Female Killing

Female Killing




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10 of the Most Notorious Female Serial Killers
Since men perpetrate about 90 percent of the world’s homicides, it makes sense that nearly all of history’s most notorious serial killers are men. But they do have a small number of female counterparts, and they are just as deadly. Today, we look at some of the most horrifyingly ruthless female serial killers ever. Many used arsenic as their deadly weapon, and some killed over 100 people. Check out these women below.
Born in 1956, Wuornos killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990. She shot each of the seven at point-blank range, according to The New York Daily News. She was captured after a minor traffic accident in one of her victims’ cars. She told the police that she murdered the men in self-defense because they raped her while she worked as a prostitute. However, she was sentenced to death for six of the murders. In 2003, a movie of her life, titled Monster and starring Charlize Theron, was released to high praise.
Judy Buenoano, was nicknamed the “Black Widow” for poisoning her husband, killing her son and trying to blow up her boyfriend. (Handout)
Buenoano killed her husband James Goodyear, according to NBC News, her son Michael Buenoano, her boyfriend Bobby Joe Morris, and potentially her boyfriend Gerald Dossett. She was also believed to have been involved in a 1974 murder in Alabama, and attempted to murder her fiancé John Gentry.
Buenoano was executed in 1971 for the murder of her husband. She was later linked to many of the other murders. She was the first woman to be executed in Florida since 1848 and was the third woman to be executed in the U.S. since the reinstatement of capital punishment in 1976.
Barraza was a Mexican professional wrestler. She was born in 1957 and was known as “The Old Lady Killer.” She murdered between 42 and 48 elderly woman and was later sentenced to 759 years in prison. She would beat or strangle her victims and steal their possessions. She was caught in 2006 and found guilty of 16 counts of murder and aggravated burglary in 2008, according to the New York Daily News.
Jane Toppan at the age of tweny-four. She was a nurse who went on a killing spree that started with her family friends and by the end had thirty-one victims. Her method was poison through injection and upon confessing, was declared insane and committed. Female Serial Killers (Getty Images)
Toppan was a nurse who killed dozens of patients, according to NBC. She was nicknamed “Jolly Jane.” She confessed to 31 murders after her arrest in 1901. She would kill the victims with different combinations of medicine and chemicals and even climb into bed with them after administering the dose. She was found not guilty by reason of insanity and committed to the Taunton Insane Hospital for life.
Gottfried was a German serial killer who was the last person publicly executed in the city of Bremen. She killed 15 people using arsenic, probably between the years 1813 and 1827. She would mix the poison in with her victims’ food while caring for them as a nurse, reports New York Daily News. She killed her parents, her two husbands, her fiancé and her children.
Dyer is only convicted of one murder, but her name is attached to the murder of hundreds of infants and children. She worked for 20 years at the “baby farm,” according to the New York Daily News. It is suspected that she killed over 400 infants, which would make her among history’s most prolific serial killers. She was tried for murder in 1896 and convicted and hanged.
Gilbert was a nurse who was convicted of four murders and two attempted murders of patients admitted to the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Massachusetts. She would inject patients with massive doses of epinephrine, which is an untraceable heart stimulant. This would cause cardiac arrest, and she would respond to the coded emergency herself. She was convicted in 1998. She is serving a life sentence at Federal Medical Center, Carswell in Fort Worth, Texas.
Mrs. Nannie Doss, confessed rat poison slayer of four of her five husbands. Tulsa, Oklahoma: Mrs. Nannie Lanning Morton Doss. (Getty Images)
Doss killed 11 people between the 1920s and 1954, including four of her husbands, two children, her two sisters, her mother, a grandson, and a mother-in-law. She was known as the “Giggling Granny,” the “Lonely Hearts Killer,” the “Black Widow,” and “Lady Blue Beard.” Her main method of murder was rat poison. She pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life imprisonment. She died in 1965.
Puente ran a boarding house in Sacramento, California, and murdered her elderly and mentally disabled boarders. She would then cash in their Social Security checks. She was often called the “Death House Landlady.” She was charged with a total of nine murders. Puente was convicted of three and sentenced to two life sentences. She died in 2011 in a prison in Chowchilla at the age of 82.
Ishikawa was a Japanese midwife. She murdered infants with the help of accomplices during the 1940s, reports New York Daily News. Estimates suggest the she murdered between 85 and 169 people, but the general estimate is 103. She sought payments for the murders, since many of her victims were deserted children, and she said her services cost less than raising an unwanted child. She received a four-year sentence.
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When you try to imagine a murderer, your brain likely conjures an image of a man. That's probably because, statistically as far as we know, women are responsible for around 11% of all murders. But that doesn't make the murders any less heinous.
The women on this list have gone down as some of the most terrifying killers of all time. 
Editor's note: A warning some of these accounts feature graphic depictions of violence, sexual abuse, and murder.
