door after his 1991 arrest. Screenshot courtesy of Netflix.
The layout of Dahmer’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Redditor ‘Sunny86JD.’
A shot inside Dahmer’s bedroom, including his dresser and TV. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Department.
A shot inside Dahmer’s bedroom. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A shot inside Dahmer’s bedroom. Photo courtesy of Redditor ‘Sunny86JD.’
Another shot inside Dahmer’s bedroom. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Dahmer’s drawer full of Polaroids. Notice the needle, which was involved in his ‘experiments.’ Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Jeffrey Dahmer’s living room in his apartment. If you look in the top corner, near the ceiling you’ll notice a camera. Apparently Dahmer spent close to $1,000 for a security system (he installed extra locks on his doors as well). Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
The other side of Dahmer’s living room (notice his infamous smelly fish tank he said was responsible for the bad smell in his apartment). Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Another shot of Dahmer’s living room. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A shot of Dahmer’s bathroom (it looks like its attached to his living room). Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A shot of Dahmer’s apartment. Photo courtesy of A&E.
A shot of Dahmer’s toilet inside of his loo. Photo courtesy of TMJ4.
Tools Dahmer used to dismember his victims. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Police Department.
Some additional tools Dahmer used to dismember his victims. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Police Department.
A shot of the inside of Dahmer’s closet. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Police Department.
A shot of Dahmer’s kitchen. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Police Department.
The freezer and boxes of acid in Dahmer’s kitchen. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Police Department.
A different perspective in Dahmer’s kitchen. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A freezer in Dahmer’s kitchen. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Two skulls found in Jeffrey’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Three skulls inside the top drawer of Dahmers bedside filing cabinet.
The full skeleton of Ernest Miller located in the bottom drawer of Dahmer’s bedside filling cabinet.
Two skulls inside a cardboard box inside Dahmer’s bedroom.
Some Polaroids that investigators found inside of a laptop cover inside of the cardboard box.
Some skulls found in Dahmer’s apartment. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
Plastic bags that contained human remains, including two heads, the body of Oliver Lacey, and an assortment of body pats.
A closet in Jeffrey’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A close-up of some items found in a closet in Jeffrey’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A close-up of some items found in a closet in Jeffrey’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A vat of acid Dahmer used to dissolved bones. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department
A giant pot Dahmer used to dissolved bones. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
A picture of Dahmer’s freezer in his apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A picture of Dahmer’s refrigerator in his apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A picture of Dahmer’s refrigerator door in his apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A skull found in Dahmer’s apartment. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Some miscellaneous body parts of some of Dahmer’s victims. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Police bringing Dahmer’s bed out of his apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
LE bringing the gigantic vat of acid out of Jeff’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
Police bringing items out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
Police bringing items out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
Police bringing items out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
Police bringing items out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of TMJ4.
LE taking evidence out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of Netflix.
LE taking evidence out of Dahmer’s apartment and putting it into an official vehicle. Screen grab courtesy of Netflix.
LE taking evidence out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of Netflix.
LE taking evidence out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of Netflix.
Technicians wearing hazmat suits lower Dahmer’s freezer down the stairs at his apartment building in 1991. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Another shot of techs lowering Dahmer’s freezer down the stairs at his apartment. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Technicians wearing hazmat suits lower a vat of acid down the stairs at Dahmer’s apartment building in 1991. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Technicians securing items taken out of Dahmer’s apartment on official police transport vehicles. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The boxes of acid being taken out of Dahmer’s apartment after his arrest in 1991. Photo courtesy of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Some of the vehicles used to take items out of Dahmer’s apartment. Screen grab courtesy of the Milwaukee Police Department.
LE looking around the outside of Dahmer’s apartment building after his arrest in 1991. Screen grab courtesy of TMJ4.
LE looking around the outside of Dahmer’s apartment building after his arrest in 1991. Screen grab courtesy of TMJ4.
A police photographer taking pictures of some bones that were found in the back of a building across the alley from the apartment building where Dahmer resided. It could not be determined at the time whether they were human (I believe they were eventually determined to be unrelated to his case). Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
After combing through Dahmer’s apartment investigators went through the dumpster in the back of his apartment building. Photo courtesy of TMJ4.
Investigators looking at a bone found in a dumpster located in the back of Dahmer’s apartment building. Photo courtesy of TMJ4.
After combing through Dahmer’s apartment investigators went through the garbage located in the back of his apartment building. Photo courtesy of TMJ4.
The apartment where Jeffrey Dahmer once resided was torn down in 1992.
The lot where Dahmer’s apartment once stood.
Some of Dahmer’s Polaroids. Photo courtesy of ‘Maniac Nanny.’
Dahmer victim, Ricky Beeks.
A post-mortem Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A post-mortem, handcuffed Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
A post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
Another post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
Another post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
Another post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
Another post-mortem shot of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
The beginning of Dahmer’s dissection of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
The more advanced stages of Dahmer’s dissection of Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
SOne body parts of Dahmer victim, Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
Dahmer victim, Ricky Beeks. Photo courtesy of ‘NairaLand.’
The ME standing with some of the remains found at Dahmer’s apartment.
The Summit County Sheriff’s Department looking through the area behind Dahmer’s childhood home. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
Another shot of the Summit County Sheriff’s Department looking through the area behind Dahmer’s childhood home. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
A local kid reading a note on the door at the home of Catherine Dahmer, which is located on South 57th Street in West Allis. The handwritten note asks that the family be left alone, and mentioned that they have been receiving prank calls. Photo courtesy of Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The Ambrosia candy company, where Dahmer briefly worked.
The bathroom where Jeffrey Dahmer was killed. Photo courtesy of Redditor ”DogaCascio.’
The bathroom where Jeffrey Dahmer was killed. Photo courtesy of Redditor ”DogaCascio.’
The bathroom where Jeffrey Dahmer was killed. Photo courtesy of Redditor ”DogaCascio.’
The bathroom where Jeffrey Dahmer was killed. Photo courtesy of Redditor ”DogaCascio.’
The remains of Jeffrey Dahmer. On November 28, 1994 he was bludgeoned to death by convicted killer Christopher Scarver. Photo courtesy of Redditor ‘Frikydraws.’
The remains of Jeffrey Dahmer. Photo courtesy of Redditor ‘Frikydraws.’
Dahmer’s autopsy photo. Courtesy of Redditor ‘Frikydraws.’
Another post-mortem shot of Dahmer.
Jeff’s name listed in the Wisconsin death index from 1979 through 1997.f
Dahmer’s brain. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Another shot of Dahmer’s brain in a jar. It was eventually cremated, per his wishes. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A super cryptic drawing of an altar than Dahmer had planned to create at one point. Courtesy of Murderpedia.
A map drawn by Jeffrey Dahmer. Courtesy of Murderpedia.
A younger picture of Joyce Dahmer.
A blurb about Joyce Dahmer, published in the LA Times published on December 6, 2000.
A picture of Lionel Dahmer from the 1958 University of Wisconsin–Madison yearbook.
David Dahmer from the 1982 Revere High School yearbook.
Dahmer killer, Christopher Scarver.
Jesse Anderson.

