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John Wayne Gacy
John Wayne Gacy
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John Wayne Gacy (March 17, 1942 – May 10, 1994) was an American serial killer and sex offender who raped, tortured and murdered at least thirty-three young men and boys between 1972 and 1978 in Norwood Park Township, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois. He became known as the "Killer Clown" due to his public performances as a clown prior to the discovery of his crimes.

Key Information

Gacy committed all of his known murders inside his ranch-style house. Typically, he would lure a victim to his home and dupe them into donning handcuffs on the pretext of demonstrating a magic trick. He would then rape and torture his captive before killing his victim by either asphyxiation or strangulation with a garrote. Twenty-six victims were buried in the crawl space of his home, and three were buried elsewhere on his property; four were discarded in the Des Plaines River.

Gacy had previously been convicted in 1968 of the sodomy of a teenage boy in Waterloo, Iowa, and was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment, but served eighteen months. He murdered his first victim in 1972, had murdered twice more by the end of 1975, and murdered at least thirty victims after his divorce from his second wife in 1976. The investigation into the disappearance of Des Plaines teenager Robert Piest led to Gacy's arrest on December 21, 1978.

Gacy's conviction for thirty-three murders (by one individual) then covered the most homicides in United States legal history. Gacy was sentenced to death on March 13, 1980. He was executed by lethal injection at Stateville Correctional Center on May 10, 1994.

Early life

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Childhood

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John Wayne Gacy was born at Edgewater Hospital in Chicago, Illinois,[1] on March 17, 1942, the second of three children and only son of John Stanley Gacy and Marion Elaine Robison.[2][3] His father was an auto repair machinist and World War I veteran, and his mother was a homemaker.[4][5] Gacy was of Polish and Danish ancestry, and his family was Catholic.[6][7]

Gacy was close to his mother and two sisters but had a difficult relationship with his alcoholic father, who was verbally and physically abusive to his family.[2][8][9][a] The elder Gacy frequently belittled his son, calling him "dumb and stupid" and comparing him unfavorably with his sisters. One of Gacy's earliest childhood memories was of his father beating him at age four for accidentally disarranging car engine components.[11] His mother tried to shield her son from his father's abuse, which resulted in accusations that he was a "sissy" and a "mama's boy" who would "probably grow up queer".[4][8][12] In 1949, Gacy's father whipped him after he and another boy were caught sexually fondling a young girl.[13] The same year, a family friend began to occasionally molest Gacy.[8][9] Gacy never told his father, afraid that his father would blame him.[14] Despite their challenging relationship, Gacy loved his father,[9] but felt he was "never good enough" in his father's eyes.[15]

Gacy was an overweight and unathletic child. Because of a heart condition, he was told to avoid sports.[2] In the fourth grade, Gacy began to experience blackouts. He was hospitalized on occasion because of these episodes and also, in 1957, for a burst appendix.[16] Gacy later estimated that between the ages of 14 and 18, he had spent almost a year in hospital; he attributed the decline of his grades to missing school.[1][b] Gacy's medical condition was never conclusively diagnosed; his father suspected he was malingering. On one occasion, he openly accused his son of faking as he lay in a hospital bed.[18]

Career origins

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In 1960, at age 18, Gacy became involved in politics, working as an assistant precinct captain for a local Democratic Party candidate. This led to more criticism from his father, who called him a "patsy".[19] The same year, Gacy's father bought him a car. He kept the vehicle's title in his own name until Gacy had paid for it, which took several years. His father would confiscate the keys if Gacy did not do as he said. In April 1962, Gacy purchased an extra set of keys; in response, his father removed the distributor cap, keeping the component for three days.[12] Hours after his father replaced the cap, Gacy left home and drove to Las Vegas, Nevada, with $136 to his name in the hope of residing with a cousin.[20]

Gacy worked in the Las Vegas ambulance service before being transferred to Palm Mortuary. He worked as a mortuary attendant for three months, observing morticians embalming bodies and occasionally serving as a pallbearer.[21] He slept on a cot behind the embalming room and later confessed that one evening, while alone, he clambered into the coffin of a teenage male, embracing and caressing the body before experiencing a sense of shock.[8][c] This experience prompted Gacy to return home.[23]

Shortly thereafter, Gacy enrolled at Northwestern Business College, despite having failed to complete high school. He graduated in 1963 and took a management trainee position with the Nunn-Bush Shoe Company.[12][16] In 1964, the company transferred him to Springfield, Illinois, to work as a salesman, and eventually promoted him to department manager.[8] In March of that year, he became engaged to Marlynn Myers, a co-worker.[16]

During their courtship, Gacy joined the local chapter of the Jaycees.[2] That same year, he had his second homosexual experience. According to Gacy, a colleague in the Jaycees plied him with drinks and invited him to spend the evening on his sofa; the colleague then performed oral sex on him while he was drunk.[24] By 1965, Gacy had risen to the position of vice-president of the Springfield Jaycees[16] and was named the third-most outstanding Jaycee in Illinois.[12]

Waterloo, Iowa

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KFC manager

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Gacy and Myers married in September 1964.[13] Marlynn's father subsequently purchased three Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) restaurants in Waterloo, Iowa. The couple moved there so Gacy could manage the restaurants, with the understanding that they would move into Marlynn's parents' former home.[8][16] The offer was lucrative: Gacy would receive $15,000 per year (the equivalent of about $152,600 as of 2025), plus a share of the restaurant's profits.[25] Gacy opened a "club" in his basement where his employees could drink alcohol and play pool. Although Gacy employed teenagers of both sexes, he socialized only with the males. Gacy gave many of them alcohol before he made sexual advances; if they rebuffed him, he would claim his advances were jokes or a test of morals.[8]

Gacy's wife gave birth to a son in February 1966 and a daughter in March 1967. Gacy later described this period of his life as "perfect"—he had finally earned his father's approval. When Gacy's parents visited in July 1966, his father privately apologized for the abuse he had inflicted before happily saying, "Son, I was wrong about you", as he shook Gacy's hand.[26]

Waterloo Jaycees

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Gacy (second left), pictured with his first wife (left) at the 1967 Waterloo Jaycees Christmas party

In Waterloo, Gacy joined the local Jaycees chapter, regularly offering extended hours to the organization in addition to the twelve- and fourteen-hour days he worked managing the restaurants.[27] At meetings, Gacy often provided fried chicken and insisted on being called "Colonel".[12] He and other Waterloo Jaycees were also deeply involved in drug abuse, pornography, prostitution and wife swapping.[8][24] Although Gacy was considered ambitious and a braggart, the Jaycees held him in high regard for his fundraising work: in 1967 he was named "outstanding vice-president" of the Waterloo Jaycees and served on the board of directors.[28]

Assault of Donald Voorhees

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In August 1967, Gacy sexually assaulted 15-year-old Donald Voorhees Jr., the son of Donald Edwin Voorhees, a local politician and fellow Jaycee. Gacy lured Voorhees to his house with the promise of showing him heterosexual stag films regularly played at Jaycee events. Gacy plied Voorhees with alcohol, allowed him to watch a stag movie, then persuaded him to engage in mutual oral sex, adding, "You have to have sex with a man before you start having sex with women."[29] Over the following months, Gacy abused several other youths, including one whom he encouraged to have sex with his own wife before blackmailing him into performing oral sex on him. Gacy also tricked several teenagers into believing he was commissioned to conduct homosexual experiments for scientific research and paid them up to $50 each.[8]

In March 1968, Voorhees told his father that Gacy had sexually assaulted him. Voorhees Sr. immediately informed the police, who arrested Gacy and charged him with performing oral sodomy on Voorhees and the attempted assault of 16-year-old Edward Lynch.[30] Gacy vehemently denied the charges and demanded to take a polygraph test. The results of these tests were "indicative of deception".[31] Gacy publicly denied any wrongdoing and insisted the charges were politically motivated—Voorhees Sr. had opposed Gacy's nomination for appointment as president of the Iowa Jaycees. Several fellow Jaycees found Gacy's story credible and rallied to his support. However, on May 10, 1968, Gacy was indicted on the sodomy charge.[31]

"The most striking aspect of the test results is the patient's total denial of responsibility for everything that has happened to him. He can produce an "alibi" for everything. He presents himself as a victim of circumstances and blames other people who are out to get him ... the patient attempts to assure a sympathetic response by depicting himself as being at the mercy of a hostile environment."

Section of report detailing Gacy's 1968 psychiatric evaluation.[8]

On August 30, Gacy promised one of his employees, 18-year-old Russell Schroeder, $300 if he physically assaulted Voorhees in an effort to discourage the boy from testifying in court.[32] Schroeder lured Voorhees to an isolated park, sprayed Mace in his eyes, then beat him.[31][33] Voorhees escaped and reported Schroeder's actions to police. Schroeder was arrested the next day; initially denying involvement, he soon confessed to assaulting Voorhees, indicating he had done so at Gacy's request. Police arrested Gacy and charged him with hiring Schroeder to assault and intimidate Voorhees.[8]

On September 12, Gacy was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation at the Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Iowa. Two doctors concluded he had an antisocial personality disorder (the clinical term for sociopathy or psychopathy), was unlikely to benefit from treatment, and that his behavior pattern was likely to bring him into repeated conflict with society. The doctors concluded Gacy was mentally competent to stand trial.[8][34]

Conviction and imprisonment

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On November 7, 1968, Gacy pleaded guilty to one count of sodomy in relation to Voorhees, but not guilty to the charges related to other youths. He claimed Voorhees had offered himself to him and that he had acted out of curiosity. His story was not believed. Gacy was convicted of sodomy on December 3 and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment, to be served at the Anamosa State Penitentiary.[8][35][36] That same day, Gacy's wife petitioned for divorce, requesting she be awarded the couple's home and property, sole custody of their two children, and alimony.[37][38] The court ruled in her favor, and the divorce was finalized on September 18, 1969. Gacy never saw his first wife or children again.[8]

During his incarceration, Gacy rapidly acquired a reputation as a model prisoner.[8] Within months of his arrival, he had risen to the position of head cook. He also joined the inmate Jaycee chapter and increased its membership from 50 to 650 men in less than eighteen months. Gacy secured an increase in the inmates' daily pay in the prison mess hall and supervised several projects to improve conditions for inmates, including the installation of a miniature golf course;[37][39][40] he was presented with a distinguished service award for his efforts within the inmate Jaycee chapter in February 1970.[41]

In June 1969, Gacy was denied parole. To prepare for a second scheduled parole hearing in May 1970, he completed sixteen high school courses, obtaining his diploma in November 1969.[8] On Christmas Day 1969, Gacy's father died from cirrhosis. When informed of his father's death, Gacy collapsed to the floor, sobbing.[8] His request for supervised compassionate leave to attend the funeral was denied.[37]

Return to Chicago

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Gacy was granted parole with twelve months' probation on June 18, 1970, having served eighteen months of his ten-year sentence.[42][43] Conditions of his probation included a nightly curfew and that Gacy relocate to Chicago to live with his mother.[8][37] On his release, Gacy told friend and fellow Jaycee Clarence Lane—who picked him up from the prison and had remained steadfast in his belief of Gacy's innocence—that he would "never go back to jail" and that he intended to re-establish himself in Waterloo. However, within twenty-four hours, Gacy had relocated to Chicago.[8] He arrived there by bus on June 19 and shortly thereafter obtained a job as a short-order cook.[43]

On February 12, 1971, Gacy was charged with sexually assaulting a teenage boy who claimed that he had lured him into his car at Chicago's Greyhound bus terminal and driven him to his home, where he had attempted to force the boy into sex. The court dismissed this complaint when the boy failed to appear.[37] On June 22, Gacy was arrested and charged with aggravated sexual battery and reckless conduct, in response to a complaint filed by a youth who claimed that Gacy had flashed a sheriff's badge, lured him into his car, and forced him to perform oral sex.[44] These charges were dropped after the complainant attempted to blackmail Gacy.[43] The Iowa Board of Parole did not learn of these incidents. Gacy's parole ended on October 18, 1971,[45] and a month later the records of Gacy's criminal convictions in Iowa were sealed.[d]

8213 West Summerdale Avenue

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With financial assistance from his mother, Gacy bought a ranch-style house at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in unincorporated Norwood Park Township, Illinois, part of metropolitan Chicago.[47] He lived there until his arrest in December 1978 and, according to Gacy, committed all his murders there.[48]

Gacy was active in his local community and helpful towards his neighbors; he willingly loaned his construction tools and plowed snow from neighborhood walks free of charge.[49] From 1974 to 1978, he hosted themed annual summer parties. These events were attended by up to 400 people, including neighbors, politicians and business associates.[50]

Second marriage and divorce

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In August 1971, shortly after Gacy and his mother moved into the house, he became engaged to Carole Hoff, whom he had briefly dated in high school.[8] Hoff and her two young daughters from a previous marriage moved into the house soon after.[43] They were married on July 1, 1972.[8] Gacy's mother moved out of the house shortly before the wedding.[8]

By 1975, Gacy had told his wife that he was bisexual.[51] After the couple had sex on Mother's Day that year, he informed her this would be "the last time" they would do so.[44] He began spending most evenings away from home, only to return in the early morning with the excuse he had been working late or conducting business meetings.[52][e] Carole observed Gacy bringing teenage boys into his garage in the early hours and also found gay pornography and men's wallets and identification inside the house. When she confronted Gacy about these items, he informed her angrily that it was none of her business.[43]

In October 1975, after a heated argument, Carole asked Gacy for a divorce.[54] He agreed although, by mutual consent, she continued to live at his house until February 1976. On March 2, the Gacys' divorce—decreed on the false grounds of Gacy's infidelity with women—was finalized.[49][55][56][f]