Countess Elizabeth Bathory killed over 600 young girls.
Elizabeth Bathory used her wealth and position to torture those she considered beneath her, according to The History Channel. Bathory came from a prominent noble family in Hungary, and she married into another one when she wed Count Ferencz Nádasdy in 1575.
Sources say she convinced her husband to build a torture chamber in the castle they shared. She is said to have killed over 600 girls, mostly aged 10 to 14, after torturing them by "jamming pins and needles under the fingernails of her servant girls, and tying them down, smearing them with honey, and leaving them to be attacked by bees and ants."
Her powerful position kept her out of prison until 1610 when she moved on from servant girls to targeting the daughters of local nobles. She was convicted for 80 counts of murder in 1611 and confined to a room of the castle that is said to have only had slits for food and air. She died three years later in 1614.
Andrea Yates drowned all five of her children.
The story of Andrea Yates, the Houston woman accused of killing her five children, captured America's attention in 2001. Yates was convicted of murder on five counts after she had methodically drowned all of her children one by one in the span of an hour, according to Time. The youngest was six months old, and the eldest was 7 years old.
A first trial in 2002 convicted Yates of two counts of capital murder, but an appeals court later reversed this decision and she was found not guilty by reason of insanity in her second trial in 2006. 
Aileen Wuornos went on a killing spree in Florida.
Aileen Wuornos was responsible for the murders of six different men. Between 1989 and 1990, she later confessed to shooting men who picked her up hitchhiking in self-defense after she claimed they beat or raped her, a claim that she later recanted.
Wuornos was sentenced to death in 1992 and was executed by lethal injection on October 9, 2002. Her story was portrayed in the film "Monster," with Charlize Theron playing Wuornos.
Evelyn Dick was called the "Torso Killer."
In 1946, some children stumbled upon a torso in the woods that would later be identified as John Dick, according to The Canadian Encyclopedia. His wife Evelyn was immediately accused of the murder and put on trial.
The couple had been estranged because Evelyn was allegedly having numerous affairs. When her home was searched, police also found the body of her infant son in a suitcase that had been filled with concrete.
After two trials, she was ultimately found not guilty for the murder of her husband, despite her father being found guilty of accessory to murder. She was, however, found guilty of manslaughter for the death of her son. She was released from jail in 1958 and immediately disappeared from public.
Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten, and Patricia Krenwinkel killed for Charles Manson.
Charles Manson was a criminal mastermind who had the other members of his "family" to do his killing for him. Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten, and Patricia Krenwinkel were all members of the infamous Manson Family and helped to carry out the group's most notorious murders at the LaBianca and Tate residences.
Atkins was convicted on eight counts of first degree murder and died in jail in 2009. Krenwinkel is still serving time in a California prison for her seven murder convictions. Van Houten was convicted of assisting in the murder of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca and recently had a parole overturned by California Governor Jerry Brown.
Juana Barraza is a former wrestler who killed elderly women.
As a Mexican wrestler, Juana Barraza was known by her character name "The Lady of Silence." But after she was arrested on charges of murdering elderly women in Mexico City, she was dubbed the "Mataviejitas," or "Little Old Lady Killer."
According to authorities, Barraza would pretend to be a nurse or social worker so the women would let her into their home, at which point she would strangle them and take their possessions. When she was caught, police said she had a list of names and addresses of elderly women receiving government assistance.
She was convicted of 11 separate counts of murder and sentenced to 759 years in jail, where she remains today.
Jane Toppan was a nurse whose patients became her victims.
Jane Toppan began working at the Cambridge Hospital in 1885 and was so liked by her peers and patients that they dubbed her "Jolly Jane." She used her time at the hospital to experiment with different medications and drugs such as morphine and atropine to see the reaction in her patients.
She would later confess to killing at least 31 people. She was found not guilty by reason of insanity and was sent to Taunton State Hospital for life.
Dorothea Puente ran a boarding house and stole the social security checks of her victims.
Dorothea Puente was an elderly woman who opened a boarding house in Sacramento. In reality, she was poisoning her residents and hoarding their social security checks, a racket that made her about $5,000 a month, according to Sactown magazine.
Police investigated her home in 1988 and discovered body parts buried in the backyard. Puente fled, but was later apprehended at a hotel in Los Angeles and tried for nine murders. She was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after she was found guilty on two counts first-degree murder and one count of second-degree murder.
Puente died at the age of 82 while incarcerated at Central California Women's Facility.
Velma Barfield poisoned her own mother.
The "Death Row Granny" was a nickname given to Velma Barfield, a woman convicted of killing at least four people in North Carolina, including her own mother and two husbands, according to The New York Daily News. She says she did so by adding arsenic to their food or drink.
Although those are the only murders she admits to, there were multiple other people in her life who died under mysterious circumstances. At her trial in 1978, she claimed, "the devil made me do it" and that she had never intended to kill her relatives. The defense didn't work, and she was found guilty and executed in 1984.