John Wayne Gacy: Crime Scene Pictures.

John Wayne Gacy was born on March 17, 1942 to John Stanley and Marion (nee Robinson) Gacy in Chicago, Illinois; he was one of three children and had two sisters, Joanne and Karen. Mr. Gacy was born on June 20, 1900 in Chicago, and John’s Mother was born on May 4, 1908 in Racine, WI. As a child, the sickly Gacy was reportedly close with his mom and sisters but had a poor relationship with his alcoholic father, who was verbally and physically abusive and reportedly beat him regularly. He was hospitalized in 1957 for a burst appendix, and when he was eleven was hit in the head with a swing. As a result of the injury he suffered from seizures and blackouts until the age of sixteen, when a doctor diagnosed him with a blood clot on the brain; the condition was corrected with medication. John Stanley made it clear that he thought his son was faking his illness in an attempt to garner attention and sympathy, and strangely enough his conditions were never formally diagnosed (although his mother and two sisters never doubted him). In 1949, Mr. Gacy was told that John and another boy had been caught sexually molesting a young girl, and he whipped him with a razor strop. Later the same year, a friend of the Gacy family began molesting John in his truck; he never told his father about it as he was afraid that he might somehow be blamed for it.

Despite dropping out of high school his senior year, Gacy still managed to have a fairly successful life: in April 1962 he moved to Las Vegas, where he briefly worked for an ambulance company before moving on to employment in a mortuary. John worked there as an attendant for roughly three months, watching morticians preserve bodies and at times serving as a pallbearer. He slept in the embalming room on a cot, and later confessed that one night while alone he got into a coffin with the body of a teenage male inside. He had a few “intimate moments” with the corpse before going into a state of shock. After this, Gacy returned home to Chicago and enrolled in classes at Northwestern Business College. After finishing his studies, he got a job as a shoe salesman at the Nunn-Bush Shoe Company, and in 1964 he was transferred to a store in Springfield, IL where he met bookkeeper Marlynn Myers. The two were wed in September 1964 and had two children together: a son and a daughter. While living in Springfield Gacy became active in the Waterloo Jaycees, and in 1965 became the chapter’s vice-president. Just in case anyone was curious (I kept hearing about the organization in Netflix’s ‘Conversations with a Killer’ and had no idea what it was), the Jaycees are a civic organization for individuals between the ages of 18 and 40. It provides leadership training and its areas of emphasis are business development, management skills, individual training, community service, and international connections.

In 1966 Gacy began his career managing three KFC’s in Waterloo, Iowa owned by his FIL. He said he enjoyed the first few years of marriage but compared it to constantly being in church… big surprise: it didn’t last long, and the couple divorced after he was arrested for sodomy in December 1968 (which was illegal in Iowa until 1976). John was sentenced to ten years at the Anamosa State Penitentiary, and after his arrest Marlynn took the children and left; the last time Gacy saw them was in 1968.