PDM Contractors

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In 1971, Gacy established a part-time construction business, PDM Contractors (for "Painting, Decorating, and Maintenance").[43] With the approval of his probation officer, Gacy worked evenings on his construction contracts while working as a cook during the day. Initially, he undertook minor repair work, but later expanded to include projects such as interior design, remodeling, and landscaping. In mid-1973, Gacy quit his job as a cook so he could commit fully to his construction business.[44]

By 1975, PDM was expanding rapidly and Gacy was working up to sixteen hours per day. In March 1977, he became a supervisor for PE Systems, a firm specializing in the remodeling of drugstores. Between PE Systems and PDM, Gacy worked on up to four projects simultaneously and frequently traveled to other states.[58] By 1978, PDM's annual revenue was over $200,000.[59][g]

Clown

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A heavy-set man in a clown costume, with balloons and waving
Gacy as Pogo the Clown

Through his membership in a local Moose Club, Gacy became aware of a "Jolly Joker" clown club, whose members regularly performed at fundraising events and parades in addition to voluntarily entertaining hospitalized children.[54] In late 1975, Gacy joined the clown club and created his own characters "Pogo the Clown" and "Patches the Clown", devising his own makeup and costumes. He described Pogo as a "happy clown", whereas Patches was a "more serious" character.[61]

Gacy seldom earned money for his performances and later said that acting as a clown allowed him to "regress into childhood". He performed as both Pogo and Patches at numerous local parties, political functions, charitable events, and children's hospitals.[54][62] Gacy's voluntary public service as a clown throughout the years of his murders led to him being known as the "Killer Clown".[63]

Employees

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Much of PDM's workforce consisted of high school students and young men.[64] Gacy would often proposition his workers for sex, or insist on sexual favors in return for lending his vehicles, financial assistance or promotions.[52][65] Gacy also claimed to own guns, once telling an employee, "Do you know how easy it would be to get one of my guns and kill you—and how easy it would be to get rid of the body?"[66]

In 1973, Gacy and a teenage employee traveled to Florida to view a property Gacy had purchased; while there, Gacy raped the employee in their hotel room. After returning to Chicago, this employee drove to Gacy's house and beat him in his front yard. Gacy told his wife he had been attacked for refusing to pay him for poor quality painting work.[44]

In May 1975, Gacy hired 15-year-old Anthony Antonucci. Two months later, he went to Antonucci's home, knowing the youth had an injured foot. The two drank a bottle of wine, then watched a heterosexual stag film before Gacy wrestled Antonucci to the floor and cuffed his hands behind his back. One cuff was loose and Antonucci freed his arm while Gacy was out of the room. When Gacy returned, Antonucci—a high school wrestler—grappled with him, obtained the key, and cuffed Gacy's hands behind his back. Gacy threatened Antonucci, then calmed down and promised to leave if he was freed. Antonucci agreed and Gacy left. Antonucci continued working for PDM for nine months after this incident, and Gacy made no further attempts to assault him.[67]

On July 26, 1976, Gacy picked up 18-year-old hitchhiker David Cram and offered him a job with PDM; he began work the same evening. On August 21, Cram moved into Gacy's house. The next day, Cram and Gacy had several drinks to celebrate his 19th birthday, with Gacy dressed as Pogo. Gacy tricked Cram into donning handcuffs, his wrists cuffed in front of his body rather than behind. He swung Cram around while holding the chain linking the cuffs, then said he intended to rape him. Cram kicked Gacy in the face and freed himself.[65]

A month later, Gacy appeared at Cram's bedroom door intending to rape him, saying, "Dave, you really don't know who I am. Maybe it would be good if you give me what I want." Cram resisted, straddling Gacy, who left the bedroom, stating, "You ain't no fun." Cram moved out on October 5 and left PDM (although he periodically worked for Gacy over the following two years).[65][68] Shortly afterwards, another employee, 18-year-old Michael Rossi, moved in.[43][58][69] Rossi had worked for PDM since May 23, 1976.[70] He lived with Gacy until April 1977.[h] Rossi sometimes assisted Gacy in clowning at grand openings of businesses: Gacy as Pogo and Rossi as Patches.[54][61]

Politics

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Gacy with First Lady Rosalynn Carter on May 6, 1978, six years after his first murder and seven months before his final arrest

Gacy entered local Democratic Party politics, initially offering use of his employees to clean party headquarters at no charge. He was rewarded with an invitation to serve on the Norwood Park Township street lighting committee, subsequently earning the title of precinct captain.[43][46][71]

In 1975, Gacy was appointed director of Chicago's annual Polish Constitution Day Parade.[6][72] Through his work with the parade, which he would supervise until 1978, Gacy met and was photographed with First Lady Rosalynn Carter wearing an "S" pin, indicating a person given special clearance.[71][73] The event later became an embarrassment to the United States Secret Service.[73]

Murders

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Gacy murdered at least thirty-three young men and boys, twenty-six of whom he buried in the crawl space of his house.[74] His victims included people he knew and random individuals lured from Chicago's Greyhound Bus station, Bughouse Square, or off the streets with the promise of a job with PDM, an offer of alcohol, drugs, or money for sex. Some victims were grabbed by force; others were conned into believing Gacy (who often carried a sheriff's badge and had red spotlights on his black Oldsmobile) was a policeman.[48] Gacy usually lured a lone victim to his house, although on more than one occasion Gacy had what he called "doubles"—two killed in the same evening.[75]

Inside Gacy's home, his usual modus operandi was to ply a youth with drink, drugs, or generally gain his trust. He would then produce a pair of handcuffs to "show a magic trick", sometimes as part of a clowning routine.[i] He typically cuffed his own hands behind his back, then surreptitiously released himself with a hidden key. He then offered to show his intended victim the trick.[77] With his victim restrained, Gacy proceeded with rape and torture. He frequently began by sitting on or straddling his victim's chest before forcing the victim to fellate him.[78] Gacy then inflicted acts of torture including burning with cigars, making his captive imitate a horse as he sat on their back and pulled on makeshift reins around their necks, and violation with foreign objects such as dildos and prescription bottles after he had sodomized his captive.[79] Gacy frequently manacled his captives' ankles to a two-by-four with handcuffs attached at each end, an act inspired by the Houston Mass Murders.[80][j] He also taunted many victims throughout their abuse,[83] and was known to have partly drowned several in the bathtub before repeatedly reviving them.[84][85]

Gacy typically murdered his victims by placing a rope tourniquet around their neck and progressively tightening it with a hammer handle.[86] He referred to this as the "rope trick", frequently informing his victim, "This is the last trick."[84] Occasionally, the victim convulsed for an "hour or two" before dying, although several victims died by asphyxiation from cloth gags stuffed deep in their throats.[87] Except for his two final victims, all were murdered between 3:00 and 6:00 a.m.[48] Gacy usually stored the victims' corpses under his bed for up to twenty-four hours before burying them in the crawl space, where he periodically poured lime to hasten decomposition.[88][k] Some were taken to his garage and embalmed prior to burial.[22]

Murder of Timothy McCoy

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Timothy McCoy

Gacy's first known murder occurred on January 3, 1972. According to Gacy's later account, following a family party the previous evening, he drove to the Civic Center in the Loop in the early morning to view a display of ice sculptures.[90] He then lured 16-year-old Timothy Jack McCoy from Chicago's Greyhound Bus Terminal into his car. McCoy was on his way to his father's home in Omaha, Nebraska, and informed Gacy his bus was not due until noon.[91][92] Gacy took McCoy on a sightseeing tour of Chicago and then drove him to his home with the promise that he could spend the remainder of the night and be driven back to the station in time to catch his bus.[93][l] Prior to McCoy's identification, he was known as the "Greyhound Bus Boy".[95]

Gacy claimed he woke early the following morning to find McCoy standing in his bedroom doorway holding a kitchen knife.[22] He jumped from his bed and McCoy raised both arms in a gesture of surrender, accidentally cutting Gacy's forearm.[m] Gacy disarmed McCoy, banged his head against the bedroom wall, and kicked him against his wardrobe.[97] McCoy kicked Gacy in the stomach, doubling him over. Gacy then grabbed McCoy,[97] wrestled him to the floor and stabbed him repeatedly in the chest.[51]

As McCoy lay dying, Gacy claimed he washed the knife in his bathroom, then went to his kitchen and saw the makings of breakfast on the table. McCoy had set the table for two; he had walked into Gacy's room to wake him while absentmindedly carrying the knife.[22] Gacy buried McCoy in his crawl space and later covered his grave with a layer of concrete.[51] In an interview several years after his arrest, Gacy said that immediately after killing McCoy, he felt "totally drained", yet noted that as he stabbed McCoy and listened to the "gurgulations" and gasping, he had experienced a mind-numbing orgasm. He added: "That's when I realized that death was the ultimate thrill."[22]

Second murder

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Gacy said he committed murder for the second time around January 1974.[98][n] This victim remains unidentified. He was strangled and placed in Gacy's closet before burial.[100][101] Gacy later stated that bodily fluids leaked from the victim's mouth and nose, staining his carpet. Because of this incident, Gacy regularly stuffed rags, the victim's own underwear, or a sock deep into the mouths of subsequent victims to prevent such a leakage.[102]

Murder of John Butkovich

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John Butkovich

On July 31, 1975, John Butkovich, an 18-year-old PDM employee, disappeared.[103] Butkovich's car was later found abandoned with his jacket and wallet inside and the keys in the ignition.[104]

The day before his disappearance, Butkovich had confronted Gacy over outstanding back pay. Butkovich's father called Gacy, who claimed he was happy to help search for his son but was sorry Butkovich had "run away". When questioned by police, Gacy said Butkovich and two friends had arrived at his house demanding the overdue pay, but they had reached a compromise and all three had left. Over the following three years, Butkovich's parents called police more than 100 times, urging them to investigate Gacy further.[49][105]

Gacy later admitted to encountering Butkovich exiting his car, waving to attract his attention. According to Gacy, Butkovich approached him, stating, "I wanna talk to you." Gacy invited Butkovich into his car, then invited him back to his home, ostensibly to settle the issue of his overdue wages.[o] At his home, Gacy offered Butkovich a drink, then conned him into allowing his wrists to be cuffed behind his back. Gacy later confessed to having "sat on the kid's chest for a while" before he strangled him. He stowed Butkovich's body in his garage, intending to bury the body later in the crawl space. When his wife and stepdaughters returned home earlier than expected, Gacy buried Butkovich under the concrete floor of the tool room extension of his garage in an empty space where he had intended to dig a drain tile.[104]

Cruising years

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In addition to being the year his business expanded, Gacy freely admitted that 1975 was also when he began to increase the frequency of his excursions for sex with young males.[44] He often referred to these jaunts as "cruising".[107] Gacy committed most of his murders between 1976 and 1978, as he largely lived alone following his divorce.

Although Gacy remained gregarious and civic-minded, several neighbors noticed behavioral changes after his 1976 divorce, including seeing him keeping company with young males, hearing his car arrive or depart in the early morning, or seeing lights in his home switch on and off in the early hours.[55] One neighbor later recollected that, for several years, muffled high-pitched screaming, shouting, and crying had repeatedly awakened her and her son in the early morning. She identified the sounds as emanating from a house adjacent to theirs on West Summerdale Avenue.[87]

1976

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One month after his divorce was finalized, Gacy abducted and murdered 18-year-old Darrell Samson. He was last seen alive in Chicago on April 6, 1976.[107] Gacy buried him under the dining room, with cloth lodged in his throat.[108] On May 14, 15-year-old Randall Reffett disappeared shortly after returning home from a dental appointment.[109] Hours after Reffett was last seen by his family, 14-year-old Samuel Stapleton vanished as he walked home from his sister's apartment.[55][110] He and Reffett were close acquaintances;[111] they were buried together in the crawl space, and investigators believe the two were murdered the same evening.[112]

Michael Bonnin

On June 3, Gacy killed 17-year-old Michael Bonnin, who disappeared while traveling from Chicago to Waukegan. Gacy strangled Bonnin with a ligature and buried him under the spare bedroom.[112][113][114] Ten days later, Gacy murdered 16-year-old William Carroll and buried him in a common grave in the crawl space. Carroll seems to have been the first of four victims known to have been murdered between June 13 and August 6, 1976.[110] Three were between 16 and 17 years old, and one unidentified victim appears to have been an adult.

