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John Donald MERRETT
John Donald Merrett, a University student, was
tried at Edinburgh for the murder of his mother, Bertha Merrett, and for
uttering forged cheques upon her banking account. The authorities at
first believed that she had committed suicide, and no suspicion was
raised for eight months. Merrett was most skilfully defended, and the
jury returned a verdict of "Not Proven" on the charge of murder, and
guilty of uttering. He received a sentence of twelve months'
imprisonment.
In 1954, after a chequered career, under the name of
Chesney, he killed his wife and mother-in-law, and then committed
suicide.
John Donald
Merrett
Date of crime: 11 February 1954
Motive: Money
Crimes: Murder of his wife,
Veronica Bonnar, and her mother, Lady Mary Menzies, in their home in
Ealing, London.
He also appeared in
court at the age of 17, for the murder of his mother Bertha Merrett in
1926 in Edinburgh. The verdict for this was " not proven".
Method: He got his wife drunk on
gin and then drowned her in the bath. His mother-in-law was hit over the
head with a coffee pot and strangled.
Sentence: Merrett committed
suicide on 16th February 1954, shooting himself in the head.
Interesting facts:
Merrett's
mother was at first presumed to have committed suicide - she died from a
single gunshot behind her ear. After her death though, it became
apparent that Merrett had been defrauding her for quite a while and had
a strong motive to kill her. The forensic evidence was reconsidered in
the light of this. At the trial, there was great discussion as to
whether the ballistic evidence could show that she had not committed
suicide, but been shot.
After the verdict of not
proven, and his imprisonment for the related offence of uttering a false
cheque, Merrett married Bonnar. In 1921 he inherited £50,000, giving
£8,400 of it to his wife. He also changed his name to Ronald Chesney.
After the war, he dealt goods on the black market. When his money
finally ran out, he decided to kill his estranged wife to get back the
money he'd given her.
Bloodstains and hairs found on the clothes of Merrett after his death
linked him to the murder of his wife and mother-in-law. An inquest
decided that he had unlawfully killed them both.
John Donald Merrett
Merrett was born in New Zealand in 1908. As he grew up he developed
a talent for languages and his mother got him into Edinburgh University
in the hope that it might curb his over-developed interest in girls. It
was a vain hope and Merrett soon dropped out, though he did not inform
his mother of this. He would leave their house in Buckingham Terrace
each morning, carrying his books, and then spend most of his days in
Picardy Palace, a local dance hall.
He was having
breakfast with his mother on the morning of 17th March 1926 when the
daily help heard a shot and a shout of "My mother has shot herself." She
ran into the room to find 55-year-old Mrs Bertha Merrett lying on the
floor bleeding from a head wound. The injured woman was taken to
hospital where she recovered consciousness but was unable to remember
what had happened clearly but said that she had told Donald to go away
and to stop annoying her. She died on 1st April.
When the police investigated her
death they found that Donald had been helping himself to his mother's
chequebook and forging her signature to pay for his extravagant
lifestyle. .
Merrett was arrested in November
1926 and appeared in court in Edinburgh in February 1927 charged with
murder and forgery. The jury returned a verdict of not proven on the
murder charge but he received a year's imprisonment on the forgery
charge.
On his release, Merrett inherited
£50,000 and married seventeen-year-old Vera Bonnar. He also changed his
name to Ronald Chesney. It did not take him too long to get through his
inheritance and he maintained his lifestyle by blackmail and fraud.
He served in the RNVR during the war
and found himself in Germany after the cessation of hostilities. Merrett
was separated from his wife by this time and quickly became involved in
the black market. His financial position worsened as pressure grew to
stamp out marketeering. His wife, by this time, was running an old
people's home in Montpelier Road, Ealing, with her eccentric mother Mrs
Mary Bonnar, who had styled herself Lady Menzies.
In February 1954 Merrett crossed the
channel and went to Ealing. He got his wife drunk on gin and drowned her
in the bath, hoping that it would appear an accident. Unfortunately for
him, Lady Menzies had seen him and it was necessary for him to dispatch
her as well. This he did by battering and then strangling her. He fled
back to the continent but an international alert was raised.
On 16th February Merrett's body was
found in a wood near to Cologne. He had taken his own life by shooting
himself. Forensic examination of his clothing discovered fibres that
linked him with the killings and a London inquest determined that
Merrett, alias Chesney, had killed both women.
