Jeffery Dahmer: A Notorious Serial Killer of all Times 

 

Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer, a.k.a. one of the top serial killers of the century, was a notorious American cannibal killer, serial rapist, negrophilic, cannibal, ephebophile, hebephile, and poisoner, who stunned the world when he was apprehended in 1991, for the heinous crimes he did towards his victims, as for the truth that he killed 17 guys and boys over greater than thirteen years without capture.


 

 

        His mother was a machining instructor and his father was a chemist by profession. His father         was always away from home, either studying or working, and his mother got depressed due         to the marriage's lack of attention. She developed an addiction to Enaquil tablets and even            tried to commit suicide by overdosing. Jeff and his younger sibling brother, David, were                frequently overlooked as a result of their incessant squabbling. As a child, Dahmer started to         collect insects and butterflies, then progressed to collect road-killed, always preserving                corpses in jars after dismembering them because he was fascinated by how the parts fit                together. He started drinking and in high school, he was a heavy drinker.

  His first murder happened only a few weeks after he finished high school. On June 18, 1978,        Dahmer welcomed Steven Hicks, an 18-year-old hitchhiker to his home. When Steven wanted        to go, he hit him over the head with a dumbbell, knocking him unconscious, then strangling           him with the dumbbell's bar and killing him. Dahmer then stripped him naked and masturbated       over his lifeless body. In the crawl area beneath his house,  Dahmer dismembered Hick’s body      and buried the bones in a shallow grave in his garden. He dug up the remains, peeled the       flesh off the bones with acid, flushed the acid down the toilet, shattered the bones with a              sledgehammer, and dispersed them in the woods behind his family's home many weeks later.

    With his victims, Dahmer typically followed a similar pattern. He would convince them with              promises of money in exchange for sex or nude photoshoots. He would drug, rape, and kill,             then separate the limbs and head from the torso, extract the bones from the corpse using acid     or just remove the flesh from the bone, dissolve all residual flesh and dispose of it. Then he            would shatter the bones with a sledgehammer and scatter or destroy them, sometimes saving         the skulls or genitals. He tried to keep the skulls or genitals as souvenirs. He also regularly            photographed his victims at various phases of the murder procedure so that he could recall and relive the event later.


Tracy Edwards, a 32-year-old African American man who was running with handcuffs dangling     from his wrist, led two Milwaukee police officers to Dahmer’s house in July 1991. They looked into the man's allegations that he had been drugged and restrained by a “weird dude.” When they arrived at Dahmer's residence, he calmly volunteered to grab the handcuffs' keys.


The knife Dahmer had threatened Edwards with was said to be in the bedroom, according to Edwards. When the officer searched the room they noticed polaroid photographs of dissected bodies in various poses. Cops also found various skulls in his bedroom, a full torso in his refrigerator, jars holding genitalia, and a  slew of other horrors. Dahmer tried to escape but officers arrested him. The chief medical examiner stated that “It was more like deconstructing someone's museum, rather than an actual crime scene.”

Dahmer gave up his right to have a counsel present during his interrogations on July 23, 1991, and quickly acknowledged killing 17 young men and boys between 1978 and 1991, having sex with dead bodies, collecting body parts, and eating others.

He was judged to be legally sane during his trial, despite being detected with borderline personality disorder, schizotypal personality disorder, and a psychotic situation. He was well aware of what he was doing.


 

     When asked if he was pleased that it was all ended after his arrest, Dahmer said he wasn't,         that he enjoyed his lifestyle and considered it "interesting and exhilarating," according to FBI         archives. When police questioned Dahmer if he could live an everyday life if he were ever             freed, the killer said that jail was the greatest place for him because if he ever got out, he would     return to his old ways, including killing.

    He was given 15 following life sentences, with a 16th sentence added in May. Dahmer died on         November 28, 1994, after Christopher Scarver, a fellow prisoner beat him to death.



Name: Ishraq Anjum Naypunya

 

Id: 22201229

 

section: 20



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