On August 5, 16-year-old James Haakenson is last known to have phoned his family, possibly from Gacy's home.[115][116] Haakenson died of suffocation. His body was buried in the crawl space beneath 17-year-old Rick Johnston, who was last seen alive on August 6.[117][118][p]

Gacy is thought to have murdered two unidentified males between August and October 1976. On October 24, Gacy abducted and killed teenage friends Kenneth Parker and Michael Marino: the two were last seen on Clark Street in Chicago.[120][121] Two days later, 19-year-old construction worker William Bundy disappeared after informing his family he was to attend a party.[122] Bundy died of suffocation. Gacy buried the body beneath his master bedroom.[123] Bundy had apparently worked for Gacy.[124]

Between November and December 1976, Gacy murdered 21-year-old Francis Alexander. His last contact with his family was a phone call to his mother sometime in November.[125] He was not reported missing as his family believed he had moved to California shortly thereafter.[126] Alexander was buried beneath the room Gacy used as his office.[127]

In December 1976, 17-year-old Gregory Godzik disappeared. His girlfriend last saw him outside her house.[128][129] Godzik had worked for PDM for less than three weeks when he disappeared. He had informed his family that Gacy had had him "dig trenches for some kind of (drain) tiles" in his crawl space. Godzik's car was later found abandoned. His parents and older sister contacted Gacy about Godzik's disappearance. Gacy claimed that Godzik had expressed a wish to run away from home; he also claimed to have received an answering machine message from Godzik shortly after he had disappeared. When asked if he could play the message for Godzik's parents, Gacy said he had erased it.[69][130]

1977

[edit]

On January 20, 1977, Gacy lured 19-year-old John Szyc to his house on the pretext of buying his Plymouth Satellite.[129] He later confessed to strangling Szyc in his spare bedroom, claiming Rossi was asleep in the house the following morning. Gacy later sold the car to Rossi for $300.[58]

Two months later, on March 15, 20-year-old Jon Prestidge disappeared. Prestidge was last seen leaving a Near North Side restaurant. He was buried in the crawl space above the body of Francis Alexander.[131] Shortly before his disappearance, Prestidge had mentioned he had obtained work with a local contractor.[132] Gacy murdered one additional unidentified youth and buried him in the crawl space in the spring or early summer of 1977. On July 5, Gacy killed 19-year-old Matthew Bowman. Bowman's mother last saw him at a suburban train station; he had intended to travel to Harwood Heights for a court appointment.[112][133]

The following month, Rossi was arrested for stealing gasoline while driving Szyc's car. The gas station attendant noted the license plate and police traced the car to Gacy's house. When questioned, Gacy told officers that Szyc had sold the car to him in February, saying he needed money to leave town. A check of the VIN confirmed the car had belonged to Szyc.[70] The police did not pursue the matter further, although they did inform Szyc's mother that her son had sold his car.[58]

By the end of 1977, Gacy had murdered six more young men between the ages of 16 and 21. The first of these was 18-year-old Robert Gilroy, the son of a Chicago police sergeant, last seen alive on September 15.[73][112] Gilroy lived four blocks from Gacy's house. He was buried in the crawl space. On September 12, Gacy had flown to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to supervise a remodeling project, and did not return to Chicago until September 16.[134] Because Gacy was in another state at the time Gilroy was last seen, this is cited to support Gacy's claim of assistance from one or more accomplices in several homicides. Ten days after Gilroy was last seen, 19-year-old former U.S. Marine John Mowery disappeared after leaving his mother's house.[112] Gacy strangled Mowery and buried his body beneath the master bedroom.[123]

On October 17, 21-year-old Russell Nelson disappeared; he was last seen outside a Chicago bar. Nelson was looking for contracting work.[132] Gacy murdered and buried him beneath the guest bedroom. Less than four weeks later, Gacy murdered 16-year-old Robert Winch and buried him in the crawl space. Twenty-year-old Tommy Boling disappeared on November 18 after leaving a Chicago bar.[112] On December 9, 19-year-old U.S. Marine David Talsma disappeared after telling his mother he was to attend a rock concert in Hammond, Indiana.[135][112] Gacy strangled Talsma with a ligature and buried him in the crawl space, close to John Mowery.[123]

On December 30, Gacy abducted 19-year-old college student Robert Donnelly from a Chicago bus stop at gunpoint.[136] Gacy drove him to his home, where he raped, tortured, and repeatedly drowned Donnelly to unconsciousness in a bathtub as he made statements such as, "Aren't we playing fun games tonight?"[85] Donnelly later testified at trial that he was in such pain that he asked Gacy to kill him. Gacy replied "I'm getting 'round to it."[137] After several hours, Gacy drove Donnelly to his workplace and released him, warning him that if he complained to police, they would not believe him.[85]

1978

[edit]

Donnelly reported the assault, and police questioned Gacy on January 6, 1978. Gacy admitted to having had a "slave-sex" relationship with Donnelly, but insisted everything was consensual, adding that he "didn't pay the kid" the money he had promised him.[138] The police believed him and filed no charges.[73] The following month, Gacy killed 19-year-old William Kindred, who disappeared on February 16 after telling his fiancée, who knew Gacy,[139] that he was going to a bar.[73] Kindred was the final victim buried in the crawl space.[71][61]

On March 21, Gacy lured 26-year-old Jeffrey Rignall into his car.[140] Gacy chloroformed him and drove him to his house, where his arms and head were restrained in a pillory device affixed to the ceiling and his feet locked into another device.[141] He raped and tortured Rignall with instruments including lit candles and whips and repeatedly chloroformed him into unconsciousness. Gacy then dumped Rignall in Chicago's Lincoln Park, unconscious but alive.[71]

Rignall managed to stagger to his girlfriend's apartment. Police were informed of the assault but did not investigate Gacy. Rignall was able to recall the Oldsmobile, the Kennedy Expressway and particular side streets. He and two friends staked out the Cumberland exit of the Expressway and, in April, Rignall saw the Oldsmobile, which he and his friends followed to 8213 West Summerdale.[71] Gacy was arrested on July 15; he faced trial for assault and battery against Rignall.[73]

By mid-1978, the crawl space had no room for further bodies.[8][33][48] Gacy later confessed to police that he considered stowing bodies in his attic, but had been worried about complications arising from "leakage".[51] Therefore, he chose to dispose of his victims off the I-55 bridge into the Des Plaines River.[73] Gacy stated he had thrown five bodies into this river in 1978, one of which he believed had landed on a passing barge;[48] only four were ever found.[132]

The first known victim thrown from the bridge was 20-year-old Timothy O'Rourke. He was murdered in mid-June after leaving his apartment to purchase cigarettes. Shortly before his disappearance, O'Rourke had told his roommate a contractor on the Northwest Side had offered him a job.[142][143] On November 4, Gacy killed 19-year-old Frank Landingin.[144] He was last seen alive by his father walking along Foster Avenue; his naked body was found close to an inlet in the Des Plaines River by two duck hunters on November 12.[110] On November 24, 20-year-old James Mazzara disappeared after Thanksgiving dinner with his family.[145] Mazzara had informed his sister the day before that he was working in construction.[110] He was last seen walking in the direction of Bughouse Square.[59]

Murder of Robert Piest

[edit]
Robert Piest

On the afternoon of December 11, 1978, Gacy visited the Nisson Pharmacy in Des Plaines, to discuss a potential remodeling deal with the store owner, Phil Torf.[146] While he was within earshot of 15-year-old part-time employee Robert Piest, Gacy mentioned his firm often hired teenage boys at a starting wage of $5 per hour—almost double the pay Piest earned at the pharmacy.[147]

Shortly after Gacy left, Piest's mother arrived at the store to drive her son home so the family could celebrate her birthday together.[71] Piest asked his mother to wait, adding that "some contractor wants to talk to me about a job". He left the store at 9:00 p.m., promising to return shortly.[148]

Piest was murdered shortly after 10:00 p.m. at Gacy's home.[147] Gacy later stated that at his house, he gave Piest a soft drink before asking whether there was anything he "wouldn't do for the right price", to which Piest replied that he did not mind working hard. In response, Gacy stated "good money" could be earned by hustling, although Piest was dismissive. Gacy then duped Piest into donning handcuffs.[149] Gacy's subsequent statements regarding the events varied,[20][150] although in one of his initial statements, he claimed Piest failed to resist as he removed the boy's trousers. He also stated that as he placed the rope around Piest's neck, the boy was "crying, scared".[151] Gacy admitted to having received a phone call from a business acquaintance as Piest lay dying.[71]

Investigation

[edit]

When Piest failed to return, his family filed a missing person report with the Des Plaines police. Torf named Gacy as the contractor Piest had most likely left the store to talk to. Lieutenant Joseph Kozenczak, whose son attended Maine West High School like Piest, chose to investigate Gacy further.[152] A check of Gacy's criminal background revealed that he had an outstanding battery charge in Chicago and had been imprisoned in Iowa for the sodomy of a 15-year-old boy.[153]

Kozenczak and two Des Plaines police officers visited Gacy at his home the following evening. Gacy indicated he had asked one of the youths working at the pharmacy—whom he believed to be Piest—whether there were any remodeling materials behind the store.[153] He was adamant, however, that he had not offered Piest a job, and had only returned to the pharmacy shortly after 8:00 p.m. as he had left his appointment book.[71] Gacy promised to come to the station later that evening to make a statement, indicating he was unable to do so at that moment as his uncle had just died. When questioned as to how soon he could come to the police station, he responded, "You guys are very rude. Don't you have any respect for the dead?"[154]

At 3:20 a.m., Gacy arrived at the police station covered in mud, claiming he had been involved in a car accident. On returning to the police station later that day, Gacy denied any involvement in Piest's disappearance and repeated that he had not offered him a job. Gacy reiterated that he had returned to the pharmacy in response to a phone call from Torf informing him he had left his appointment book at the store. Detectives had already spoken with Torf, who denied calling Gacy. At the request of detectives, Gacy prepared a written statement detailing his movements on December 11.[153]

First search warrant

[edit]

Suspecting Gacy might be holding Piest at his home, Des Plaines police obtained a search warrant on December 13.[155] This search revealed several suspicious items, including several police badges; a starting pistol; a syringe and hypodermic needle; handcuffs; books about homosexuality and pederasty;[156][157][158] pornographic and stag films; capsules of amyl nitrite; a dildo;[159] a two-by-four with two holes drilled into each end; bottles of Valium and atropine; several driver's licenses; a blue hooded parka;[155] and underwear too small to fit Gacy.[158] They also found a class ring engraved with the initials J.A.S.[160] and a Nisson Pharmacy photo receipt in a trash can, alongside a 36-inch (91 cm) section of nylon rope.[154]

Surveillance

[edit]

The Des Plaines police confiscated Gacy's Oldsmobile and other PDM work vehicles. Surveillance teams (consisting of officers Mike Albrecht and David Hachmeister, and Ronald Robinson and Robert Schultz) monitored Gacy as the investigation continued.[161][162] The following day, investigators received a phone call from Michael Rossi, who informed the investigators of Gregory Godzik's disappearance and the fact that another PDM employee, Charles Hattula, had been found drowned in an Illinois river earlier that year.[129][163]

On December 15, Des Plaines investigators obtained further details of Gacy's battery charge, learning Jeffrey Rignall had reported that Gacy had lured him into his car, then chloroformed, raped and tortured him before dumping him in Lincoln Park. In an interview with Gacy's former wife the same day, they learned of the disappearance of John Butkovich.[160] The same day, the class ring was traced to a John Alan Szyc.[129] An interview with Szyc's mother revealed that several items from her son's apartment were also missing, including a Motorola television.[164][165]

By December 16, Gacy was becoming affable with the surveillance detectives, regularly inviting them to join him for meals in restaurants and occasionally for drinks in bars or at his home. He repeatedly denied involvement with Piest's disappearance and accused the officers of harassing him because of his political connections or his recreational drug use. Knowing these officers were unlikely to arrest him on anything trivial, he openly taunted them by flouting traffic laws and succeeded in losing his pursuers more than once.[166] That afternoon, Cram consented to a police interview in which he revealed that, because of his poor timekeeping, Gacy had once given him a watch which he claimed to have obtained "from a dead person".[167][q]

Investigators conducted a formal interview of Rossi on December 17. He informed them Gacy had sold him Szyc's vehicle, explaining that he had bought the car from Szyc because he needed money to move to California. A further examination of Gacy's Oldsmobile revealed a small cluster of fibers in the trunk, suspected to be human hair. That evening, three trained search dogs were used to determine whether Piest had been present in any of Gacy's vehicles. One laid on the passenger seat of Gacy's Oldsmobile in what the dog's handler informed investigators was a "death reaction", indicating Piest's body had been present.[160]

That evening, Gacy invited detectives Albrecht and Hachmeister to a restaurant for a meal. Early on December 18, he invited them into another restaurant where, over breakfast, he discussed his business, his marriages and his clowning. During the conversation, Gacy remarked: "You know ... clowns can get away with murder."[168][169]

By December 18, Gacy was beginning to display signs of strain from the constant surveillance: he was unshaven, looked tired and anxious and was drinking heavily. That afternoon, he drove to his lawyers' office to prepare a $750,000 civil suit against the Des Plaines police, demanding that they cease their surveillance.[164] The same day, the Nisson Pharmacy photo receipt found in Gacy's kitchen was traced to 17-year-old Kimberly Byers, a colleague of Piest at Nisson Pharmacy. Byers stated that she had borrowed Piest's parka earlier in the evening and had placed the receipt in the pocket just before she returned the coat to Piest as he left the store.[163][170]

Second search warrant

[edit]

The same evening, Rossi was interviewed a second time. This time he was more cooperative. He informed detectives that in the summer of 1977, at Gacy's behest, he had spread ten bags of lime in the crawl space of Gacy's house.[171]

On December 19, investigators began compiling evidence for a second search warrant for Gacy's house. The same day, Gacy's lawyers filed the civil suit against the Des Plaines police. The hearing for the suit was scheduled for December 22. That afternoon, Gacy invited the surveillance detectives inside his house again. As Robinson distracted Gacy with conversation, Schultz walked into Gacy's bedroom in an unsuccessful attempt to write down the serial number of the Motorola television they suspected belonged to Szyc. While flushing Gacy's toilet, the officer noticed a rancid smell he suspected could be that of rotting corpses emanating from a heating duct.[r] The officers who had searched Gacy's house previously had failed to notice this, as the house had been cold.[161]

Investigators interviewed both Cram and Rossi on December 20. When questioned as to where he believed Gacy had concealed Piest's body, Rossi replied Gacy may have placed the body in the crawl space.[61][173] Rossi agreed to submit to a polygraph test. He denied any involvement in Piest's disappearance or any knowledge of his whereabouts. He soon refused to continue the questioning, and Rossi's "erratic and inconsistent" responses while attached to the polygraph machine rendered Kozenczak "unable to render a definite opinion" as to his truthfulness.[171] Rossi did, however, further discuss the trench digging he did in the crawl space and remarked on Gacy's insistence that he not deviate from where he was instructed to dig.[174]