After serving only eighteen months in prison Gacy was granted parole on June 18, 1970 on the condition he serve a year of probation. As a part of his release he had to move back to Chicago and reside with his mother, and shortly after they bought the infamous murder house located at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue. On February 12, 1971 John was arrested again for reckless conduct and aggravated sexual battery, but the charges were dropped after the victim attempted to blackmail him. In 1971, he established his construction company, ‘PDM Contractors’ (short for ‘Painting, Decorating, and Maintenance’), and with the ‘OK’ of his PO worked nights on side gigs while maintaining his day job as a cook. At first he only took on smaller jobs like minor repair work, but he later expanded to include bigger projects like landscaping, remodeling, and interior design. In August 1971 he got engaged to a divorced mother of two that he briefly dated in high school named Carole Hoff. The couple quickly moved in together (along with her two daughters, Tammy and April) and were married on July 1, 1972; Gacy’s mother moved out shortly before their nuptials.

In 1973, Gacy traveled to Florida with one of his teenage employees to take a look at a piece of property he had recently bought; while there, he raped the young man in their shared hotel room. After returning home to Chicago, the youth drove to John’s house and beat him up in his front yard; he told his wife that he had been attacked after refusing to pay him for a poor painting job. In the middle of the same year, Gacy quit his FT job as a cook so he could fully commit to his construction business. By early 1975 he had shared with his second bride that he was bisexual, and after they had sex on Mother’s Day he informed her that it would be ‘the last time’ he did that with her. After that John started spending most of his time away from the family home, returning early in the morning with the excuse that he had been working late or was preoccupied with ‘business meetings.’ It was also around this time that Carole started to notice her husband was sneaking teenage boys in and out of their garage in the early morning hours of the day. She also found wallets and ID’s amongst his belongings as well as gay pornography, and when she attempted to talk to him about it he told her that it was ‘none of her business.’ By October 1975 Carole had enough of her husband’s shenanigans and after a big blow-up asked him for a divorce, which he agreed to; despite this, she continued to live with him until February 1976 (with his blessing). On March 2, 1976 the couple’s divorce was finalized.

In addition to Gacy’s booming personal business in March 1977 he became a supervisor for a firm specializing in the remodeling of drugstores called PE Systems (remember this tidbit for later), and between the two there were occasions where he was working sixteen hours a day. By 1978, his construction company alone was bringing in over $200,000 annually. Thanks to John’s membership at a nearby Moose Club in late 1975 he became affiliated with a group that called themselves the ‘Jolly Joker Clown Club;’ an organization that regularly entertained sickly children and participated in parades, parties, and other public fundraising events. As he got more and more into clowning, Gacy developed costumes and makeup for different characters such as ‘Pogo’ and ’Patches,’ and described Pogo as a ‘happy clown,’ whereas the latter had a ‘more serious’ side. When performing, John rarely made money and in interviews during his later life he shared that being a clown allowed him to ‘regress into childhood.’

Many of Gacy’s employees were local high school students and men that tended to be on the younger side. He frequently would proposition them for sex, and traded sexual favors in return for the use of his vehicles, money, or advancement of employment. John also made it known that he owned guns, and on one occasion said: ‘do you know how easy it would be to get one of my guns and kill you, and how easy it would be to get rid of the body?’ After his first stint in prison he became active in the local Democratic Party, and after giving them use of his employees to clean their headquarters (at no charge) he was rewarded with an invite to serve on the Norwood Park Township Street lighting committee, which eventually helped him obtain the title of precinct captain. In addition to being active in local politics in 1975 he was made the director of Chicago’s yearly Polish Constitution Day Parade, and it was directly because of his work with the organization that helped him meet the (former) First Lady, Rosalynn Carter. It’s worth noting, in their pictures together Gacy is wearing a pin with a ‘S’ on it, which gave its wearer a special security clearance with the US Secret Service.

After his intended victim was successfully inside his home, Gacy’s typical MO was to give them alcohol and illicit substances in an attempt to gain their trust. He would then pull out handcuffs and tell them he wanted to ‘show them a magic trick,’ sometimes as part of a routine that began with cuffing his own hands behind his back. After a bit of fussing he would eventually uncuff himself (thanks to a hidden key), and when finished he would offer to show the young man how to perform the illusion. Once they were subdued, John would then procede to assault, torture, and rape them. He would also inflict various acts of torture onto the men, including burning them with cigars, violating them with foreign objects (after sodomizing them), and making them pretend to be a horse while he sat on their backs and rode them (while pulling on homemade ‘reins’ he strung around their necks… WTF?). Gacy frequently bound his victims’ ankles together with the help of a two-by-four, complete with handcuffs attached at both ends. He also taunted most of the young men while he was murdering them, and partly drowned several of them in his bathtub before repeatedly bringing them back to life (only to kill them again).

The Killer Clown typically killed his young victims using what he called his ‘rope trick:’ he put a tourniquet made out of a rope around their neck and using a hammer handle progressively made it tighter and tighter. Additionally, several of his young victims died by asphyxiation from cloth gags stuffed down their throats. Gacy typically kept their remains underneath his bed for up to twenty-four hours before moving them to the crawl space underneath the house. On occasion, he would pour quicklime on them in order to speed up the rate of decomp. Looking into it, quicklime (or calcium carbonate) has been used for centuries to help break down human remains. Strangely enough, Gacy took some of his victims out to his garage and embalmed them before they were disposed of underneath his house.

