Fifth in a series on serial killers!
I have to admit, watching Charlize Theron play Aileen Wuornos in the movie Monster made me feel a strange sympathy for the serial killer. I felt something similar after reading about Henry Lee Lucas too. Maybe it’s a teacher’s job hazard to always see the hurt, traumatized child in the adult, for, as Dr. Phil would say, I don’t ask why Wuornos and Lucas killed, I ask why wouldn’t they, given their formative years? Wuornos was convicted of killing seven men between 1988 and 1989 at point-blank range. She claimed self-defense: the men she killed either attempted to rape her or did rape her while she was working as a prostitute.
A few snippets from Wuornos’ early life:
- Her mom was 14 when she married her dad, who was 16. They had a boy a year later, and then Aileen, a year after that.
- Her mom, aged 16, filed for divorce when Aileen was barely 2 months old.
- She never met her father, as he was jailed when she was born and committed suicide in prison.
- Her father was diagnosed with schizophrenia and charged with sex crimes against children.
- Her mother abandoned Aileen and her brother when Aileen was just 4. Their maternal grandparents took them in.
- Her grandfather was an alcoholic who beat and sexually abused Aileen. He made her take her clothes off before a beating.
- She engaged in sexual behavior with her brother.
- By age 11, she was performing sexual acts at school in exchange for food, drugs, and cigarettes. Age 11. Age 11!
- At 14, she became pregnant and gave the child up for adoption. The father? One of her grandfather’s friends.
- Shortly after the birth of the child, her grandmother died and Aileen dropped out of school.
- At 15, her grandfather kicked her out of the house. She began prostituting and living in the woods.
Mix together and bake for 20 years. What would we expect from her?
Wuornos appealed her conviction, but stopped all attempts in 2001, saying, “I killed those men…robbed them as cold as ice. And I’d do it again, too.”
Well, then. At least she’s honest. She continued:
“I have hate crawling through my system…I am so sick of hearing this ‘she’s crazy’ stuff. I’ve been evaluated so many times. I’m competent, sane, and…one who seriously hates human life.”
Can you blame her, considering what her first fifteen years of life were like?
She was found sane, but over the course of the next year, became increasingly erratic in her behavior. She was executed in 2002. Her last words were “I would just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back, like Independence Day, with Jesus. June 6, like the movie. Big mothership and all, I’ll be back. I’ll be back.”
I’m no psychiatrist, but that would make me question her sanity.
Why is it that some people can be exposed to horrific early-life trauma and come out on the other side, but others, like Wuornos and Lucas, can not? Let me know your thoughts after you read up on Ed Gein, Henry Lee Lucas, Belle Gunness, and Robert Hansen.
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