Murder-UK.com
John Donald Merrett
John Donald Merrett was born in New
Zealand in 1908. In 1924 his father walked out on his mother, who
decided to return to her homeland, England.
She made sure her son was enrolled in an excellent
public school ('public' is the English term for a private, or fee-paying
school), where he did very well with his studies. He also did very well
with talking scores of women into bed, and was kicked out of the school
as a result.
Merrett and his mother then moved to Edinburgh, where
he developed a liking for women who worked as strippers and escorts.
They didn't come cheap.
He began to forge his mother's signature on cheques.
He was caught when her bank manager wrote to her, concerned about the
size of her overdraft. Aware that he would no longer be able to forge
himself any free money, Merrett took some time to consider his next move...and
shot his mother.
He tried to pass it off as a suicide, explaining that
she'd had serious money worries, but the police found out about the
cheques. Realising that Mrs Merrett's annual income would be transferred
to her son, they had themselves a motive for murder. Merrett was
arrested.
He was found guilty of forgery but the murder charge
was 'not proven'. While in prison, a friend of his mother's, Mrs Bonnar,
came to visit him. She didn't believe he was a murderer, and invited him
to stay with her when his sentence was over. He changed his name to
Chesney and did just that. Some time later he married her daughter Vera.
Chesney then received a windfall - his grandfather
died, leaving him £50,000. He gave £8,400 to Vera and proceeded to spend
the rest trying to find out how best to be a successful criminal. He
tried thieving, more forgery, smuggling, blackmail, fraud, and was
pretty good at all of them.
He wasn't much good at saving, though. 20 years later
he was flat broke.
Remembering the £8,400 he'd given his estranged wife
Vera, he decided he'd have it back. He turned up at the retirement home
she ran with her mother, dragged her into a bathroom and drowned her in
the tub. On his way out of the building, Vera's mother stopped him, so
he killed her as well.
Chesney managed to escape to Germany, but knew the
police were closing in. He shot himself.
Edimburghdarkside.blogspot.com
Foreign News: Not Proven
Time.com
Monday, Mar. 01, 1954
Black-bearded, with a gold earring in his pierced
right ear and gold bangles jangling at his wrists, the man who called
himself Ronald Chesney looked every inch the pirate he claimed to be. He
habitually arrayed his strapping, 6-ft. 1-in. frame in the generously
sweeping gestures of the quarterdeck, and boasted homerically of his
vast appetites for food, drink and women. When asked his profession, "Old
Ches" would reply with a huge guffaw: "Smuggling." Men and women in all
walks of life fell easy prey to Ches's flamboyant charms, and after
failing to see him for long stretches, old friends would frequently
renew acquaintance with a happy smile and the affable greeting: "Hello,
you old s.o.b. Been in the jug again?" The answer, all too often, was
yes.
A Talent for Forgery.
Like many a romantic swashbuckler of fiction, Ches
began his life in gentler circumstances—as a brilliant, somewhat slack-jawed
mother's boy named John Donald Merrett. His doting mother, whose less
doting husband had skipped out of the family circle, sent him to a fine
public school, and went herself to Scotland to tend his needs when he
entered Edinburgh University. Each night in the privacy of their
quarters, Donald practiced the talent that led to his first serious
trouble—forging his mother's name. He soon became expert enough to drain
her meager bank account of some £450, most of which he spent on a local
music-hall dancer.
Two months after Donald entered college, his mother
was found shot to death with a .25 automatic which Donald had bought a
month before. In a trial which has since become a red-bound volume in
the Notable British Trials series, 17-year-old Donald escaped conviction
for the murder: the jury's verdict, under a useful Scots law, was "Not
Proven." But he went to prison for forgery, and after a year, emerged to
elope with 17-year-old Isobel Bonar. The honeymoon was scarcely over
when the young couple were indicted for fraud. Isobel was acquitted;
Donald got nine more months.