Cram informed investigators of Gacy's attempts to rape him in 1976. He stated that after he and Gacy had returned to his home after the December 13 search, Gacy had turned pale after seeing a clod of mud on his carpet and had immediately entered the crawl space to look for evidence of digging. When asked whether he had been to the crawl space, Cram replied he had once been asked by Gacy to spread lime down there and had also dug trenches, which Gacy had explained were for drainage pipes. Cram stated these trenches were 2 feet (0.6 m) wide, 6 feet (1.8 m) long and 2 feet deep—the size of graves.[171]

Confession

[edit]

On the evening of December 20, Gacy drove to his lawyers' office in Park Ridge to attend a scheduled meeting, ostensibly to discuss the progress of his civil suit. Gacy appeared anxious and disheveled and immediately asked for an alcoholic drink. Sam Amirante fetched a bottle of Seagrams whiskey,[175] and Gacy immediately drank two cupfuls. Amirante—by this stage dubious of Gacy's claims of innocence—then asked what he had to discuss with them, placing a copy of the Daily Herald on his desk and stating: "You said you had something new to tell me! Something important!" Gacy picked up the newspaper, pointed to the front-page article covering the disappearance of Piest and said, "This boy is dead. He's dead. He's in a river."[176]

Gacy then proceeded to give a rambling confession that ran into the early hours of the following morning. He began by stating he had "been the judge ... jury and executioner of many, many people", and that he now wanted to be the same for himself.[177] He stated he had murdered "at least thirty" victims, most of whom he had buried in his crawl space, and had disposed of five other bodies in the Des Plaines River. Gacy dismissed his victims as "male prostitutes", "hustlers" and "liars", adding he sometimes awoke to find "dead, strangled kids" with their hands cuffed behind their back.[65] He had buried their bodies in his crawl space as he believed they were his property.[22]

As a result of the alcohol he had consumed, Gacy fell asleep midway through his confession. Amirante immediately arranged a psychiatric appointment for Gacy that morning. On awakening several hours later, Gacy shook his head when informed by Amirante he had confessed to killing approximately thirty people, saying, "Well, I can't think about this right now. I've got things to do." Ignoring his lawyers' advice regarding his scheduled appointment, Gacy left to attend to his business.[178]

Gacy later recollected his memories of his final day of freedom as being "hazy", adding he knew his arrest was inevitable and that he intended to visit his friends and say his farewells. After leaving his lawyers' office, Gacy drove to a gas station where he handed a small bag of cannabis to the attendant, who immediately handed the bag to the surveillance officers, adding that Gacy had told him, "The end is coming (for me). These guys are going to kill me." Gacy then drove to the home of a fellow contractor and friend, Ronald Rhode. Gacy hugged Rhode before bursting into tears and saying, "I've been a bad boy. I killed thirty people, give or take a few."[173] Gacy left Rhode and drove to Cram's home to meet with Cram and Rossi. The surveillance officers noted he was holding a rosary to his chin, praying while he drove along the expressway.[179]

After talking with Cram and Rossi, Gacy had Cram drive him to a scheduled legal meeting. Cram informed the surveillance officers that Gacy had told him and Rossi that he had confessed to over thirty murders with his lawyers the previous evening. Gacy then had Cram drive him to Maryhill Cemetery, where his father was buried.[173]

As Gacy drove to various locations that morning, police outlined the formal draft of their second search warrant, specifically to search for Piest's body in the crawl space. On hearing from the surveillance detectives that, in light of his erratic behavior, Gacy might be about to commit suicide, police decided to arrest him on a charge of possession and distribution of cannabis in order to hold him in custody, as the formal request for a second search warrant was presented.[s][179] At 4:30 p.m. on December 21, the eve of the hearing of Gacy's civil suit, a second search warrant was granted.[181] After police informed Gacy of their intentions to search his crawl space for the body of Piest, Gacy denied the teenager was buried there, but confessed to having killed in self-defense a young man whose body was buried under his garage.[132]

Armed with the signed search warrant, police and evidence technicians drove to Gacy's home. They found Gacy had unplugged his sump pump, flooding the crawl space with water; they replaced the plug and waited for the water to drain. Evidence technician Daniel Genty then entered the 28-by-38-foot (8.5 m × 11.6 m) crawl space, crawled to the southwest area and began digging.[2] Within minutes, he uncovered putrefied flesh and a human arm bone. Genty shouted to the investigators that they could charge Gacy with murder, adding, "I think this place is full of kids." A police photographer uncovered a patella in the northeast corner. The two then began digging in the southeast corner, uncovering two lower leg bones.[48]

The victims were too decomposed to be Piest. As the body in the northeast corner was unearthed, a crime scene technician discovered the skull of a second victim alongside this body. Later excavations of the feet of this second victim revealed a further skull beneath the body.[110] Because of this, technicians returned to the trench where the first body was unearthed, discovering the rib cage of a fourth victim, confirming the scale of the murders.[182]

Arrest

[edit]

After being informed that the police had found human remains in his crawl space and that he would now face murder charges, Gacy told officers he wanted to "clear the air". In the early morning hours of December 22, and in the presence of his lawyers, Gacy provided a formal statement in which he confessed to murdering approximately thirty young males—all of whom he claimed had entered his house willingly.[48] Some victims were referred to by name, but Gacy claimed not to know or remember most of the names.[183] He claimed all were teenage male runaways or male prostitutes, the majority of whom he had buried in his crawl space.[48] Gacy claimed to have dug only five of the graves in this location and had his employees (including Godzik) dig the remaining trenches so that he would "have graves available".[151] When shown a driver's license issued to a Robert Hasten which had been found on his property, Gacy claimed not to know this individual but admitted that this license had been in the possession of one of his victims.[184] He also confessed to having planned to further conceal the bodies beneath his property by covering the entire crawl space with concrete in January 1979.[185]

When questioned specifically about Piest, Gacy confessed to luring him to his house and strangling him on December 11. He also admitted to having slept alongside Piest's body that evening, before disposing of the corpse in the Des Plaines River in the early hours of December 13.[186] On his way to the police station, he had been in a minor traffic accident after disposing of Piest. His vehicle had slid off an ice-covered road and had to be towed free.[48]

Diagram of Gacy's Norwood Park residence, depicting the dimensions of his crawl space

Accompanied by police, his lawyers, and his older sister, Gacy was driven to the I-55 bridge on December 23 to pinpoint the precise spot where he confessed to having thrown the body of Robert Piest and four other victims into the river.[71][187] Gacy was then taken to his house and instructed to mark his garage floor with orange spray paint to show where he had buried the individual he had supposedly killed in self-defense, whom he named as John Butkovich.[69] To assist officers in their search, Gacy drew a rough diagram of his basement to indicate where their bodies were buried. Twenty-six bodies were unearthed from Gacy's crawl space over the next week; three others were also unearthed elsewhere on his property. As the flooring and walls of the property were dismantled, additional evidence including identification cards and further deviant sex books were discovered.[110][188][t]

Trial

[edit]

Gacy was brought to trial on February 6, 1980, charged with 33 murders.[190] He was tried within the Cook County Criminal Court Building before Judge Louis Garippo;[191] the jury was selected from Rockford because of extensive press coverage in Cook County.[192]

At the request of his defense counsel, Gacy spent over three hundred hours with doctors at the Menard Correctional Center in Chester in the year before his trial. He underwent a variety of psychological tests to determine whether he was mentally competent to stand trial.[173] Gacy attempted to convince the doctors that he had multiple personality disorder.[193] He claimed to have four personalities: the hard-working, civic-minded contractor, the clown, the active politician, and a policeman called Jack Hanley, whom he referred to as "Bad Jack". When Gacy had confessed to police, he claimed to be relaying the crimes of Jack, who detested homosexuality and viewed male prostitutes as "weak, stupid and degraded scum".[107] His lawyers opted to have Gacy plead not guilty by reason of insanity.[194]

In his opening statement, one of Gacy's defense attorneys, Robert Motta, remarked: "The insanity defense has been looked [upon] as an escape; a defense of last resort. The defense of insanity is valid and it is the only defense that we could use here, because that is where the truth lies ... because if [Gacy] is normal, then our concept of normality is totally distorted."[195] Presenting Gacy as a Jekyll-and-Hyde character, the defense produced several psychiatric experts who had examined Gacy;[193][196] three testified they found him to be a paranoid schizophrenic with multiple personalities.[33][197]

The prosecutors argued that Gacy was sane and in full control of his actions.[137] They produced several witnesses to testify to his premeditation and the efforts he took to escape detection. Those doctors refuted the defense doctors' claims of multiple personalities and insanity. Cram and Rossi testified that Gacy had made them dig drainage trenches and spread bags of lime in his crawl space. Both said Gacy looked periodically into the crawl space to ensure they and other employees they supervised did not deviate from the precise locations he had marked.[68][174]

On February 18, Robert Stein testified that all the bodies recovered from Gacy's property were "markedly decomposed [and] putrefied, skeletalized remains", and that of all the autopsies he performed, thirteen victims had died of asphyxiation, six of ligature strangulation, one of multiple stab wounds to the chest and ten in undetermined ways.[51][198][u] When Gacy's defense team suggested that all 33 deaths were caused by accidental erotic asphyxia, Stein called this highly improbable.[71][200]

Jeffrey Rignall testified for the defense on February 21.[200] Rignall wept repeatedly while describing Gacy's torture of him in March 1978.[201] During specific cross-examination relating to the torture, Rignall vomited and was excused from further testimony.[202] On February 29, Donald Voorhees testified to his ordeal at Gacy's hands and his assault at Gacy's behest. Voorhees felt unable to testify but did briefly attempt to do so before being asked to step down.[203] Robert Donnelly testified the week after Voorhees, recounting his ordeal at Gacy's hands in December 1977. Donnelly was visibly distressed as he recalled the abuse.[85]

During the fifth week of the trial, Gacy wrote a personal letter to Judge Garippo requesting a mistrial for reasons including that he did not approve of his lawyers' insanity plea; that his lawyers had not allowed him to take the witness stand (as he had wanted to do); that his defense had not called enough medical witnesses, and that the police were lying with regard to verbal statements he had allegedly made to detectives after his arrest and that, in any event, the statements were "self-serving" for use by the prosecution.[22][204] Judge Garippo informed Gacy that both counsels had not been denied the opportunity or funds to summon expert witnesses to testify, and that, under the law, he had the choice whether he wished to testify, and was free to indicate as much to the judge.[205]

Closing arguments

[edit]

On March 11, final arguments by both prosecution and defense attorneys began. Prosecuting attorney Terry Sullivan outlined Gacy's history of abusing youths, the testimony of his efforts to avoid detection and describing his surviving victims—Voorhees and Donnelly—as "living dead". Referring to Gacy as the "worst of all murderers", Sullivan stated, "John Gacy has accounted for more human devastation than many earthly catastrophes... I tremble when thinking about just how close he came to getting away with it all."[113][184]

Kenneth Piest, brother of victim Robert Piest, pictured within the Cook County Criminal Court Building on March 12, 1980

After the state's four-hour closing, counsel Sam Amirante spoke for the defense. Amirante accused Sullivan of scarcely referring to the evidence in his own closing argument, and of arousing hatred against his client. He attempted to portray Gacy as "driven by compulsions he was unable to control", contending the State had not met their burden of proving Gacy sane beyond a reasonable doubt.[184] Amirante then urged the jury to put aside any prejudice they held against his client and asked they deliver a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, adding that Gacy was a danger to both himself and to others, and that studying his psychology and behavior would be of benefit to science.[196]

On the morning of March 12, William Kunkle continued to argue for the prosecution.[196] Kunkle referred to the defense's contention of insanity as "a sham", arguing that the facts of the case demonstrated Gacy's ability to think logically and control his actions. Kunkle also referred to the testimony of one of the doctors who had examined Gacy in 1968 and had concluded he was an antisocial personality, stating that had the recommendations of this doctor been heeded, Gacy would not have been freed.[184] At the close of his argument, Kunkle removed photos of Gacy's 22 identified victims from a display board and asked the jury not to show sympathy but to "show justice".[184]

The jury deliberated for one hour and fifty minutes.[206] Gacy was found guilty of 33 charges of murder; he was also found guilty of sexual assault and taking indecent liberties with a child, both in reference to Robert Piest.[184][207][208] At the time, his conviction for 33 murders was the most for which any person in U.S. history had been convicted.[209][210]

In the sentencing phase of the trial, the jury deliberated for more than two hours before sentencing Gacy to death for each murder committed after the Illinois statute on capital punishment came into effect in June 1977.[211][212] His execution was set for June 2, 1980.[213]

Death row

[edit]

On being sentenced, Gacy was transferred to the Menard Correctional Center, where he remained on death row for 14 years,[213] repeatedly proclaiming, often via conflicting claims, his alleged innocence.[214]

Isolated in his prison cell, Gacy began to paint, with his artwork occasionally produced via commission.[215] He drew inspiration from a wide range of sources for his artwork, depicting subjects as diverse as clowns (including himself as Pogo or Patches), Jesus, the Seven Dwarfs, skulls, his own home, Elvis Presley, and John Dillinger.[216][217] Gacy's paintings have been displayed at exhibitions[218][219] and sold at auction.[220]

Before his trial, Gacy initiated contact with journalist Russ Ewing, to whom he granted numerous interviews between 1979 and 1981.[221] Ewing later collaborated with author Tim Cahill to publish the book Buried Dreams.[222] The information Gacy divulged to Ewing regarding the circumstances of his first murder would prove instrumental in establishing the identity of his first victim.[223]

On February 15, 1983, Henry Brisbon, a fellow death row inmate known as the I-57 killer, stabbed Gacy in the arm with a sharpened wire. He received treatment in the prison hospital.[224]