On the afternoon of December 11, 1978, Gacy went to the Nisson Pharmacy in Des Plaines, to talk about a potential remodeling deal with its owner, Phil Torf. While there he met 15-year-old PT employee Robert Piest, and made a point of mentioning that his firm frequently hired teenage boys at far more than what he was making at the pharmacy. Shortly after John left, Mrs. Piest arrived to bring her son home, but he asked her to wait and said ‘some contractor wants to talk to me about a job.’ He walked away from her at 9:00 PM, saying he’d be right back but never returned; by 10 PM, he was dead. When Rob never came home, his family quickly filed a missing person report with the Des Plaines PD. Torf told them Gacy was the contractor his young employee had most likely left his store to speak with, and a quick look into his criminal background showed an outstanding battery charge as well as his Iowa imprisonment. The evening after Piest disappeared three Des Plaines police officers visited Gacy at his home and questioned him about the missing boy; he said he never offered Rob a job and promised to come in later that evening to make an official statement, and that he was unable to go then because his uncle had just passed away. John got to the station around 3:20 AM completely covered in mud, telling detectives he had recently been involved in a car accident.

Suspecting Gacy might be holding the young man, Des Plaines police got a search warrant for his residence on December 13, which revealed several suspicious items (including ropes, sex toys, and handcuffs). He was quickly becoming friendly with the detectives that were in charge of his surveillance, and by December 16 he was regularly inviting them to join him for meals and drinks (both in bars and at his home).

By December 18, Gacy was starting to crack and was showing visible signs of strain from the constant police surveillance. That afternoon, he drove to his lawyers’ office to file a $750,000 civil suit against the Des Plaines PD demanding that they stop their monitoring of him. Later that same day, LE found a photo receipt from the Nisson Pharmacy was found in his kitchen that was traced back to a colleague of Robs named Kimberly Byers, who told them she had borrowed his blue parka earlier in the evening and had put it in his pocket before returning it. The following day Gacy’s lawyers filed the civil suit, and Cook County detectives started compiling information for a second search warrant for his residence. Later that afternoon, he invited the surveillance team inside his home, and as one of them distracted him the other walked into his room in an (unsuccessful) attempt to get the serial number on the back of his Motorola TV that they suspected belonged to one of his victims (John Szyc). While one of the detectives was using Gacy’s restroom, he noticed a very particular odor coming out of his heating duct that he strongly suspected was rotting corpses. The first time the residence was searched it had been cold, and the officers had failed to notice it.

On the evening of December 20, Gacy went to his attorney’s office for a scheduled meeting, most likely to talk about the progress of the civil suit. When arriving he seemed to be visibly nervous and immediately gulped down two cups of whiskey provided by his lawyer, Sam Amirante. By then Amirante was having serious doubts about his client’s innocence, and it was then that he threw down a copy of The Daily Herald and said: ‘you said you had something new to tell me! Something important!’ John picked up the paper, pointed at the front page story about Piest and dramatically announced, ‘this boy is dead. He’s dead. He’s in a river.’ He then proceeded to give a rambling, hours-long drunken confession claiming that he had ‘been the judge, jury, and executioner of many, many people,’ and that he now wanted to be the same for himself. Gacy also volunteered that he had killed ‘at least thirty’ young men, most of which he dismissed simply as ‘male prostitutes,’ ‘hustlers,’ and ‘liars,’ and said that sometimes he would wake up and discover ‘dead, strangled kids’ with their hands handcuffed behind their backs.

Mid-way during his rambling John passed out. When he woke up a couple of hours later he told his lawyer that he couldn’t talk about the night before, and said ‘I can’t think about this right now. I’ve got things to do’ then left. Gacy later said that his memories of his last day of freedom were ‘hazy,’ and that he knew his arrest was only a matter of time and that he intended to drive around and visit his friends and say his last goodbyes. After leaving, John went to a nearby gas station where he handed off a small baggie of marijuana to an attendant, who immediately gave it to the surveillance officers. He said that Gacy told him, ‘the end is coming (for me). These guys are going to kill me.’ John then drove to the home of Ronald Rhode, a friend and fellow contractor, hugged him then burst into tears while sobbing, ‘I’ve been a bad boy. I killed thirty people, give or take a few.’ From there, he left and drove to former employee David Cram’s home to meet with him and Michael Rossi, and as he drove down the expressway, surveillance officers noted he was holding a rosary to his chin and appeared to be praying.

When investigators heard from the surveillance officers that Gacy was showing increasingly erratic behavior, they became fearful that he may have become suicidal and decided to arrest him on a possession charge (for the weed) in order to put him in their custody. On the night of Gacy’s civil hearing a second search warrant  for his residence was granted at 4:30 PM, and when he was informed of their plans to dig up his crawl space to search for Rob Piest’s body he confessed that he killed the boy in self-defense and buried him under his garage. When police and evidence technicians arrived at John’s home they found he had unplugged his sump pump, which flooded the crawl space. After they replaced it and the water drained away, evidence technician Daniel Genty began digging, and within minutes he uncovered a human arm bone as well as rotted flesh. According to Tim Cahill’s novel, ‘Buried Dreams:’ ‘in the northeast corner of the crawl space under John Gacy’s house, the officers found puddles, all swarming with thin red worms. There, two feet from the north wall, they uncovered what appeared to be a knee bone. The flesh was so desiccated that at first they thought is was blue-jean material.’