For the next decade the Donald Merretts, or the
Ronald Chesneys as they liked to call themselves, lived high, wide &
handsome, spending most of their time touring the Mediterranean in a
luxury yacht, the Armentières. They were often joined in their cruising
by Mrs. Chesney's mother, who called herself "Lady" Mary Menzies. When
Donald's fondness for gay company and Isobel's fondness for gin at last
drove them apart in 1937, Lady Mary and her daughter went back to London,
bought a large house in Ealing, and opened a boardinghouse for genteel
elderly ladies and gentlemen. Donald went on to join the navy, served as
a torpedo-boat commander. But he ended up as usual, sentenced to nine
months' imprisonment for misappropriation of naval vehicles—for
smuggling.
The Two Bodies.
From then on, Donald was in jail almost as much as he
was out. Betweentimes he lived luxuriously, on the profits of his
smuggling operations, in well-appointed establishments all over the
Continent. Sometimes he found the opportunity to drop in on his wife and
mother-in-law at Ealing, where he was a welcome visitor with his own
latchkey and a place to keep a few possessions, including two submachine
guns.
One day two weeks ago, Lady Menzies and her daughter
were both found dead, the older woman strangled with a nylon stocking,
the younger drowned in a bathtub. Donald was supposedly in Germany with
his current mistress (who had made him cut off his beard). Police found
some blurred fingerprints, listened to tales of a serving maid who said
she had heard a man's voice in her mistress' room the night before, and
began a search for Donald Merrett, alias Chesney. London newspapers
promptly jumped to the conclusion that he was the murderer.
But was he? No one could be sure; nor was anyone ever likely to be. In
Cologne last week, Donald Merrett wrote a note to his mistress: "After
all that lies behind me, I have no chance." Then he put a bullet through
his head.
Buccaneering life of a bearded brute
George Hume - HeraldScotland.com
16 Mar 1996
For Ronald Chesney, the lust for
money swept aside any hint of moral scruple. George Hume looks back at
the brutal criminal career of a man whose first victim was the mother
who loved him TWO deeply scratched forearms, their muscular power still
evident in a tall jar of formaldehyde at Scotland Yard's Black Museum,
provide the macabre full stop to the buccaneering and murderous career
that was the life of Ronald John Chesney.
His amoral rampage over three decades
first broke surface 70 years ago this weekend when a single pistol shot
cracked out, followed by a scream, in the smart West End home of
Edinburgh teenager John Donald Merrett.
Chesney the man, who escaped the
gallows by putting a pistol in his mouth and blowing his brains out in
the heart of war-battered Germany, was one and the same person as
Merrett the boy who, even as his mother fell to the floor of her drawing-room
in Buckingham Terrace, blood seeping from a bullet-hole in her head, had
only money on his mind.
Later on the day of the shooting,
March 17, 1926, as his mother lay under guard in the Royal Infirmary
suspected of having attempted to take her own life, the far from
distraught young Donnie - as his fond mother called him - was dancing in
the arms of a ballroom hostess, her charms booked out for the day, paid
for with money the 17-year-old had stolen from his mother.
As Merrett the boy, he would stand
trial for the alleged murder of his mother and enjoy the peculiarly
Scottish benefit of a not proven verdict: as Chesney the man he would
amass an Aladdin's cave of stolen drugs, jewels, and alcohol in the
ruins of post-war Europe, drown his wife in her bath, strangle his
mother-in-law, and die by his own hand . . . still, doubtless, with only
money on his mind. It was the fierce resistance of his frail, elderly
mother-in-law in London, the enigmatic and bogus ``Lady'' Menzies, that
left deep wounds on Chesney's arms: the forensic clue that tied his
corpse to murder, the grisly clincher that won detached fame in the
Black Museum.
The criminal career of the dual-identity
New Zealand-born rogue that began with the theft of money from his
mother and ended in a frenzy of murder spanned almost 30 years after a
jury put the question mark of a not proven verdict over the head of the
teenage Edinburgh University student.
Uncertain though the jury were about
the Crown's charge of murder against young Merrett, they were in no
doubt about a second charge on the indictment and the youth, already,
according to medical examiners, precociously developed, went to prison
for a year for fraud, a simple but lucrative scam that had involved
stealing blank cheques from his mother and forging her signature - a
number of them even after his mother, shot through the right ear, was
removed to hospital.
Today the three-room converted flat
at 31 Buckingham Terrace where, it seems almost certain, Bertha Merrett
discovered the web of cheque thefts and forgeries and taxed her son with
his guilt, is much as it was that morning after breakfast when she
opened a letter from her bank to find that she was, inexplicably,
overdrawn.