After his incarceration, Gacy read law books and filed voluminous motions and appeals, although he did not prevail in any. His appeals related to issues such as the validity of the first search warrant granted to the Des Plaines police on December 13, 1978, and his objection to his lawyers' insanity plea defense. Gacy contended that, although he had "some knowledge" of five of the murders (those of McCoy, Butkovich, Godzik, Szyc and Piest), the other 28 murders had been committed by employees who had keys to his house while he was away on business trips.[22]

In mid-1984, the Supreme Court of Illinois upheld Gacy's conviction and ordered his execution by lethal injection on November 14.[22] Gacy filed an appeal against this decision, which was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States on March 4, 1985. The following year, Gacy filed a further post-conviction petition, seeking a new trial. His then-defense lawyer, Richard Kling, argued that Gacy had been provided with ineffective legal counsel at his 1980 trial. This petition was dismissed on September 11, 1986.[225]

Gacy appealed the 1985 decision that he be executed. The Illinois Supreme Court upheld his conviction on September 29, 1988, setting a new execution date of January 11, 1989.[226] After the U.S. Supreme Court denied Gacy's final appeal in October 1993, the Illinois Supreme Court formally set an execution date for May 10, 1994.[227]

Execution

[edit]

On the morning of May 9, 1994, Gacy was transferred to Stateville Correctional Center to be executed. That afternoon, he was allowed a private picnic on the prison grounds with his family. For his last meal, Gacy ordered a bucket of KFC, french fries, a dozen fried shrimp, fresh strawberries and a Diet Coke.[228][229] That evening, he received the last rites from a Catholic priest before being escorted to the Stateville execution chamber.[230][231][232] In the hours leading up to Gacy's execution, a crowd estimated at over 1,000 gathered outside the correctional center; a vocal majority were in favor of the execution, although a small number of anti-death penalty protesters were present.[220][233][234] Some of those in favor of the execution wore T-shirts hearkening to Gacy's previous community services as a clown and bearing satirical slogans such as "No tears for the clown".[235]

At 12:40 a.m., the procedure to administer the lethal injection began, although the chemicals used in the execution solidified unexpectedly, clogging the IV tube.[236] The execution team replaced the clogged tube and the execution resumed. The entire procedure took 18 minutes.[237] Anesthesiologists blamed the problem on the prison officials' inexperience at conducting an execution. This error apparently led to Illinois' adopting an alternative method of lethal injection. One prosecutor at Gacy's trial, William Kunkle, said, "He got a much easier death than any of his victims."[238]

According to published reports, Gacy was a diagnosed psychopath who did not express any remorse for his crimes.[239] His final statement to his lawyer before his execution was that killing him would not compensate for the loss of others, and that the state was murdering him.[238] His final spoken words were reported to be "Kiss my ass",[240] although prosecutor William Kunkle stated in 2020 that these words were spoken to a prison official, and were not part of any official statement prior to Gacy's execution.[241][242]

After Gacy's death was confirmed at 12:58 a.m. on May 10, 1994, his brain was removed. It is in the possession of Helen Morrison, a witness for the defense at Gacy's trial, who has interviewed Gacy and other serial killers in an attempt to isolate common personality traits of violent sociopaths.[204][243] He was cremated, and the whereabouts of his ashes remain undisclosed.[244]

Amber alert

[edit]

In 1984, Sam Amirante authored procedures that were incorporated by the Illinois General Assembly into the Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984. At the time of the Gacy murders, Illinois police had to wait 72 hours before initiating a search for a missing child or adolescent.[245] The Missing Child Recovery Act removed this waiting period. Other states subsequently adopted similar procedures. As a result, a national network aimed at locating missing children was gradually formed. This has since developed into the Child Abduction Emergency—commonly known as an Amber alert.[245]

Victims

[edit]

Only 28 of Gacy's victims have been conclusively identified. The youngest were Samuel Stapleton and Michael Marino, both 14. The oldest were Francis Alexander and Russell Nelson, both 21.

Name Age Date of murder Date of identification Recovery number Location recovered
Timothy Jack McCoy 16 January 3, 1972 May 9, 1986 Body 9 Crawl space
John Butkovich 18 July 31, 1975 December 29, 1978 Body 2 Garage
Darrell Julius Samson 18 April 6, 1976 November 18, 1979 Body 29 Dining room
Randall Wayne Reffett 15 May 14, 1976 April 12, 1979 Body 7 Crawl space
Samuel G. Dodd Stapleton 14 May 14, 1976 November 14, 1979 Body 6 Crawl space
Michael Lawrence Bonnin 17 June 3, 1976 January 6, 1979 Body 18 Crawl space
William Huey Carroll Jr. 16 June 13, 1976 March 17, 1979 Body 22 Crawl space
James Byron Haakenson 16 August 5, 1976 July 19, 2017 Body 24 Crawl space
Rick Louis Johnston 17 August 6, 1976 January 1, 1979 Body 23 Crawl space
Kenneth Ray Parker 16 October 24, 1976 March 29, 1980 Body 15 Crawl space
Michael M. Marino 14 October 24, 1976 Body 14 Crawl space
William George Bundy 19 October 26, 1976 November 29, 2011 Body 19 Crawl space
Francis Wayne Alexander 21 c. December 1, 1976 October 25, 2021 Body 5 Crawl space
Gregory John Godzik 17 December 12, 1976 December 29, 1978 Body 4 Crawl space
John Alan Szyc 19 January 20, 1977 Body 3 Crawl space
Jon Steven Prestidge 20 March 15, 1977 January 6, 1979 Body 1 Crawl space
Matthew Walter Bowman 19 July 5, 1977 January 29, 1979 Body 8 Crawl space
Robert Edward Gilroy Jr. 18 September 15, 1977 January 6, 1979 Body 25 Crawl space
John Antheney Mowery 19 September 25, 1977 January 27, 1979 Body 20 Crawl space
Russell Lloyd Nelson 21 October 17, 1977 January 6, 1979 Body 16 Crawl space
Robert David Winch 16 November 10, 1977 September 11, 1979 Body 11 Crawl space
Tommy Joseph Boling 20 November 18, 1977 Body 12 Crawl space
David Paul Talsma 19 December 9, 1977 November 16, 1979 Body 17 Crawl space
William Wayne Kindred 19 February 16, 1978 May 16, 1979 Body 27 Crawl space
Timothy David O'Rourke 20 June 16–23, 1978 January 9, 1979 Body 31 Des Plaines River
Frank William Landingin 19 November 4, 1978 November 14, 1978 Body 32 Des Plaines River
James Mazzara 20 November 24, 1978 December 30, 1978 Body 33 Des Plaines River
Robert Jerome Piest 15 December 11, 1978 April 9, 1979 Body 30 Des Plaines River

Crawl space

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Gacy's sketch of burial locations in his basement (left), and investigators' later diagram (right)

Cook County medical examiner Robert Stein supervised the exhumations of the victims buried on Gacy's property.[246] The crawl space was marked in sections and each body was given an identifying number. The first body recovered from the crawl space was assigned a marker denoting the victim as Body 1.[123] He was identified as Jon Prestidge on January 6, 1979.[132] No cause of death could be determined.

John Butkovich was labelled as Body 2; he was among the first to be identified, on December 29, 1978.[132][184] On December 23, investigators returned to unearth the three corpses which had been buried in the same trench as Body 1.[247] Body 3 (John Szyc) was buried in the crawl space directly above Body 4 (Gregory Godzik); both were identified December 29, 1978.[110][132] Body 5 was buried directly beneath Body 1;[123] this victim was discovered 36 inches (910 mm) below the surface of the soil, indicating he was the first to be buried in this common grave.[248]

Medical examiners retrieve one of the first bodies exhumed from beneath Gacy's crawl space. December 23, 1978.

The search was postponed over Christmas. Four more bodies were unearthed on December 26.[249] Body 6 (Samuel Stapleton, identified through dental records November 14, 1979) and Body 7 (Randall Reffett, identified through X-rays April 12, 1979) were buried in the same grave.[61][132] Reffett was found in a fetal position with a cloth gag in his mouth, leading investigators to conclude he most likely died of asphyxiation.[112][113] Body 8 (Matthew Bowman, identified January 29, 1979) was found with the tourniquet used to strangle him around his neck.[132][250] Body 9 (Timothy McCoy, identified via dental records and a distinctive belt buckle in May 1986) was found beneath a layer of concrete and had several stab wounds to the ribs and sternum, suggesting he was Gacy's first victim.[51][223][251][252]

On December 27, eight more bodies were discovered.[253] Body 10, buried beneath the entrance to Gacy's home,[123] remains unidentified; he is estimated to have been between 17 and 21 years old and between 5 ft 7 in and 5 ft 11 in (170 and 180 cm).[254] Both Body 11 and Body 12 were found with ligatures around their necks and buried beside each other in the center of the crawl space;[123] on September 11, 1979, they were identified as Robert Winch and Tommy Boling, respectively.[132] Body 13 (still unidentified) was found beneath the spare bedroom; he is estimated to have been between 17 and 22 years old and between 5 ft 9 in and 6 ft 2 in (180 and 190 cm).[255][256] Bodies 14 and 15 were recovered from a common grave; both were found with their head and upper torsos inside separate plastic bags.[255] They were identified using dental records and radiology images as Michael Marino and Kenneth Parker on March 29, 1980 (too late to include among the victims identified before Gacy's trial).[121][257][258] Body 16 (Russell Nelson, identified January 6, 1979) was found with a cloth rag lodged deep in his throat, causing him to die of suffocation.[132][255] The seventeenth victim (identified as David Talsma using radiology images on November 16, 1979) was found with a ligature around his neck.[255]

The following day, four more bodies were exhumed.[259] Body 19 was buried directly beneath Gacy's master bedroom; Body 18 (Michael Bonnin, identified January 6, 1979) was located beneath the spare bedroom, and found with a ligature around the neck.[123][132] Body 20 (John Mowery, identified through dental records January 27, 1979) was buried in the northwest corner of the crawl space.[123][132]

By December 29, six more bodies were unearthed. Bodies 22, 23, 24, and 26 were buried in a common grave beneath Gacy's kitchen and laundry room,[110] with Body 25 (Robert Gilroy, identified January 6, 1979) located beneath Gacy's bathroom.[123][132] Body 26, still unidentified, was estimated to have been between 23 and 30 years old and approximately 5 ft 4 in (160 cm) in height.[260] Body 22 (identified using dental records as William Carroll on March 17, 1979)[132] was found beneath Gacy's kitchen with cloth-like material lodged in his throat. Two socks were recovered from the pelvic region.[112] He was buried directly beneath Body 21, recovered the previous day; this victim, who remains unidentified, is estimated to have been aged between 15 and 24 years old and approximately 5 ft 10 in (180 cm) in height.[261] The bones of victims 23 (identified as Rick Johnston January 1, 1979) and 24 were commingled; cloth was found inside the mouth of Bodies 24 and 26.[110][262] Body 25 was found beneath Gacy's bathroom with cloth lodged in the throat. The final victim recovered from the crawl space (William Kindred, identified May 16, 1979) was also found beneath the bathroom, with cloth lodged deep in his throat.[123][132]

Operations were suspended due to the Chicago Blizzard of 1979, but resumed in March despite Gacy's insistence that all the buried victims had been found.[33][263] On March 9, Body 28 was found wrapped in several plastic bags and buried beneath the patio in Gacy's backyard.[264] Gacy's likely second murder victim[v] and still unidentified, he stood approximately 5 ft 9 in (180 cm) and is estimated to be aged between 14 and 18.[137] On March 16, Body 29 (Darrell Samson, identified November 18, 1979) was found beneath the dining room.[132][137]

All the victims discovered at Gacy's house were in an advanced state of decomposition. Dental records and X-ray charts helped Stein identify the remains.[255][266] Twenty-three were identified via dental records and two via skeletal trauma. These identifications were supported with personal artifacts found in Gacy's home.[267]

The head and upper torso of several bodies unearthed beneath Gacy's property had been placed in plastic bags.[w] In some cases, bodies were found with foreign objects such as prescription bottles lodged in their pelvic region, the position of which indicated the items had been thrust into the victims' anus.[123] Stein concluded 12 victims recovered from Gacy's property died of asphyxiation.[59] Gacy's vacant house was demolished in April 1979.[268]

Des Plaines River

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In June 1978, Gacy began discarding the bodies of his victims in the Des Plaines River (pictured), as his crawl space was full.

The victim found 6 miles (9.7 km) downstream from the I-55 bridge on June 30 was not connected initially to Gacy.[110][269] On January 9, 1979, this victim was identified using fingerprint records and a distinctive tattoo as Timothy O'Rourke. An autopsy was unable to rule out strangulation as the cause of death.[71][270] This victim was numbered 31. Following Gacy's arrest, investigators discovered he was a further victim.