After Gacy was told that investigators had found remains underneath his house and he was now facing homicide charges, he told them that he wanted to ‘clear the air:’ on December 22, 1978 John Wayne Gacy confessed to murdering roughly thirty young men. He referred to a few of his victims by name, but claimed not to know the majority of them and volunteered that they were all teenage prostitutes or runaways. Gacy also claimed he only dug five of the graves underneath his house, and that his employees dug the remaining ones so that he would have then ‘available.’ In January 1979 he claimed to have plans to further destroy evidence by covering the entire crawl space with concrete.

Gacy murdered at least thirty-three boys and young men between 1972 and 1978, twenty-six of whom he buried in the crawl space of his house. His victims included young men that he knew as well as random individuals he lured from Bughouse Square, the nearby Greyhound Bus Station, or off the streets with the promise of a job, booze/drugs, or cash for sexual favors. Some were grabbed by force, while others were conned into trusting him. After Cook County LE tore apart his residence they investigated a five-unit apartment building in Chicago about four miles away (located at 6114 West Miami Avenue), where he worked as a maintenance man for many years (apparently his mother even lived there at one point). He also told investigators that in 1978 he dumped five of his victims into the Des Plaines River after running out of room in his crawl space, one of which he believed landed on a barge (it is worth noting that only four were ever found). Interesting fact: on more than one occasion the ‘Killer Clown’ committed what he referred to as ‘doubles,’ or two murders in one night.

On March 13, 1980 John Wayne Gacy was sentenced to death; he was executed by lethal injection at the age of 52 on May 10, 1994 at Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill, Illinois. Marion Gacy died on December 14, 1989 and John’s older sister Joanne died on March 23, 2007.

Works Cited:
Crime Museum. Taken March 2, 2024 from https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/serial-killers/john-wayne-gacy/
FBI Document: Taken March 4, 2024 from https://vault.fbi.gov
McEvoy, Colin. ‘John Wayne Gacy.’ June 16, 2023. Taken March 2, 2024 from https://www.biography.com/crime/john-wayne-gacy
Wikipedia article on JWG taken March 8, 2024 from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wayne_Gacy