Leonarda Cianciulli famously turned one of her victims into soap.
After a series of miscarriages and a fortune-teller's prophecy that Leonarda Cianciulli's children were at risk, she decided that she needed to sacrifice other people in order to save them. Over the course of a year from 1939-1940 in Correggio, Italy, she killed three women and disposed of the bodies. She used caustic soda to disintegrate the bodies, and according to her court testimony, she turned one of the women's remains into soap, which earned her the nickname "la Saponificatrice di Correggio," or "the soap-maker of Correggio."
She was sentenced to 30 years in prison and three years in a criminal asylum. She died in 1970.
Amelia Dyer is suspected of murdering hundreds of babies in England.
Amelia Dyer may be one of the most prolific serial killers in England's history. It was discovered in the late 1890s that she had been "baby farming," or collecting babies to "care" for them in exchange from money. Instead, she would starve them or give them liquid opiates.
She was sentenced to six months of hard labor for neglect, but then her crimes progressed to strangling the infants and dumping them in the river.
One of those bodies was found and traced back to her. She confessed and was sentenced to death by hanging in 1896, according to the BBC. She is suspected of killing hundreds of babies, but it's impossible to know just how many infants were killed.
Nannie Doss killed several family members, including four husbands.
Nannie Doss killed four of her five husbands, at least two children (and two other died of a suspicious "food poisoning"), her mother, her two sisters, and a mother-in-law. Miraculously, it wasn't until the death of her fifth husband that anyone became suspicious.
An autopsy revealed an extremely high amount of arsenic in his system, and Doss was charged with his murder. She confessed to killing the others but was only tried and convicted on one count of murder. She died in prison in 1965.
Waneta Hoyt smothered her five children.
From 1965-1971, Waneta Hoyt lost five children to what was assumed to be Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. Medical professionals were fascinated by the story and wrote about the family in journals, using their story as proof that the mysterious ailment must run in families, according to The New York Times. Other professionals called this "statistically impossible" and an investigation began.
Years later in the '90s, authorities say Hoyt confessed to smothering all of the children though she later recanted. She was sentenced to 75 years in prison and died shortly after.
Tillie Klimek appeared to have psychic abilities when she "predicted" the deaths of her victims.
Tillie Klimek got quite a reputation in Chicago for her "psychic" abilities, but her visions always centered around a very specific prophecy — the death of her husbands, according to the New York Daily News. She seemed to know the exact date each of her husbands would die.
Police eventually realized that Klimek was able to predict these deaths because she was putting rat poison in her husbands' food (investigators found arsenic in all of their bodies). She also is suspected of killing neighbors and friends with food or candy she had prepared. Klimek was found guilty and died in jail in 1936.
Katherine Knight killed her boyfriend and cooked his body parts.
Katherine Knight worked in a slaughterhouse in Australia before she decided to put her skills to use killing and skinning her boyfriend, John Price, in 2000, according to The Guardian. By the time police found what was left of his body, some of his body parts had been prepared to serve to Price's children with vegetables and gravy, and his head appeared to be cooking in a pot for a stew.
She was sentenced to life without parole in 2001 for the stabbing death of her husband and is still serving time.
Mary Ann Cotton is considered Britain's first serial killer.
Mary Ann Cotton is thought to be the first serial killer to terrorize England. She is suspected of poisoning at least 20 people, including multiple husbands and 11 of her children, among others. She was only convicted of one killing — that of her stepson Charles Edward Cotton — who authorities say died from arsenic poison.
Cotton never admitted to any of the murders but was hanged for her crimes in 1873.
Stacey Castor poisoned her husband and tried to blame her daughter for it.
Stacey Castor is another woman who used poison to kill, but she did one thing differently — she tried to blame her daughter for it, according to Syracuse.com. After her second husband died of antifreeze poisoning in 2005, she also tried to kill her daughter with a mix of medications. To cover her tracks, she wrote a suicide note from her daughter in which "her daughter" confessed to killing both Castor's first and second husbands.
Her daughter survived the ordeal, and Castor was arrested and convicted on charges of first-degree and attempted murder. In 2016 she was found dead in her cell of apparent heart disease.
Rita Gluzman killed her husband with an ax.
In 1996 Rita Gluzman was convicted and sentenced to death for killing and dismembering her husband, a renowned cancer researcher, according to The New York Times. She murdered him with an ax, reportedly after he said he was leaving her for another woman.
Gluzman recruited her cousin to help, and the cousin later confessed to helping cut up the body while she cleaned up the blood. They were caught when a police officer saw her cousin trying to dump the body in the Passaic River.
Stella Nickell mixed poison with Excedrin to kill her husband.
Stella Nickell was inspired by the Chicago Tylenol murders, in which someone added cyanide to Tylenol and put them back on store shelves, and decided that was the best way to kill her husband, according to PBS. She put
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