Frank Landingin's cause of death was certified at autopsy as suffocation through his own underwear being lodged down his throat. His body was also identified via fingerprint records. A bond slip issued to Landingin the day before his death was found at Gacy's home;[271] he was assigned victim number 32.[87]

On December 28, one further body linked to Gacy was found 1 mile (1.6 km) from the I-55 bridge. This victim was identified two days later as James Mazzara, whom Gacy confessed to having murdered shortly after Thanksgiving.[132][59] Mazzara had been strangled with a ligature.[87][272]

On April 9, 1979, a man walking along a Grundy County towpath discovered a decomposed body tangled in roots on the edge of the Des Plaines River. The body was identified via dental records as being that of Robert Piest the same evening. An autopsy revealed that "paper-like material" had been shoved down his throat, causing him to suffocate.[184][199]

Unidentified victims

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Five victims have never been identified.[273] Based on Gacy's confession, the location of the victims buried in the crawl space, and forensic analysis, police determined the most likely dates for when his unidentified victims were killed.[274]

  1. January 3, 1972 – July 31, 1975. Body 28. Backyard. Male aged 14–18.[101]
  2. June 13 – August 6, 1976. Body 26. Crawl space. Male aged 23–30.[275]
  3. August 6 – October 5, 1976. Body 13. Crawl space. Male aged 17–22.[276]
  4. August 6 – October 24, 1976. Body 21. Crawl space. Male aged 15–24.[277][x]
  5. March 15 – July 5, 1977. Body 10. Crawl space. Male aged 17–21.[279]

In late 1979,[280] forensic expert Betty Pat Gatliff used the skulls of the remaining unidentified victims to create facial reconstructions.[281][282]

Recent identification efforts

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Facial reconstructions of the unidentified victims, released to the media in 1980. Depicted left to right are Body 5 (later identified as Francis Alexander), Body 9 (later identified as Timothy McCoy), Body 24 (later identified as James Haakenson), Body 19 (later identified as William Bundy), Body 21, Body 28, Body 13, Body 26, and Body 10.

In October 2011, Cook County sheriff Thomas Dart announced that investigators, having obtained DNA profiles from the unidentified victims, were to renew their efforts to identify them. At a press conference Sheriff Dart stated investigators were seeking DNA samples from across the United States related to any male missing between 1970 and 1979.[283]

To date, the identification of three victims has been confirmed, numerous other missing youths have been ruled out as being victims of Gacy,[284][285] and four unrelated cold cases dating between 1972 and 1979 have been solved.[286][287][288][289] Updated facial reconstructions of Bodies 10 and 13 were released in 2018.[290]

In November 2011, William Bundy was identified through DNA testing.[124] Shortly after Gacy's arrest, Bundy's family had contacted his dentist in the hope of submitting his dental records for comparison with the unidentified bodies, but the records had been destroyed after his dentist had retired.[291] In July 2017, 16-year-old James Haakenson was identified using DNA testing.[292] Francis Wayne Alexander was identified via forensic genealogy in October 2021.[293]

In 2012, the DNA of Gacy and other executed Illinois inmates was entered into a national DNA database in efforts to establish potential forensic links to further unsolved murders.[294]

Possible additional victims

[edit]

At the time of Gacy's arrest, he had claimed to investigators that the total number of murder victims could be as high as 45.[80] However, only 33 victims were ever linked to Gacy. Investigators excavated the grounds of his property until they had exposed the substratum of clay beneath the foundations, finding 29 bodies.[295]

Shortly after his arrest, Gacy informed investigators that after he had assaulted and then released Jeffrey Rignall in March 1978, he began to throw his murder victims into the Des Plaines River. He confessed to having disposed of five bodies in this manner; however, only four bodies recovered from the Des Plaines River were linked to him.[71][296] When asked whether there were more victims, Gacy stated, "That's for you guys to find out."[297][y]

Disputed DNA and dental tests conducted between 2012 and 2016 indicate that neither body found in the common grave in Gacy's crawl space and identified as those of Kenneth Parker and Michael Marino in 1980 was actually Marino.[299][300][301] Marino's mother had always doubted her son's identification because the clothing found on Body 14 was inconsistent with what he had worn when she last saw him.[302] DNA testing conducted on the exhumed body of Parker has proven that Marino's body had not been mistaken for his.[z] In addition, the dental X-ray conducted on the victim identified as Michael Marino had revealed he had all of his second molars; a dental X-ray conducted on Marino in March 1976 revealed one molar had not erupted.[303] The original identification of the body has been disputed because the exhumed body had neither an upper nor lower jaw bone.[304] Nonetheless, the orthodontist who had identified Marino's remains has stated his conviction in the accuracy of his findings.[305]

On May 23, 1978, 25-year-old Charles Antonio Hattula was found drowned in the Pecatonica River near Freeport, Illinois. He had been missing since May 13.[306] Hattula was an employee of PDM and had been linked to the initial investigation of Gacy after Michael Rossi informed investigators of both Godzik's disappearance and Hattula's death. Moreover, Rossi had stated that Hattula was known to have conflicts with Gacy, and when he had "failed to show up at work", Gacy had informed him and several other employees that he had drowned.[164] At the time of Hattula's death, no more bodies could be stored in Gacy's crawl space, which leaves a possibility he had disposed of Hattula's body in the Pecatonica River. However, Des Plaines authorities had contacted Freeport during their investigation into Gacy, and were told on December 27 that Hattula had fallen to his death from a bridge while attempting to free a stranded vehicle. Hattula's death has been officially ruled as asphyxia by drowning.[163]

Retired Chicago police officer Bill Dorsch stated he had reason to believe there might be more victims buried in the grounds of an apartment building on West Miami Avenue in Chicago, where Gacy had been the caretaker for several years.[307] In 1975, Dorsch—then a Chicago police officer—observed Gacy (whom he knew on a casual basis) holding a shovel in the early morning. When Dorsch confronted him, Gacy said he was doing work that he was too busy to do during the day. Dorsch also said that several other residents of West Miami Avenue stated they had seen Gacy digging trenches at the property in the early to mid-1970s.[308] Gacy was then still married to Carole Hoff.[309] In March 2012, Cook County Sheriff's officials submitted a request to excavate the grounds of this property. The Cook County State's Attorney denied the request, citing a lack of probable cause, including the results of a 1998 search of the property.[310] However, the sheriff's office noted that in 1998, a radar survey suggested fourteen areas of interest within the grounds, yet only two of these had been excavated; four of those remaining were described as being "staggeringly suggestive" of human skeletons.[311] A second request to excavate the grounds was granted in January 2013, and a search of the property was conducted in the spring. Both FBI sniffer dogs and ground-penetrating radar equipment were used, but no human remains were found.[312][aa]

Potential accomplices

[edit]

One of the first things Gacy told investigators after his arrest was that he had not acted alone in several of the murders: he asked whether "my associates" had been arrested. When questioned whether these associates had participated directly or indirectly in the killings, Gacy replied, "Directly". He later claimed Cram and Rossi were involved in several of the murders.[48] Some defense attorneys and investigators researching the possibility Gacy had not acted alone in several of the murders have said there is "overwhelming evidence Gacy worked with an accomplice".[314]

In the 1980s, Gacy informed FBI profiler Robert Ressler that "two or three" PDM employees had assisted in several murders. Ressler believed there were unexplained avenues to the case and that Gacy had killed more than 33 victims in multiple states. Gacy neither confirmed nor denied Ressler's suspicions.[ab][ac] Jeffrey Rignall, who had been assaulted and tortured by Gacy in March 1978, was adamant that at one point during his ordeal, a young man with brown hair had watched and participated in his abuse.[71][316][ad]

Three days before his arrest, two officers followed Gacy to a bar where he met two employees—Michael Rossi and Ed Hefner. An anxious Gacy was observed walking with the two out of earshot of the officers to talk before returning closer. Gacy said to both young men: "You'd better not let me down, you fuckers. You owe it to me." The officers then overheard sections of a hushed conversation between Gacy and the two during which Rossi asked Gacy, "And what? Buried like the other five?"[317]

In interviews from death row, Gacy said that at the time of his arrest, three PDM employees were also considered suspects in the murders—all of whom he said were in possession of keys to his house.[102] In addition to Cram and Rossi, Gacy named his former employee Phillip Paske, who was an acquaintance of Cram and a close associate of John David Norman. In the late 1970s, Norman operated a nationwide sex trafficking ring based in Chicago known as the Delta Project with the help of Paske.[318] At least two victims believed to have been murdered by Gacy (Kenneth Parker and Michael Marino) had last been seen alive close to where Norman lived.[319] This led to speculation that Gacy had been connected to this trafficking ring.[320]

Gacy claimed that he was not in Chicago when sixteen of the identified victims disappeared. In 2012, two Chicago lawyers said travel records show that he had been in another state at the time of three of the murders, implying he had one or more accomplices.[321][322]

Investigators note that Robert Young, the traveling companion with whom victim Russell Nelson was visiting Chicago at the time of his disappearance, gave differing accounts of his disappearance.[323] Young filed a missing person's report with Chicago police before unsuccessfully requesting money from Nelson's parents to finance a search. When Nelson's brothers arrived in Chicago to search for him, Young offered them a job with PDM.[322] Young was never summoned to testify at Gacy's trial.[323]

Films and media

[edit]
  • The made-for-TV film To Catch a Killer, starring Brian Dennehy as Gacy, was released in 1992. The film is based largely on the investigation and apprehension of Gacy following the disappearance of Robert Piest, by Des Plaines Police.[324]
  • A feature film, Gacy, was released in 2003. This film cast Mark Holton in the role of Gacy and depicts his life after he moved to Norwood Park in 1971 until his arrest in 1978.[325]
  • The made-for-TV film Dear Mr. Gacy, released in 2010, stars William Forsythe as Gacy. The film is based on the book The Last Victim by Jason Moss. The film focuses on the correspondence between Moss and Gacy before Gacy invited Moss to visit him on death row in 1994.[326]
  • The 2010 horror film 8213: Gacy House is based on paranormal investigators spending a night in the house built on the former site of 8213 W. Summerdale.[327]
  • The Discovery Channel broadcast an episode relating to Gacy's crimes in the true crime series The New Detectives: Case Studies in Forensic Science. This documentary features an interview between Gacy and FBI profiler Robert Ressler.[328]
  • The Investigation Discovery channel has broadcast two documentaries about the Gacy murders. The first was commissioned for the Most Evil series, a forensics program in which forensic psychiatrist Michael Stone analyzes murderers and psychopaths. The second is featured in the Evil Lives Here series. This program explores how Gacy's actions affected his family; Gacy's sister and niece are among those interviewed.
  • The Biography Channel broadcast a 45-minute documentary on Gacy's crimes.[329]
  • The television program Psychic Investigators broadcast an episode entitled "What Lies Below".[330] This program focuses on the consultation between Detective Joseph Kozenczak and psychic Carol Broman, whom Kozenczak had met on December 17, 1978, to discuss the whereabouts of the body of Robert Piest.[331]
  • The Lifetime Movies network series Monster in My Family broadcast "Killer Clown: John Wayne Gacy" in August 2015. The episode features Karen Kuzma, Gacy's sister, and her daughter, and focuses on formative events in Gacy's life that may have initiated his later crimes.[332][333]
  • The documentary series John Wayne Gacy: Devil in Disguise. Commissioned by Peacock, the first episode was broadcast in March 2021. This six-part series includes interviews with Gacy, investigators responsible for his apprehension, and Cook County Sheriff Thomas Dart.[334]
  • Conversations with a Killer: The John Wayne Gacy Tapes. Commissioned by Netflix and directed by Joe Berlinger, this series includes previously unreleased recordings of conversations between Gacy and his lawyer. The first of this three-part series was broadcast on April 20, 2022.[335]
  • Defense Diaries: A podcast series hosted by the son of Gacy's defense attorney Robert Motta. The series includes previously unreleased cassette recordings of pretrial interviews with Gacy and his attorneys.[336][337]
  • The John Wayne Gacy Murders: Life and Death in Chicago. Produced and directed by John Borowski, this eight-part documentary miniseries was released in 2024 and features interviews with several individuals responsible for Gacy's apprehension and conviction.[338]
  • Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy. An eight-episode limited series commissioned by Peacock. This series premiered on October 16, 2025, and stars Michael Chernus as Gacy.[339]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Cited works

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
John Wayne Gacy Jr. (March 17, 1942 – May 10, 1994) was an American , rapist, and building contractor who murdered 33 young men and boys, aged 14 to 21, in Norwood Park Township near between 1972 and 1978. As owner of PDM Contractors, Gacy lured victims—often , prostitutes, or those seeking —to his home at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue by offering jobs or cash, then subdued them using , , or deception before raping, torturing, and killing them primarily through strangulation, suffocation, or, in one case, stabbing. He concealed 29 bodies in the under his house, as well as in the driveway and garage, while disposing of five others by throwing them from a bridge into the . Gacy earned the moniker "Killer Clown" posthumously due to his volunteer performances as "Pogo the Clown" at children's parties, hospitals, and charity events, a he referenced during by claiming that "clowns can get away with murder." The investigation began after the December 11, 1978, disappearance of 15-year-old Robert Piest, who had visited Gacy's home for a job discussion; a executed days later uncovered decomposing bodies, leading to Gacy's on December 21, 1978. Tried in Cook County in 1980, Gacy was convicted on 33 counts of , plus additional charges of deviate and indecent liberties with a ; despite claiming , he was sentenced to death on 12 counts and executed by at .

Early Life

Childhood and Family Dynamics

John Wayne Gacy was born on March 17, 1942, at Edgewater Hospital in , , via , as the second of three children to John Stanley Gacy and Marion Elaine Robison Gacy. His father, a veteran employed as an auto repair machinist, was a severe alcoholic who routinely inflicted on Gacy, his mother, and siblings using a razor strap or beatings for perceived failures, such as in 1946 and 1948 incidents where Gacy was punished for displeasing him. Gacy's mother, a former who ceased working after marriage, offered consistent nurturing and endeavored to protect her son from his father's rages, fostering a dynamic where she served as a buffer against the household volatility. The family's working-class existence in Chicago's North Side was dominated by the father's punitive temperament and verbal degradations, particularly toward Gacy, whom he labeled a "" and unfavorably compared to his sisters for lacking athleticism or toughness. Gacy, overweight and uncoordinated from childhood, internalized a drive for paternal approval amid this rejection, yet harbored growing resentment; his sisters, Joanne (older) and Karen (born 1944, younger), faced parallel physical mistreatment but later led non-criminal lives, underscoring individual variation in responses to shared adversity. Gacy's early health struggles, including a congenital enlarged bottleneck heart, psychomotor diagnosed in 1952 with attendant blackouts, and a 1953 from a playground swing causing blood clots, further isolated him and drew accusations from his father of feigning illness. These dynamics reflected a pattern of authoritarian control and emotional neglect from the , tempered by maternal intervention, in a home where amplified cycles of violence without evident external interventions or . While Gacy later recounted seeking normalcy through school and odd jobs, the persistent intra-family contributed to his reported feelings of inadequacy and alienation during formative years.

