Edward
Theodore GEIN |
Gein's farm.
Deputy sheriff stands guard to keep
outsiders away from the Gein farmhouse.
Curiosity-seekers peer through a window into the house of serial
killer Ed Gein, Plainfield,
Wisconsin, November
1957.
The bright lighting in the side ground floor window is part
of the
illumination for the on-site crime lab.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Curiosity seekers peering into kitchen window at alleged mass
murderer Ed Gein's house,
where parts of his victim's bodies were found.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Crime lab specialist Jim Halligan carrys a chair through a
doorway as he searches for evidence
in the disorganized home of serial killer Ed Gein, Plainfield,
Wisconsin, November 20, 1957.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Filthy, cluttered bedroom in alleged mass murderer (serial killer)
Ed Gein's house.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Neighbor of alleged mass murderer Ed Gein, Bob Hill, looking in
horror while standing in interior
doorway of Gein's house, where he visited on the day Gein killed Mrs.
Worden.
(Photo by Francis Miller//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Neat, uncluttered room in alleged mass murderer (serial killer)
Ed Gein's house which his
mother had occupied;
room was never used after her death and is in stark contrast
to
filthy, cluttered rooms in rest of the house,
where parts of his victim's bodies
were found.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
Filthy, cluttered kitchen of alleged mass murderer Ed Gein, where
parts of his victim's bodies were found.
(Photo by Frank Scherschel//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
This is a photo of his kitchen at the time of his arrest,
and a police officer who was on the scene investigating it.
Removal of evidence at Gein's house.
Some of the graves that Edward Gein exhumed.
Worden's hardware store (right view)
This is where Ed Gein shot and killed Bernice Worden.
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