When the shot from Merrett's pistol -
a .25 Spanish automatic bought with funds looted from his mother's bank
account - rang out in the genteel silence of Buckingham Terrace, the
young student, unknown at his lectures although his mother believed him
diligent, rushed from the room where he had been standing beside his
mother to tell the daily cleaning woman: "Rita, my mother has shot
herself''.
His explanation then, and
subsequently, was that she had done so because of "money matters'' - a
subject on which Donnie was certainly able to declare with some
authority. The official mind, though, did not think it necessary to
probe the motives and finances of a woman so meticulous in money matters
that she required a weekly statement of expenditure from Donald -
including his donations to the church collection plate. Not for the last
time was Donald believed even as his mother, puzzled as to what had
happened, lay behind the barred windows of Ward 3, the Royal Infirmary's
suicide ward, and told a friend: ``Something burst in my head, just like
a pistol shot. Did Donald not do it? He is such a naughty boy''.
Two weeks after something burst in
her head "just like a pistol shot'' as she sat writing to a friend - a
letter from her bank manager before her - Bertha Merrett, seldom visited
by her only offspring, succumbed to her injuries. Aged just 55, Donnie's
fond mother was laid to rest in a grave bought by her sister in the
city's Piershill Cemetery. Donald, his father long since disappeared in
revolutionary Russia, was now an orphan.
In support of his "money matters''
theory young Merrett had told Rita the maid, even as they stood over the
shot and bleeding Bertha, that he had been "wasting my mother's money''
- an unusually frank admission from him. The wasted money, it
subsequently came to light, bought the much beloved son acceptance in
his spiritual home, the Dunedin Palais de Danse in Picardy Place, where
the student became a familiar free spender as he booked out the hostess
of his choice - 30 shillings a night, 15 shillings an afternoon - and
adorned them with gifts, jewellery, and the thrills of Edinburgh's 1920s
fast set.
Even as his mother lay in a hospital
bed, paralysed down her left side as the result of the bullet wound in
her head, Donald toured the countryside with the danseuse of the day in
a second-hand motorcycle combination bought a fortnight before the
shooting for #28. For a young man on a pocket money allowance of 10
shillings a week, Donald got a lot out of life. The open road before him,
money in his pocket and a girl by his side, he had little time for
hospital visiting. Mrs Merrett may have been on the point of dying, but
for her unworthy son, liar, cheat, thief, and - by way of a pastime -
brutal tormentor of dogs, life had just begun. But all good things,
including being believed, come to an end.
Eight months after the fatal gunshot
over "money matters'' - the police investigation having got off to a
slow start on the naive assumption of a suicide - young Donald was
unceremoniously returned to Edinburgh from his new home at the vicarage
of Hughenden in Bucking- hamshire where he had gone ostensibly to
prepare for Oxford University, his Edinburgh Alma Mater having by now
shown him the door.
On February 1 the following year John
Donald Merrett stood in the dock of the High Court, a policeman on
either side with drawn baton, charged with murdering his mother and
fraudulently passing off her cheques. The jury were treated to a
virtuoso performance by defence counsel Craigie Aitchison, KC, that cut
the Crown's case to pieces.
The jurors, reminded by the trial
judge that they were sitting not in a court of morals but in a court of
law, took just 55 minutes after hearing seven days of evidence to save
Donald's bacon by pointing out to His Majesty's Advocate that a callous
son keen on motorcycling in the company of a dancing instructress as his
mother's life slips away does not a murderer make.
After he was found not proven on the
murder charge, there remained the matter of the cheques. Here the jury,
certain of its ground, unanimously found for the Crown and Donald, by
now 18, was sent to prison - an experience that was to be the first of
many as a guest of His Majesty.
The sentence was 12 months and young
John Donald Merrett disappeared from view down the stairs from the dock
- out of sight for the time being but not for long out of the public eye.
Discharged from prison in October
1927, Merrett's subsequent history was that of an outlaw against society:
smuggling, theft, drug dealing, gun running, fraud and, ultimately,
double murder.
In the months immediately after the
end of the Second World War officers of the Royal Navy involved in the
job of dismantling the remnants of the German Kriegsmarine found the
bleakness of life at Buxtehude, a short car ride from the shattered
ruins of Hamburg, eased by the Mr Fixit expertise of a large, bearded,
RNVR Lieutenant-Commander whose job it was to ensure that life ran
smoothly.