Education and Initial Employment

Gacy attended Catholic elementary school in Chicago starting in 1947 at age five, transferring to public school in 1956 at age fourteen. He was described as a good student during elementary years. In high school, Gacy enrolled in , focusing on courses, but attended four different high schools amid personal difficulties and ultimately dropped out in 1959 at age seventeen without graduating. He later completed a course at Northwestern Business College, graduating in 1962 at age twenty with good grades. Gacy's initial employment began with delivering groceries for an IGA store in Chicago in 1956 at age fourteen. In 1961, at age nineteen, he worked briefly as an ambulance attendant in Las Vegas, Nevada, but was demoted to janitor and subsequently fired. By 1963, at age twenty-one, he served as a manager trainee at Nunn Bush Shoes in Springfield, Illinois, where he performed well. These roles preceded his relocation to Waterloo, Iowa, in 1964 at age twenty-two to manage Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises.

Residence in Waterloo, Iowa

Managerial Role and Community Engagement

Following his to Marlynn Myers on September 5, 1964, Gacy relocated to , in 1966 to manage three Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises owned by his father-in-law, Donald Myers. In this managerial capacity, he oversaw daily operations, staff supervision, and business performance at the locations, contributing to their functionality within the local economy. Gacy simultaneously immersed himself in community organizations, joining the Waterloo chapter of the Jaycees, a civic group affiliated with the of Commerce, shortly after his arrival. He advanced within the organization, serving on its and earning recognition as a Key Man in of one year during his tenure there. His involvement included participation in local events and leadership roles that positioned him as an active community member, including appearances at Jaycees functions with his wife in 1967.

Conviction for Sexual Assault

In 1968, John Wayne Gacy, then 26 years old and employed as a manager at a franchise in , faced multiple accusations of sexual misconduct involving teenage boys he had encountered through his professional and community roles. Two boys, aged 15 and 16, alleged that Gacy had lured them to his home under pretexts related to employment or organizational activities and coerced them into acts of . Gacy was arrested on May 10, 1968, in , on charges stemming from these complaints, marking his first known encounter with over . He initially denied the allegations but later entered a plea of guilty to one count of while pleading not guilty to additional charges pressed by other accusers. The case was prosecuted by Assistant County Attorney George D. Keith. Following his guilty plea, Gacy was convicted of sodomy in May 1968 and sentenced to a maximum of 10 years in the Iowa State Men's Reformatory at Anamosa. The indecent liberties with a child charges were reportedly dropped as part of the plea agreement. Gacy served approximately 18 months of his sentence before being granted parole on June 18, 1970, after demonstrating good behavior and undergoing psychological evaluation deemed satisfactory by prison officials. Parole conditions allowed his return to the Chicago area, where supervision continued until October 1971. In later years, Gacy portrayed the conviction as resulting from "false accusations" and peer pressure within his social circle, though court records and victim statements substantiated the assault.

Relocation to Chicago Area

Establishment of PDM Contractors

Following his parole from an Iowa prison in June 1970, John Wayne Gacy relocated to the area and, in 1971, established PDM Contractors as his own independent construction and remodeling business. The acronym PDM stood for Painting, Decorating, and Maintenance, reflecting the firm's primary services, which included interior and exterior , wallpaper installation, and general home maintenance and renovation work for residential clients. Gacy operated PDM from his home at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Norwood Park Township, initially handling projects through personal networking and local advertising rather than large-scale operations. The business allowed him to secure subcontracts for remodeling jobs, such as and updates, drawing on his prior managerial experience in construction-related roles. By focusing on affordable, hands-on services, PDM quickly positioned Gacy as a self-made entrepreneur in the suburban construction scene, enabling him to employ a rotating staff of young workers whom he recruited via and word-of-mouth. This setup marked a deliberate shift from salaried employment to ownership, aligning with Gacy's expressed ambitions for post-incarceration.

Marriages and Family Life

John Wayne Gacy married Marlynn Myers on September 3, 1964, shortly after meeting through mutual involvement in the Waterloo Jaycees. The couple relocated to , where Gacy managed franchises owned by Myers' father, and they had two children: son Michael, born in February 1966, and daughter Christine, born in March 1967. Myers later described Gacy as a good father who showed no signs of violence toward her or the children during the marriage. The marriage ended following Gacy's December 1968 conviction for the of two teenage boys, after which Myers filed for divorce citing cruel and inhumane treatment; it was finalized on September 18, 1969, with her awarded full custody of the children. Gacy maintained limited contact with his children post-divorce, but they ceased communication after his 1978 arrest for murder. After serving his sentence and relocating to the Chicago area, Gacy reconnected with Carole Hoff, a high school acquaintance and divorced mother of two daughters, whom he married on , 1972. The family resided at Gacy's home in Norwood Park Township, where he acted as to Hoff's daughters, Christine and Tracy; the couple had no children together. Initially affectionate, Gacy became distant, avoiding sexual intimacy with Hoff while spending increasing time with young male employees, and restricting her access to parts of the house including the garage and basement. Hoff reported persistent foul odors from the , which Gacy attributed to sewer issues or dead rats, as well as discovering wallets belonging to teenage boys and collections of homosexual pornography. Tensions escalated with Gacy's erratic behavior, including physical altercations where he threw furniture and struck Hoff, leading her to file for in October 1975 on grounds of and ; it was finalized in March 1976. Hoff moved out with her daughters prior to the finalization, though Gacy continued some involvement with the children afterward until his crimes came to light. Gacy did not remarry following this .

Civic and Political Involvement


Upon relocating to Norwood Park Township near in 1971, Gacy immersed himself in local political activities, aligning with the Democratic Party. He registered as a Democrat and served as a in the 10th Precinct of the 30th Ward in Cook County, organizing voter outreach and supporting party candidates.
Gacy actively volunteered for Jimmy Carter's 1976 presidential campaign, contributing time and resources to Democratic efforts in the area. His political engagement extended to hosting fundraisers and events at his home, which helped cultivate his image as a . In a notable civic role, Gacy directed the 1978 Polish Constitution Day Parade in , an event honoring Polish heritage that drew significant local participation. For this position, he underwent Secret Service vetting and subsequently met First Lady at a private reception following the parade on May 6, 1978, where they posed for photographs. This interaction underscored his access to high-profile political figures despite his underlying criminal activities.

Facade of Respectability

Performances as Pogo the Clown

John Wayne Gacy began performing as Pogo the Clown in late 1975 after joining a Chicago-area known as the Jolly Jokers. He crafted his own clown costumes and makeup, devising Pogo as one of several characters, including Patches the Clown, to entertain audiences. These performances occurred primarily in the Norwood Park Township suburbs, where Gacy resided and operated his construction business. Gacy's appearances as Pogo targeted children's events, including birthday parties and visits to local hospitals to amuse ill and handicapped youth. He also participated in charity fundraisers and community parades, performing magic tricks, juggling, and other routines to project an image of civic generosity. A notable instance includes a 1976 photograph of Gacy in full Pogo —featuring a multicolored outfit, face , nose, and oversized bow tie—posing outside his home with balloons in hand. These activities aligned with his involvement in local organizations like the Jaycees, where performances bolstered his facade of respectability amid ongoing criminal behavior. The Pogo persona enabled Gacy to interact closely with young boys, whom he sometimes invited to his home under pretexts of learning clowning skills or assisting with events, though no direct links to crimes were established during these public outings. Performances continued sporadically until his December 1978 arrest, with Gacy estimating dozens of such engagements over three years. Post-arrest, the association tainted imagery in the region, prompting the Metropolitan Clown Guild to publicly distance itself from Gacy's activities.

Employee Relations and Recruitment Practices

Gacy established PDM Contractors in 1971, initially focusing on , decorating, and maintenance services before expanding into remodeling, , and . The firm employed a predominantly composed of high school students and young men, often recruited through informal offers of construction jobs that appealed to teenagers and vulnerable youths seeking entry-level work. These recruitment practices allowed Gacy to maintain a steady supply of inexpensive labor while providing a veneer of community involvement, as he frequently interacted with local families and businesses in the suburbs. Employee relations at PDM were characterized by close, sometimes intrusive oversight from Gacy, who worked grueling 12- to 14-hour days himself and expected similar dedication. Workers like David Cram and Michael Rossi, both young men in their late teens or early twenties, not only performed and digging tasks but also lived at or had unrestricted access to Gacy's residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue, including keys to the . Cram later testified to experiencing unwanted sexual advances from Gacy, who demonstrated the use of ropes, , and a "sex board" device on him, though Cram escaped further harm by feigning compliance or fleeing. Tensions arose over compensation and working conditions, exemplified by the case of employee John Butkovich, an 18-year-old hired for construction work, who vanished on July 31, 1975, after confronting Gacy regarding approximately $300 in unpaid wages. Butkovich's parents repeatedly contacted authorities, reporting over 100 times to urge investigation into Gacy, but initial police responses were inadequate, allowing the business operations to continue without scrutiny. High employee turnover was common, attributed in part to disappearances and disputes, yet Gacy sustained the company's facade through persistent hiring of new young recruits, many of whom were drawn from transient or economically disadvantaged backgrounds.

Serial Murders

First Known Murder and Early Victims

John Wayne Gacy's first known murder took place on January 3, 1972, involving the stabbing death of 16-year-old Timothy Jack McCoy at Gacy's home in Norwood Park Township, Illinois. McCoy, a resident of , originally from , had been traveling by bus and stopped at the Greyhound station during a en route to visit family. Gacy, who had been drinking, encountered McCoy there and invited him to stay overnight, providing breakfast and showing him around the house. Early the next morning, McCoy entered the kitchen around 4 a.m. carrying a , which Gacy later claimed prompted him to fear an attack, leading to a struggle in which he stabbed McCoy multiple times in the chest. An confirmed by stabbing, distinct from Gacy's later method of strangulation for most victims. Gacy disposed of the body by burying it in the beneath his residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue. The remains were recovered during the 1978 investigation and identified in 1986 through dental records. Gacy confessed to the killing in December 1978, initially framing it as but admitting to prior sexual contact with McCoy. After McCoy, Gacy's murders entered a hiatus of about two years before resuming in , with early subsequent victims typically young men lured via offers of jobs, parties, or transportation. These included 18-year-old Darrell Samson, killed around April 6, 1972, after being picked up by Gacy, though precise circumstances remain limited. By 1975, Gacy had murdered at least one employee, 18-year-old John Butkovich on July 31, following a confrontation over unpaid wages; Butkovich's body was found in the , strangled and buried there. These early crimes established Gacy's pattern of targeting vulnerable teenagers and young adults connected to his PDM Contractors business or encountered in public settings like bus stations.

Escalation in the Mid-1970s

In the mid-1970s, John Wayne Gacy's pattern of predation escalated markedly, transitioning from infrequent to a more rapid succession of killings, primarily targeting vulnerable young men and teenagers. This period saw Gacy exploit his position as owner of PDM Contractors to lure potential victims under the guise of employment opportunities, often young runaways or those seeking work in . By , the frequency of his crimes had increased significantly, with Gacy later confessing to approximately two dozen occurring between April 1976 and 1977 alone. A notable example occurred on July 31, 1976, when 18-year-old John Butkovich, an employee of PDM who had confronted Gacy over unpaid wages exceeding $300, visited Gacy's home to demand payment. Gacy strangled Butkovich during the encounter and buried his body in the . This incident highlighted Gacy's growing willingness to eliminate those who challenged his authority, contributing to the acceleration of his . Similarly, on June 3, 1976, Gacy picked up 17-year-old Michael Bonnin, who was from to Waukegan. After gaining Bonnin's trust, Gacy transported him to his Norwood Park Township residence, where he subjected the youth to before him with a trick—a method involving a tourniquet-like device—and disposing of the body in the . Such cases exemplified Gacy's refined techniques for subduing victims, often involving feigned authority or games to apply restraints, followed by prolonged and manual strangulation. The escalation reflected Gacy's increasing confidence and diminished caution, as the of his home at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue became filled with decomposing remains, necessitating eventual disposal in the for later victims. Autopsies of bodies recovered from this period consistently revealed evidence of , asphyxiation via neck compression, and in some instances, defensive wounds indicating prolonged struggles. This phase underscored the causal progression from opportunistic predation to systematic serial homicide, driven by Gacy's unaddressed and access to disposable victims.

Methods of Luring and Killing

Gacy primarily targeted young men and boys, many of whom were runaways, unemployed, or seeking temporary work, approaching them through his construction business, PDM Contractors, by offering lucrative job opportunities or for minor tasks such as or yard work. He frequently lured victims to his residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Norwood Park Township, Illinois, under pretexts including interviews, parties, or demonstrations of " equipment," often providing alcohol or marijuana to lower inhibitions upon arrival. Once isolated in his home, Gacy subdued victims using a "handcuff trick," presenting himself as having prior experience in or private security—claims unsubstantiated but used to gain trust—and challenging them to test a pair of that he claimed he could not unlock, thereby restraining them without immediate resistance. Following restraint, he subjected victims to prolonged and , including beatings and forced acts, as detailed in his post-arrest to detectives. The killing phase typically involved manual strangulation via Gacy's signature "rope trick," a method he confessed to employing on multiple occasions, in which he positioned a length of rope or necktie around the victim's neck, looped it over a fixed point such as a 2x4 beam or similar improvised pulley, and tightened it gradually while seated on the victim's chest to apply leverage, allowing asphyxiation without direct hand contact. Autopsies confirmed that the majority of the 33 identified victims died from asphyxia due to strangulation, with some instances involving preliminary incapacitation by chloroform-soaked rags, though this was less consistent than the rope technique. Gacy claimed in confessions and trial-related statements that victims occasionally struggled violently, leading to unintended deaths during restraint, but forensic evidence and survivor accounts indicated deliberate, methodical homicides following extended abuse.

