Read Five Women Serial Killer Profiles Online

Authors: Sylvia Perrini

Tags: #Biographies & Memoirs, #Serial Killers, #Politics & Social Sciences, #Social Sciences, #Violence in Society, #Murder & Mayhem, #Nonfiction, #Retail, #True Crime

Five Women Serial Killer Profiles (10 page)

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Aileen giving evidence

 

On the stand, Aileen testified that she shot Richard Mallory to save herself after he had violently raped her. She gave a graphic account of the pain and humiliation she had suffered at the hands of Richard Mallory. The prosecuting attorney, John Tanner, on cross-examination, destroyed any shred of credibility Aileen might have had. He brought up inconsistencies and lies she had given in her statements to the police detectives. During the cross-examination, Aileen became angry and agitated, giving the jury a glimpse of the violent mood swings that had plagued Aileen throughout her life. Her lawyers constantly advised Aileen not to answer questions and twenty-five times she invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Aileen was the only witness for the defense. Sitting in the courtroom, Arlene Pralle prayed continually and at other times sobbed. 

Judge Uriel Blount sent the jury out to consider their verdict on January 27
th
. Less than two hours later, the jury returned with their verdict. They had found Aileen guilty of murder in the first-degree. As the jurors left the courtroom, Aileen angrily yelled at them, “I’m innocent! I was raped! Scumbags of America! I hope you all get raped in the ass!"

The following day
, the court convened for the penalty phase of Aileen’s trial.

Expert psychiatric witnesses for the defense stated under oath that Aileen was mentally unstable and suffered from antisocial personality disorder and borderline personality disorder. Aileen’s lawyers argued that her appalling childhood had damaged and ruined her as they pleaded to the jury to spare Aileen’s life. The state’s expert psychologist, Dr George Barnard
, also diagnosed Aileen as suffering from Borderline Personality disorder.

However, for the jury, Aileen’s anger and cursing from the day before was still fresh in their minds. The jurors unanimously recommended that the Judge hand Aileen the death penalty. Four days later, on
the 31st of January in 1992 Judge Blount sentenced Aileen to death by electrocution. Aileen was just thirty-six-years-old.

Aileen was visibly shocked and distraught by the jury’s verdict. On the way out of the court on her way to death row, she said to waiting journalists, “I was raped, I was tortured, and they had the steering wheel, pictures of the steering wheel. It had scratches on it, it was broken. It is proof that I was tied to that steering wheel. I cannot believe that this has happened.”

Outside the courtroom, Arlene Pralle told reporters that the verdict "gives rapists an open door, an encouragement, to kill prostitutes and get away with it."

Death Row

The British documentary film-maker Nick Broomfield paid Arlene in excess of $10,000 to arrange an interview with Aileen following the trial. At the same time, Arlene was telling Aileen that her public defender lawyers were, along with everyone else involved in the case, the attorneys, the detectives, and, especially, Tyria Moore were all attempting to profit from her story. Arlene said she would arrange paid interviews for Aileen and then Aileen could hire a private lawyer.

Arlene persuaded Aileen to fire her public defender legal team and appoint a new lawyer, Steven Glazer. Arlene had hired Stephen Glazer to handle the adoption of Aileen. Stephen Glazer was a bizarre character who had been a struggling musician before becoming a lawyer. He claimed he had been abused by his parents and had created an imaginary friend, Lowther, to keep him company
as a child. As an adult, he had built a replica of his imaginary friend, which resembled a dead, murdered corpse with a scar across his forehead. He said he used him for company and as a deterrent to keep drug addicts away from his house.

Stephen Glazer and ‘friend’

He was hired to defend Aileen in her next murder trial of Dick Humphreys, Troy Burress, and David Spears despite having no experience in death penalty cases. Aileen was extremely lonely and devoid of human contact as she wiled her time away in death row. Arlene persuaded her that her best course of action would be to drop her not guilty plea and to admit to the murders of the three men. Aileen, with lack of advice from elsewhere and still suffering from the betrayal of her lover Tyria Moore, agreed perhaps thinking that in doing this, the court would show her mercy, and she would be spared the death penalty.

On her way to this trial, as she was led to the prison van, she gave no indication to reporters that she was going to change her plea. She only talked to them about having sacked her public defender and had hired a private lawyer, Stephen Glazer.

On March 31
st
, Stephen Glazer, within seconds of being appointed her new lawyer, stunned the court by changing Aileen’s plea from not guilty to one of ‘no contest.’

Stephen Glazer

He made no attempt at having her death sentence reduced or any kind of plea bargain. Even notorious serial killer Ted Bundy was offered a plea agreement. The “no contest” plea is used as a guilty plea but without a plea agreement, it meant that she was eligible for the death penalty in each case. 

Aileen made a rambling statement to the court and Judge Thomas Sawaya in which she said, “
She was sorry her acts of self defense had ended up in court like this, but she took full responsibility for her actions, it was them or me………I am prepared to die if you say it is necessary.”

At this point, she paused and seemed confused, not looking sure if she meant this or if it was indeed wise to say this.

On May 15th, 1992, Judge Thomas Sawaya, handed Aileen three more death sentences. In video-tapes of the sentencing, it would seem by Aileen’s reaction that this was not what she was expecting.

She thanked the judge and declared, “I’ll be up in heaven while you all rot in hell.”

She turned and snarled at the Assistant State Attorney that she hoped his “wife and children get raped in the ass!”

To the judge
, she gave an obscene gesture and muttered, “Motherfucker.”

Stephen Glazer informed the court that Aileen’s automatic appeal should be handled by the public defender’s office.