The officer, who called himself
Ronald John Chesney, was the man-about-Buxtehude, the fellow to see for
service no matter how testing the request. Meeting life with an airy and
breezy manner, unfailingly helpful and eager to oblige, Chesney
displayed a knack for conjuring up champagne by the case and petrol by
the tankful. For money anything was possible.
Wartime commander of a motor gunboat
in the Mediterranean, then in charge of a schooner operating out of
Alexandria which ran supplies into Tobruk under the enemy's guns, the
swashbuckling Chesney somehow made a lot of money on the side. For all
that he was saved from considerable embarrassment when his ship was sunk
beneath him and he was taken prisoner - thus avoiding court martial for
a series of bounced cheques.
Come peacetime and still with a
single gold ear-ring in place when he arrived at Buxtehude, Chesney was
the life and soul of the party, busy on everyone's behalf as well as his
own. His endless fund of racy tales kept the mess in near incredulous
mirth though most of them were true. The most dramatic shot in his
locker, that of his murder trial as the young John Donald Merrett, he
only hinted at, once blurting out during a game of bridge when a pre-war
incident was mentioned: ``Oh, that was the year I murdered my mother''.
Then, a bridge partner recalls, he giggled - a disconcerting sound from
a man his size.
That bridge partner, the author Alan
Ross, says Chesney's obvious power and opulence were at odds with his
appearance: mean, piggy, watchful eyes with his head narrowing to a
point above his forehead. His face, in repose, wore a mean and
vindictive expression. Ever on the make, a clever exploiter of loopholes,
Chesney quickly became a law unto himself, even in uniform, and soon
moved a German woman, Gerda Schaller, into his quarters.
He managed to have her elevated to
official status, largely at taxpayers' expense. Long before the first
post-war Christmas, as millions in Europe came close to starvation,
Chesney was waxing fat on deals involving food, drink, and cigarettes as
well as petrol, cameras, drugs, and jewellery. He had enjoyed a "good
war'' but peace was proving even more profitable. But once more in the
life of Merrett/Chesney the good times came to an end. Demobilised and
then returned to Germany as a member of the Allied Control Commission,
he was soon behind bars for four months for - minor enough considering
what he had done unpunished - appropriating a Royal Navy car for his own
use. The bearded giant who had started down the slippery slope on an
Edinburgh dance-floor was now properly on the skids.
Released at the end of his sentence,
served in Wormwood Scrubs, and prison pallor notwithstanding, he was
seen within 24 hours behind the wheel of a Rolls-Royce bought with the
proceeds of contraband diamonds. With Schaller still in train Chesney
quickly established a smuggling headquarters in Liege. From there he and
his Buxtehude pick-up toured Europe in a large and luxuriously equipped
van stuffed with contraband. His fortunes flowed and ebbed.
A prosperous spell in Algiers was
followed by a short stay in the bleaker surroundings of the Sante Prison
in Paris, the first of many trips behind the bars of foreign jails in
the next few years for currency fraud and drug smuggling. The years of
post-war opportunity for the fast-moving and light-fingered ran on and
as a change from Continental prisons Chesney, who had purchased an ex-German
Navy E-boat for what he called "cross-Channel activities'', spent three
months in Pentonville Prison for importing nylon stockings without
paying duty, a sentence quickly followed by 12 months in Wandsworth
Prison for a similar undertaking - all small-beer crimes for which he
got only scant cover in the press.
Then, in January 1954, Chesney made
it big on the front page of almost every newspaper in the land - a
picture of the bearded, ear-ringed smuggler, naval cap on head, wanted
in connection with the murder of two women at an old people's home they
ran in Ealing: one the woman who had been his child bride, the other his
self-ennobled mother-in-law. Merrett had married a 17-year-old Ward in
Chancery on his release from the 12-month sentence handed down at the
High Court in Edinburgh.
His wife, Vera, was the daughter of a
bogus aristocrat, "Lady'' Menzies, and Donald Merrett - within a short
time appreciating the benefits of his mother-in-law's ``what's in a name?''
philosophy - transmogrified into Ronald Chesney. The name change did
little for him and within weeks the young bridegroom was back behind
bars - nine months with hard labour for false pretences in the Gateshead
area.