Gacy at roughly the age of three in 1945.
Gacy as a child. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young JWG standing in front of a car. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young JWG. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young John Wayne Gacy with his second dog, Prince.
A young JWG posing with the scout group he joined as an adolescent; he is on the bottom row, second from the right. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young John Wayne Gacy is to the far left. Photo courtesy of Barry Boschelli (Gacy’s childhood friend).
The Gacy family posing with some of the Boschelli’s. Photo courtesy of Barry Boschelli.
Another picture of Gacy as a child. Photo courtesy of Altered Dimensions Paranormal.
A young JWG wearing a fancy hat. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young Gacy (in the middle wearing the dark suit). Photo courtesy of Boschelli.
Some members of the Gacy family; John Stanley is on the far right, and John is in the middle with no shirt on. Photo courtesy of Biography.
John in a vehicle. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A young Gacy at a gathering, on the far right. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy with one of his sisters. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Another pic of a young JWG wearig a suit.
A adolescent Gacy. Photo courtesy of Biography.
JWG. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy is on the far left.
A young Gacy with one of his sisters. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A younger JWG.
Gacy at the age of eighteen, dressed in his uniform for the local civil defense squad. Photo courtesy of the Tumblr account, ‘true-crime-xgirlx.’
Another picture of Gacy in his uniform for the local civil defense squad.
Gacy standing with Miss Illinois.
Another shot of Gacy with Miss. Illinois.
John in his chef’s uniform.
Another John in his chef’s uniform.
Gacy taste testing a dish in his chef’s uniform.
An action shot of John dressed in his chef’s uniform. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG’s first wife, Marlynn Myers. Photo courtesy of Biography.
John on (I think) one of his sisters wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy and Marlynn on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG and his first wife, Marlynn . Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy and Marlynn at some sort of banquet. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy and Marlynn posing with one of their children. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Marlynn Lee Myers.
A shot of Gacy with his father holding his young son. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A shot of Gacy playing with his young son. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A shot of a younger JWG. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy with a bunch of men possibly some other JC’s; he is the second one in on the left (do I have to keep doing this? We all know who JWG is).
A dapper JWG. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy singing in prison after his first arrest. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy worked as the ‘first chef’ during his first stint in prison. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy married his second wife, Carole Hoff on June 1, 1972. She had two little girls, Tammy and April.
John with his second wife and Mom on his wedding day.
Gacy and his second wife on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
John and Carole on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy feeding his second wife cake on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy giving his new wife a kiss. Photo courtesy of Biography.
John and Carole on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A picture of Gacy’s and Carole on their wedding day. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of John and Carole, this time posing with some money. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy and his second wife. Photo courtesy of Biography.
John and Carole. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy and his second wife Carole posing with her two daughters; the couple eventually divorced on March 2, 1976. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
John and Carole. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy and his second wife. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of John and Carole with one of her daughters. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG is on the man on the far left. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A shot of an invite for a party the Gacy’s threw. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
John in Carole, dressed in cowboy hats. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy with his second wife Carole in the same home where he hid his victims. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
John and Carole. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy hard at work for PDM Contractors. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy is on the right. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy at some sort of political event. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy at a party standing with a friend. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy at a JC event. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Another shot of Gacy at a JC event. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy at a JC event. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Another shot of Gacy at a JC event. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Another shot of Gacy at a JC event (he’s the second from the left). Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy at a JC event (he’s right in the middle). Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy standing on a balcony. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Gacy in his days as a contractor. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy posing with friends. I couldn’t find much on this picture if anyone knows more about it please let me know.
Gacy and what looks like his sister. Weird.
Gacy hosted a bicentennial party on July 4, 1976. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune. His former business associate, Jim Van Vorous is on his right.
Gacy (far right) regularly held dress-up parties to throw suspicious neighbors off his scent. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar and The Sun.
Another shot of Gacy dressed up at a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy dressed up at a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy dressed up for a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy at a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A commonly used photo of John Wayne Gacy.
A young John and his mom.
Gacy enjoying a meal with his mother.
Gacy with a fake sheriffs badge on at a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG at a party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG at what looks like another costume party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG at another party. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy at a parade for a Democratic event. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy at a parade, for a Democratic event. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy posing with former first lady Rosalynn Carter on May 6, 1978. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
Another shot of Gacy with Mrs. Carter. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
An older picture of Gacy and an unnamed man before his second arrest.
Another shot of Gacy. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG before his second arrest. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A stock pic of Gacy from 1978. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
A picture of Gacy that was smuggled out of jail by a guard, published by The Chicago tribune in 1978.
An older Gacy on death row. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A picture of Gacy holding one of his paintings he dubbed ‘Pennywise The Clown;’ it was taken just five weeks before his execution. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Gacy during his time on death row. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Gacy in his cell. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Supposedly this is a photo of Gacy awaiting execution. Photo courtesy of finwise.edu.
Gacy dressed as Pogo.
Another photo of Gacy dressed as Pogo the Clown.
Gacy dressed as Pogo.
Another photo of Gacy dressed as Pogo the Clown.
Another shot of Pogo.
A B&W shot of Gacy as Pogo, courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
A younger John Stanley Gacy. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of a younger John Stanley Gacy. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
John’s parents.
John’s sister Joanne on Oprah. She died in 2007.
John Wayne Gacy’s card for the ‘Democratic Precinct Captain’ of Norwood Park Township. Courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