Following this court appearance Aileen sunk into a deep depression. She refused to communicate with Stephen Glazer or Arlene. The British journalist Nick Broomfield asked Stephen Glazer why he had allowed Aileen to submit a “no contest” plea. He said he had done so because, he claimed, Aileen wanted to die. Yet until 2001, Aileen continued to appeal her death sentence, claiming self-defense.

Stephen Glazer told Nick Bloomfield, that although he did not feel comfortable, he would be there with Aileen as they strapped her into the electric chair as Aileen had asked him to be there. He would be there as her friend and lawyer, and he would give her the advice that Woody Allen, in the movie “Take the Money
and Run,” in which Allen had played the lawyer, Virgil Stockwell, gave to his client about to be executed in the chair, “Don’t sit down.” Stephen Glazer then burst into raucous laughter.

Other lawyers were appalled at Stephen Glazer
’s behavior and whispered amongst themselves that he was unfit to defend her and was helping propel Aileen into the electric chair. Tricia Jenkins, Chief Assistant Public Defender, who had handled Aileen’s first trial, said that Steven Glazer had told her “he was taking the case because he needed the media exposure."

In June
of 1992, again under Stephen Glazer’s advice, Aileen pleaded guilty to the murder of Charles Carskaddon. In November of 1992, Aileen received her fifth death sentence for Charles Carskaddon’s murder.

Aileen realized too late that Arlene Pralle had only befriended her for financial gain
and Stephen Glazer for the promotion of his law firm the media publicity gave him. Aileen had discovered that Arlene was going to start a museum with letters and drawings she had sent her. Aileen told Nick Broomfield in a video-taped interview that Arlene and Stephen Glazer had advised her of ways to kill herself in prison. She said she didn’t see such advice as “very motherly or lawyerly.”

In a letter to
her childhood friend Dawn, Aileen wrote, “As her and Steve conned me to “WAIVE OFF” all remaining trials.”

When Arlene was asked why she had advised Aileen to enter the no-contest plea, she remarked, “The state has a death sentence so, golly, in a few years she could be with Jesus. Why not go for it?”

Dateline’s NBC reporter, Michele Gillen, discovered in November of 1992 that Richard Mallory, Aileen’s first victim, had spent ten years in prison in Maryland for violent rape. During Aileen’s first trial when she had taken the witness stand and described the violent rape she had undergone by Richard Mallory, the prosecution denied that there was any evidence to substantiate Aileen’s claims of rape or any history of sexual crimes by Richard Mallory. Trish Jenkins, Aileen’s public defender lawyer, was heavily criticized for failing to bring this to the court’s attention. Many believe that it was Mallory’s violent rape of Aileen that started her off on her spree of murders.

In November
of 1992, during the Charles Carskaddon post-trial hearing, Aileen’s public defender defense team tried to introduce the newly discovered evidence against Richard Mallory into court. The lawyers thought that the jurors would have seen Aileen’s case differently had they been aware of this fact. The judge refused to allow this evidence to be admitted into the post-trial proceedings and denied Aileen’s request for a retrial. Aileen, during all this time, was locked up 23-hours-a-day in a spartan 6-foot-by-8-foot prison cell rarely seeing anyone except prison guards and devoid of human touch.

Death Row Cell

Aileen spent her time reading the Bible and drawing scenic pictures with her blue ink pen. She also spent her time corresponding with her old school friend Dawn Botkins, to whom she would sometimes write four letters a day.

Aileen’s Art Work

 

In February
of 1993, Aileen pleaded guilty to the murder of Walter Jeno Antonio. Aileen told the court at the sentencing hearing that she wished to waive her right to present mitigating evidence and her right to be present. She said that she already had five death sentences and didn’t want to waste tax payer’s money. Aileen also made the observation that male serial killers normally only received about two death sentences and the number she was receiving was due to a media and political circus. She said she no longer cared and simply wished to return to her cell on death row.

When the sentencing date arrived, Aileen was brought to the court. The defense lawyers presented a letter from Dr. Harry Krop, a psychiatrist, stating that Aileen was incompetent and delusional. The court then ordered Aileen for another evaluation by psychiatrists Dr. Joel Epstein and Dr. Donald DeBeato. They declared that Aileen suffered from a personality disorder but was competent. The court decided Aileen was mentally competent enough to proceed.

At the sentencing, Aileen complained profanely and vehemently about mistreatment. The court threatened to bind and gag her unless she remained silent; she was, however, permitted to address the court. In her statement, Aileen again asserted she had acted purely in self-defense. The court rejected Aileen’s claim of self-defense, and she received her sixth death sentence.

Aileen’s lawyers continued to fight through appeals for her life. In 1996, the US Supreme Court denied her appeal. In 1989, the US Supreme Court ruled that it was not unconstitutional to execute the mentally impaired.

In 2000, Aileen’s new public defender attorney, Joseph Hobson, and an investigator, Kari Anderson, who both believed that Aileen had been let down completely by the entire legal system launched a new appeal for a new trial. They based the appeal on Stephen Glazer’s incompetence as a lawyer in a death penalty case. Moreover, the fact that, as was filmed in Nick Broomfield’s excellent documentary,
“The Selling of a Serial Killer,”
Stephen Glazer would smoke as many as seven marijuana joints before giving Aileen legal advice. Joseph Hobson also accused Stephen Glazer of financially profiting from the media for arranging interviews with Aileen.

In support of his appeals, Joseph Hobson entered a seventy-four page deposition Stephen Glazer had given the previous year.

In the deposition, Stephen Glazer admits smoking marijuana, both recently and in 1992, and admitted he was filmed smoking marijuana and had told Nick Broomfield’s that the journey from his office to Aileen Wuornos' South Florida prison was a "seven-joint ride."

BOOK: Five Women Serial Killer Profiles
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