Two years later, by which time the
couple were living rough in a tent, he inherited from his grandfather a
fortune amounting to #50,000 - in 1929 a very considerable sum - and
settled #10,000 of it on his wife under the condition ``survivor takes
all'': an arrangement that was to prove, for them both, fatal. The
remainder of his inheritance quickly went on a speedboat and a two-seater
aircraft - both bought with a view to smuggling - an open Bentley,
country mansion, lavish entertainment, fast women, and a stableful of
slow horses: his dishonest, rackety lifestyle was established.
In the 1930s he smuggled drugs and
arms on a run between Malta, North Africa, and Spain. The war, when it
came, was treated by Chesney as just another opportunity to make a
dishonest living. By the time the two women met their violent end in
Ealing, Chesney was a habitual criminal, almost broke and more at home
behind bars than in his own bed. Even his long-standing companion from
Buxtehude, his German shadow Gerda Schaller, was no longer at his side
to remind him of the good old days of wine, women, rich living, and
sackfuls of cash.
Operating a double shuffle with his
own and a false passport, the man who was once content to fund his fun
with cheques torn from the back of his mother's chequebook set off from
Germany bound for the old people's home at Montpelier Road, Ealing,
determined to make good on the ``survivor takes all'' clause that would
provide a much-needed #10,000 for a new start in life. But police
investigating the deaths of the two women - one strangled corpse in the
hall, the other drowned in her bath - were more suspicious of Chesney
the husband than Edinburgh police had been of Merrett the son 28 years
before.
As detectives pieced together details
of the #10,000 "survivor-takes-all'' settlement, the not proven
acquittal on the charge of murdering his mother, the pan-European
criminal career, and the vast quantity of alcohol in the drowned wife's
body, Merrett/Chesney remained hidden from the hue and cry.
The long-discarded Vera and "Lady''
Menzies, the police believed - and a coroner's jury later confirmed -
had been murdered: the wife targeted because she would neither grant her
husband a divorce nor part with her marriage settlement, the mother-in-law
slain out of necessity when she came across Chesney as he tried to slip
undetected from the house. Ronald John Chesney or John Donald Merrett .
. . either way the police wanted a word.
Back in Germany, five days after the
discovery of his two murdered relatives, Chesney read the newspapers and
faced up to the inevitable: captured, his career would close on the end
of a hangman's noose.
He wrote a letter to his solicitor,
another to the public trustee to authorise release of the marriage
settlement funds, and a third, more tender, farewell to Sonia, daughter
of a Cologne greengrocer and his latest German girlfriend. Then, in the
loamy privacy of a mist-shrouded wood on the banks of the River Rhine
the bearded buccaneer for whom money came before scruple put the muzzle
of a pistol in his mouth and squeezed the trigger.
Only Gerda Schaller, loyal still from
the happy days at Buxtehude, turned up for his funeral. The body was
unclaimed but London detectives asked for the badly scratched arms -
proof, almost from beyond the grave, that they had got their man. Flesh
from Chesney's arms, torn from just above the wrists, had been found
under the fingernails of "Lady'' Menzies.
Today Donald Merrett's forearms -
disarticulated at the elbows - stand in a clear plastic container of
formaldehyde in the Black Museum at Scotland Yard, the scratches
inflicted by "Lady'' Menzies still clearly visible. To one side on the
same shelf are the metal handbag frame and rock-hard gallstone that
hanged acid-bath killer John George Haigh, to the other lie artefacts
from the case of the infamous Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen. Merrett, the
beloved Donnie of his betrayed, swindled, and slain mother, is in the
company that suits him best. The criminal career began with the theft of
money from his mother and ended in a frenzy of murder On the banks of
the River Rhine he put the muzzle of a pistol in his mouth and squeezed
the trigger.
Merrett,
John Donald
(1908-54)
SEX: M
RACE: W TYPE: N MOTIVE: CE/PC
DATE(S):
1926/54
VENUE:
Scotland/England
VICTIMS:
Three confessed
MO: Smuggler who killed his mother
(1926); later killed his estranged wife and mother-in-law (1954)
DISPOSITION: Acquitted, 1926;
suicide by gunshot on Feb.17,1954.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia
of Modern Serial Killers - Hunting Humans