John Wayne Gacy’s business card for his personal business, ‘PDM Contractors.’ Courtesy of Newsweek.
Gacy loved flashy belt buckles and frequently wore one with his initials. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar and The Sun.
Gacy kept items belonging to his victims that he considered ‘mementos’ that he often looked at. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar and The Sun.
Police found necklaces, bracelets and other jewelry belonging to Gacy’s victims. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar and The Sun.
Some garters and keys belonging to Gacy’s victims.
John Gacy’s clown shoes. Photo courtesy of finwise.edu.
Gacy was indicted for 33 murders of young boys and men; these are his victims. Notice some remain unnamed to this day, March 2024. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
A B&W shot of John Wayne Gacy’s completely intact house located at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Chicago, Illinois.
A photo taken on March 19, 1979 showing that certain portions of Gacy’s property in Norwood Park Township have been completely picked through and demolished by members of LE. Photo courtesy of Walter Kale from The Chicago Tribune.
A picture of Gacy’s tiki-themed bar in his living room. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
The other side of Gacy’s living room. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
A different angle of Gacy’s living room. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
JWG’s kitchen, untouched. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
JWG’s kitchen counter, untouched. Photo courtesy of Biography.
Another shot of JWG’s kitchen, in color. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG’s bathroom, untouched. One of the detectives that was tasked with trailing Gacy used it one day and when the heat kicked on he immediately recognized the smell of human decomp. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
One side of Gacy’s bedroom. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
Another shot of Gacy’s bedroom. Photo courtesy of Cook County Court.
Another bed in Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A picture inside of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
The main hallway in Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Biography.
A poster related to Gacy’s contracting company, ‘PDM Contractors.’ Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Information related to Gacy’s contracting company, ‘PDM Contractors.’ Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Members of the Cook County Sheriff’s Department carrying a piece of floor out of Gacy’s home.
Members of LE carrying equipment into Gacy’s residence to remove the bodies of his victims.
Investigators bringing out another body from Gacy’s house.
Another body being taken out of Gacy’s house.
Another body being taken out of Gacy’s house.
A body is recovered from John Wayne Gacy’s house in 1979 and transferred to a sheriff’s van. Photo courtesy of Sally Good from The Chicago Tribune.
Another body being taken out of Gacy’s house.
Another one of Gacy’s victims being taken out of his house.
Cook County investigators carrying another body out of Gacy’s house.
Members of Cook County LE putting one of Gacy’s victims in the back of a vehicle to be further studied.
Police standing in Gacy’s garage. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Investigators opening up Gacy’s garage. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Members of the Cook County Sherrif’s Department removing the floorboards in Gacy’s kitchen in either late 1978 or early 1979. Photo courtesy of the Cook County Sheriff’s Department.
Members of LE looking through Gacy’s crawl space in either late 1978 or early 1979. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
The kitchen cabinets and partially tore up floorboards in Gacy’s kitchen. Photo courtesy of the Cook County Sheriff’s Department.
After realizing the full extend of Gacy’s atrocities, investigators eventually had to tear up the floors in his house. Photo courtesy of the Cook County Sheriff’s Department.
A technician cuts carpet in Gacy’s home in either late 1978 or early 1979. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
The crawl space underneath Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of tCook County.
Another shot of the crawl space underneath JWG’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Another shot underneath Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Numbered stakes show where the remains of Gacy’s victims were discovered in the crawl space underneath his house. Photo courtesy of Tribune News Services.
Grids were marked as the crawl space was excavated circa late 1978 or early 1979. Police found the bodies of twenty-nine young men were recovered on his property, and four more were found in Illinois rivers. Photo courtesy of the Cook County Court.
A shot of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Some bones found in JWG’s crawl space.
A member of Cook County LE in the crawl space under JWG’s home.
A member of Cook County LE in JWG’s home. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE in the crawl space under JWG’s home. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE in the crawl space under JWG’s home. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE in the crawl space under JWG’s home. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE in the crawl space under JWG’s home. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators in Gacy’s residence. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A technician digging in Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators at JWG’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
The hallway of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators tearing apart Gacy’s floorboards. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
The early stages of the Gacy investigation, when his house was mostly intact. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators at JWG’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Underneath the floors at Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators going through Gacy’s house after his arrest. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators dismantling Gacy’s kitchen floors. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators tearing apart Gacy’s floorboards. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators tearing apart Gacy’s residence. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators tearing apart Gacy’s residence. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
LE were forced to remove the floors in Gacy’s house in order to access victims’ bodies. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar.
A crime scene technician from Cook County digging in Gacy’s basement. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
LE excavating the crawl space underneath Gacy’s home in either late 1978 or early 1979. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Investigators digging through Gacy’s basement. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE underneath Gacy’s homes looking for the remains of his victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of LE underneath Gacy’s homes looking for the remains of his victims. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A member of Cook County LE underneath Gacy’s homes looking for the remains of his victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Cook County investigators going through the crawl space under JWG’s home.
A member of LE underneath Gacy’s homes looking for the remains of his victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County
A member of Cook County LE underneath Gacy’s homes looking for the remains of his victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE looking through the bones of one of Gacy’s victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
One of the skeletons found in Gacy’s crawl space.
Another shot of one of the skeletons found underneath JWG’s house.
Rafael Tovar remembers stumbling across two left femurs. Photo courtesy of Rafael Tovar.
A member of Cook County LE standing up in Gacy’s crawl space, as the floorboards above were removed. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE puling a body out of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A member of Cook County LE puling a body out of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A Investigators going through evidence found in Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
A picture of Gacy’s crawl space; I apologize for the text in the middle, it was the only copy I could find. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A picture of Gacy’s crawl space; I apologize for the text in the middle, it was the only copy I could find. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Evidence identification marker number eight. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Another view of evidence identification marker number eight. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Evidence identification marker number twelve. Photo courtesy of Supernaught.
Evidence identification marker number fifteen. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Evidence identification marker number sixteen. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Evidence identification marker number seveteen. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Evidence identification marker number twenty. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A pieced together skeleton found under JWG’s house. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Investigators looking into JWG’s crawl space.
The entrance to Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
The entrance to Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
The frame of Gacy’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
Work continues on removing mud from JWG’s crawl space. Photo taken on on January 5, 1979, courtesy of The Chicago Sun-Times Collection.
A member of Cook County LE looking through the bones of one of Gacy’s victims. Photo courtesy of Cook County.
Members of Cook County LE removing mud from the crawl space underneath Gacy’s house. Photo taken on on January 5, 1979, courtesy of The Chicago Sun-Times Collection.
Investigators taking another body out of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Investigators taking another body out of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
Investigators carring out the remains of a body found beneath the garage floor on JWG’s property. Photo taken on on December 22, 1978, courtesy of Karen Engstrom from The Chicago Tribune.
Investigators taking another body out of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
A blurry shot of investigators taking another body out of JWG’s house. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
Evidence techs from the the Cook County Sheriff’s Department taking out of one of the bodies that were found underneath JWG’s property. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
Investigators and evidence techs taking another body out of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Sun-Times.
Sheriff’s officers carry bodies to the county morgue from Gacy’s house. Photo taken on December 22, 1978, courtesy of Quentin C. Dodt from The Chicago Tribune.
Investigators carrying out the remains of a body found in JWG’s crawl space.
The 28th body that was taken out of Gacy’s property in Norwood Park as members of LE transferred it to a sheriff’s van. Photo taken on on March 9, 1979, courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
A shot of Cook County LE putting one of Gacy’s victims into a transport vehicle. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG’s front yard, (almost) completely empty of Cook County investigators and evidence technicians.
Remains found in Gacy’s crawlspace. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
More remains found in Gacy’s crawlspace. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another picture of remains found in Gacy’s crawlspace. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A body pulled out of JWG’s crawl space. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Multiple remains uncovered in JWG’s house.
(Retired) Cook County Chief ME Robert Stein examines the case tag of victim number eighteen on December 29, 1978 in a crypt set aside specifically for Gacy victims. Photo courtesy of Gerald West from The Chicago Tribune.
Cook County employees demolishing Gacy’s home.
Workers demolish Gacy’s house in  April 1979. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
The house had to be knocked down the inside was gutted in the search for bodies. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
The ruins of Gacy’s one-time home. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
The shell of JWG’s former home. Photo courtesy of Daily Mail.
The demolition of Gacy’s house. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
The lot where Gacy’s house once stood. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A barren plot of land where the home of John Wayne Gacy once stood. Photo courtesy of Bettmann Archive.
The house that was built in the lot where Gacy’s house once stood.
The Channahon Fire Department searching for bodies in the Des Plaines River. Photo taken on December 23, 1978, courtesy of Frank Hanes from The Chicago Tribune.
In addition to Gacy’s house, after police honed in on him they investigated this five-unit apartment building located at 6114 West Miami Avenue in Chicago. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
On November 23, 1998 technicians from the Cook County Sheriff’s Department began preliminary work on a possible excavation at an apartment building in the Northwest Side of Chicago in search of as many as five additional victims of JWG. Photo courtesy of The Associated Press.
The yard of the apartment building where Gacy’s mother once lived, and at one time he did some construction work there. This information regarding the location was released by retired Chicago police detective and PI Bill Dorsch in late 1998. Dorsch said he had seen Gacy carrying a shovel near the general area at about three in the morning one day in 1975. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Technicians use radar to scan beneath the parking lot at the apartment complex where Gacy once cared for. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Gacy’s car sitting in his driveway. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
The back of John Wayne Gacy’s muddy Oldsmobile. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
JWG’s contracting van. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
The back of JWG’s contracting van. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A picture of the gas station where Gacy passed off the marijuana. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Another shot of the gas station where Gacy passed off the marijuana. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A photo of JWG after his first arrest for sodomy in 1968.
A mugshot from Gacy’s 1968 arrest for sodomy in Waterloo, Iowa.
Gacy’s mugshot taken on December 21, 1978 at the Des Plaines Police Department. Photo courtesy of the Des Plaines PD.
John Wayne Gacy being transported from the Des Plaines Police Station to a hospital on December 23, 1978. Photo courtesy of William Yates from The Chicago Tribune.
At the Des Plaines police station, John Wayne Gacy covers his face with his manacled hands as he emerged after an all-night questioning session on December 22, 1978. Photo courtesy of Roy Hall from The Chicago Tribune.
Gacy being put in a squad car at the Des Plaines Police Station to be transported to a hospital. Photo taken on December 23, 1978, courtesy of William Yates from The Chicago Tribune.
Police floor plans showing location of bodies found in Gacy’s home. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A hand drawn diagram by Gacy of where he buried the bodies of his victims in the crawl space underneath his home. Photo courtesy of Erin Hooley from The Chicago Tribune.
A floor plan drawn by Gacy pointing out the locations of his victims. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
A picture from the memorial service for the nine (then) unidentified victims of Gacy; of that, five remain. Photo taken on June 12, 1981, courtesy of The Berkshire Eagle.
The service was held at a cemetery in Hillside, IL on June 12, 1981. The remains will be buried in nine different cemeteries in hopes of preventing a potential tourist attraction. Photo courtesy of The Berkshire Eagle.
Items found in the home of JWG. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Some of the ‘tools’ Gacy used in his murders. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
A ligature used by Gacy. Photo courtesy of Erin Hooley from The Chicago Tribune.
A pair of handcuffs belonging to John Wayne Gacy. Photo courtesy of Erin Hooley from The Chicago Tribune.
A blue nylon jacket belonging to Robert Piest that was found in Gacy’s home. Photo courtesy of Erin Hooley from The Chicago Tribune.
Porn found in Gacy’s house after his arrest. Photo courtesy of Murderpedia.
Some of the pornography themed literature found in Gacy’s house after his arrest. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
Some more of the pornography themed literature found in Gacy’s house after his arrest. Photo courtesy of Netflix.
One of John Wayne Gacy’s paintings, a ‘self-portrait.’ Photo courtesy of Steve Eichner and WireImage.
Original Artwork by JWG. Photo courtesy of Steve Eichner and WireImage.
Original Artwork by JWG. Photo courtesy of Steve Eichner and WireImage.
Another one of Gacy’s paintings.
Gacy’s paints.
Technicians from the Cook County Sheriff’s examining containers holding some remains of the unidentified victims of JWG in June 2011. For many years they were kept at the Cook County’s ME’s office and in 2009 were buried in a paupers’ grave. After they obtained a court order, investigators dug up a wooden crate at Homewood Memorial Gardens in June 2011 that contained eight smaller, pail-shaped boxes, each holding a victim’s jaw bones and their teeth. Photo courtesy of The Chicago Tribune.
An obituary for John’s sister, published on March 24, 2007.