Final Crimes and Robert Piest

On December 11, 1978, 15-year-old Robert Jerome Piest, a part-time employee at the in , disappeared after leaving work to discuss a potential job opportunity with John Wayne Gacy, who had been performing remodeling work at the pharmacy. Piest, earning $2.50 per hour at the pharmacy, was offered a summer position by Gacy paying double that rate, prompting him to inform his mother he would return within 30 minutes before departing around 8:00 or 9:00 p.m. Gacy lured Piest to his home at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Norwood Park Township, where he handcuffed the teenager using a "handcuff trick" and attempted sexual assault. When interrupted by a phone call, Gacy strangled Piest with a rope, twisting it twice around his neck and leaving him to suffocate. Piest's murder marked Gacy's 33rd and final known killing, as the crawl space beneath his house was already filled with victims' remains, prompting disposal of the body elsewhere. Following the murder, Gacy stored Piest's body in his attic and then the trunk of his car before driving to the , where he made multiple passes under a bridge before dumping it into the waterway. Piest's body was recovered in April 1979 after the river thawed. Piest's family reported him missing the same night, leading Des Plaines police to interview Gacy on December 12, though he initially denied any involvement. A subsequent search on December 13 uncovered Piest's jacket containing a development receipt in Gacy's residence, providing crucial evidence that intensified surveillance and ultimately precipitated his arrest on December 21-22, 1978. Gacy later confessed to police that he killed Piest out of fear the boy would report the assault.

Law Enforcement Investigation

Missing Persons Reports and Initial Leads

On December 11, 1978, 15-year-old Robert Piest vanished after departing his shift at Nisson Pharmacy in Des Plaines, Illinois, to discuss employment with John Wayne Gacy's firm, PDM Contractors. Piest had informed his mother he would return within 30 minutes, but he did not, prompting his family to file a missing persons report with Des Plaines police that evening. Investigators quickly determined through witness accounts that Piest was last seen entering Gacy's vehicle outside the pharmacy, establishing Gacy as the primary initial lead. Des Plaines police contacted Gacy at his home on December 12, 1978, where he denied any meeting with Piest and claimed to have been elsewhere that evening. Despite Gacy's , officers pursued further inquiries, uncovering his 1968 conviction in for the of a teenage boy, which heightened suspicion. Interviews with staff and Piest's acquaintances reinforced the timeline linking Gacy to the disappearance, though Gacy maintained his innocence during subsequent questioning on December 13 and 20. Prior to Piest's case, several young men employed by or associated with Gacy had been reported missing, including John Butkovich on July 31, 1976, after quitting his job at PDM amid a pay dispute. However, these reports—such as those for Butkovich and others like Gregory Godzik in December 1976—remained unconnected to Gacy due to lack of direct evidence or patterns recognized at the time, with investigations treating them as individual runaways or unrelated incidents. Piest's disappearance, uniquely tied to a recent interaction with Gacy, catalyzed the focused scrutiny that prior cases had not.

Surveillance and Warrants

Following the linkage of Gacy to the disappearance of Robert Piest on December 11, 1978, Des Plaines police initiated of his residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue. This began formally on December 15, 1978, with around-the-clock monitoring involving pairs of officers on 12-hour shifts. Gacy quickly became aware of the tail and engaged with the officers brazenly, referring to them as his "bodyguards," purchasing them beers at a local Moose Lodge, inviting them for breakfast, and boasting about his political connections. During one such interaction, officers Michael Albrecht and Robert Schultz accepted Gacy's invitation into his home to warm up from the cold; at that point, Schultz detected a strong, morgue-like odor emanating from the when the activated. Surveillance also yielded additional leads, such as the discovery of a high school ring belonging to missing youth John Szyc in Gacy's possession. A first search warrant was issued on December 13, 1978, authorizing the search of Gacy's home and vehicles for items linked to Piest, including a light blue down jacket, tan Levi pants, and any blood or hair samples; was established by Gacy's confirmed presence at the Nisson where Piest had sought , combined with Gacy's prior criminal history. The search recovered a pharmacy receipt for color film processing dated December 11, 1978, which matched an item from Piest's jacket pocket, along with syringes, drugs, and identification belonging to other young males. Gacy was released after this search but remained under surveillance. A second search warrant followed on December 21, 1978, specifically targeting evidence of Piest's remains, predicated on the prior search findings, the Schultz odor observation, and accumulating evidence of Gacy's involvement in disappearances. Gacy contested both warrants on grounds of insufficient and lack of specificity, but the Illinois Supreme Court later upheld their validity, affirming the factual basis under standards from cases like Aguilar v. Texas and Spinelli v. United States. This warrant facilitated Gacy's arrest on December 21 and the subsequent property search that uncovered human remains.

Discoveries in the Crawl Space

Following John Wayne Gacy's arrest on December 21, 1978, Des Plaines police and Cook County investigators executed a at his residence, 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Norwood Park Township, Illinois, beginning excavations in the on December 22. Upon entry, officers immediately noted a pervasive odor of human decomposition and quickly uncovered the first skeletal remains buried in shallow graves. Over the subsequent week, excavation teams, working in cramped, humid conditions amid standing water and lime used to accelerate decay, recovered the remains of 26 young males from the , many in advanced states of or reduced to skeletons. The bodies were primarily positioned face-down, some wrapped in plastic sheeting or tarpaulins, bound with rope, or showing evidence of such as restraints made from wood and clothing. Additional discoveries included personal effects like identification cards, clothing, and sexual devices, confirming the victims were lured to the property under . The , measuring approximately 100 by 50 feet but partially filled due to the burials, required systematic digging with shovels and dental picks, as well as the use of industrial fans to manage fumes; by , at least 21 bodies had been exhumed from under the home, with the total on the property reaching 28 before further searches elsewhere. Forensic examination later revealed most victims died from asphyxiation via neck compression, consistent with Gacy's method of using a rope tourniquet. These findings provided critical linking Gacy to the murders of missing youths reported over preceding years.

Interrogation and Confession

Gacy was arrested without incident on , 1978, at his home in Norwood Park Township, Illinois, by officers from the Des Plaines Police Department after surveillance confirmed his involvement in the disappearance of Robert Piest and amid mounting evidence from prior searches. Initial questioning focused on Piest's whereabouts, with Gacy maintaining his innocence while his attorneys, including Sam Amirante and Leroy Stevens, were present during parts of the process. The occurred in a small interview room at the Des Plaines , led by Joseph Kozenczak and involving officers such as Michael Albrecht, who noted Gacy's calm demeanor despite the pressure from recovered evidence like a high school ring and hairs matching Piest. On December 22, 1978, following sustained questioning and confronted with the implications of bodies already unearthed from his , Gacy confessed to the murders of 33 young men and boys between 1972 and 1978. He admitted luring most victims—typically teenagers or young runaways seeking employment—to his home under pretexts like construction jobs, restraining them with a "handcuff trick" demonstrated at parties, sexually assaulting them, and then strangling them using a method involving a rope thrown over a beam in his attic or bedroom. One killing, he claimed, occurred in with a knife after the victim attacked him, while the rest involved manual strangulation after . Gacy detailed disposing of 27 bodies in trenches dug in his home's , with two employees unknowingly assisting in the digging but not the crimes, and four others dumped in the ; he also provided an accurate diagram of the graves to aid recovery efforts. He displayed no , referring to victims as "nobodies—drifters or runaways who wouldn’t be missed" and occasionally attributing some acts to an alter ego named "Jack " or implying involvement of others without naming accomplices in the killings themselves. The enabled immediate searches that corroborated his account, leading to the recovery of remains matching the described total, though Gacy later recanted elements during preparations.

Pretrial and Jury Selection

Gacy was arrested on December 21, 1978, and initially charged with seven counts of on January 5, 1979, to which a not guilty plea was entered on his behalf during an hearing on January 11, 1979. Subsequent indictments expanded the charges to 33 counts of , along with additional counts of , indecent liberties with a , and , all returned by a Cook County . Defense counsel, led by Robert Egan and John Greer, filed numerous pretrial motions, including requests to suppress Gacy's —obtained after 17 hours of —and seized during warrant-based searches of his home, though these were largely denied by presiding Judge Louis Garippo following evidentiary hearings. To bolster an insanity defense, Gacy was subjected to multiple pretrial psychiatric evaluations by court-appointed experts, including assessments of his mental state at the time of the offenses under Illinois' definition requiring proof of inability to appreciate criminality or conform conduct to law due to mental disease or defect. These examinations, conducted over several months, yielded conflicting opinions on Gacy's psychological profile, with some experts noting antisocial personality traits and possible multiple personality disorder, but none conclusively supporting legal insanity at the time of the crimes; the defense leveraged these findings to argue diminished capacity during trial preparation. Intense media coverage of the case prompted the defense to file a motion for , citing prejudicial pretrial publicity that risked biasing a local pool in Cook County. Garippo granted the motion in part on , 1979, ruling that would occur outside Cook County to ensure impartiality, while the trial itself would remain in . Winnebago County (Rockford) was selected as the venue for after consideration of multiple counties, including McLean County. Jury selection began on January 14, 1980, in Rockford, involving extensive questioning of potential jurors on their exposure to media reports and ability to presume innocence despite the case's notoriety. The process advanced more smoothly than anticipated in the alternative venue, with fewer challenges for cause related to compared to what might have occurred in , and concluded within approximately two weeks, empaneling 12 jurors and two alternates. The selected , predominantly middle-class and with limited prior of details due to geographic distance, was sequestered immediately, housed in a , and transported daily by bus to for the trial starting February 6, 1980, to minimize external influences.

Prosecution and Defense Arguments

The prosecution, led by Assistant State's Attorney Terry Sullivan, argued that Gacy had premeditatedly murdered 33 young men and boys between 1972 and 1978, luring them to his home under false pretenses such as job offers or parties, subjecting them to and , and then killing them by strangulation or suffocation to eliminate witnesses to his crimes. They presented including 26 bodies recovered from Gacy's , three additional bodies buried elsewhere on his property, and four dumped in the , many bound with ligatures or showing signs of asphyxiation; forensic testimony from the corroborated the causes of death. Gacy's detailed to approximately 30 murders, in which he described victims as "an inconvenience" after sexual encounters, was introduced alongside witness accounts from employees like David Cram and Ronald Rhode, who testified to Gacy's instructions for digging trenches in the and his sexual advances toward young males. To counter the insanity defense, prosecutors called psychiatric experts including Dr. Robert Reifman, Dr. Robert Cavanaugh, and Dr. Jan Fawcett, who diagnosed Gacy with an but affirmed his legal sanity, stating he understood the criminality of his acts and could conform his conduct to the law, with no evidence of or hallucinations causally linked to the killings. In closing arguments on March 11, 1980, Sullivan described Gacy as "an evil, vile and diabolical man, a sadistic animal" who "snuffed out 33 lives like they were just candles," emphasizing his cunning intelligence in planning the crimes, such as constructing the trapdoor and disposing of evidence like a receipt tied to victim Robert Piest. Victim identification evidence, including photographs of 22 named individuals like 17-year-old Gregory Godzik (last seen August 6, 1976), and testimonies from families—such as a mother fainting upon seeing her son's bracelet—underscored the deliberate nature of the acts. The defense, headed by attorney Sam Amirante, conceded Gacy's commission of the murders but pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, contending that he suffered from severe mental illness—diagnosed by their experts as paranoid schizophrenia, , or atypical —rendering him unable to control his "primitive drives" or appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions during brief psychotic episodes triggered by stress. Four psychiatrists, including Dr. Amadeo Eliseo, Dr. Ralph Freedman, and Dr. Helen Morrison, testified that Gacy exhibited symptoms akin to multiple personalities ("Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"), with Morrison claiming he experienced psychological hallucinations and would kill irrespective of circumstances due to an inability to conform to legal standards. Survivor Jeffrey Rignall's graphic detailed Gacy's 1978 chloroform attack, anal with objects, and , which defense portrayed as evidence of uncontrollable sadism rooted in mental defect rather than rational choice. In final arguments, Amirante urged the to prioritize scientific understanding over emotional revulsion, arguing for institutionalization to study Gacy's —"If you don’t want to learn why, help all of us"—rather than execution, while dismissing prosecution experts as inconsistent and failing to disprove the defense's unified diagnosis of . Family testimonies highlighted Gacy's abnormal behaviors, such as , to support claims of lifelong mental instability exacerbated by . The strategy aimed to shift focus from punishment to treatment, asserting that Gacy's admissions reflected fragmented recall from blackouts, not premeditated intent.

Verdict, Sentencing, and Appeals

Gacy's trial in the concluded on March 12, 1980, when the , after deliberating for approximately one hour and forty-five minutes, found him guilty on all 33 counts of , as well as one count each of deviate and aggravated . The rejected the presented by Gacy's attorneys, determining that he was legally sane at the time of the offenses. On March 13, 1980, Louis B. Garippo sentenced Gacy to death by on each of the 33 convictions, with the sentences to run consecutively, and imposed concurrent terms of 150 to 300 years for the deviate and convictions. The death sentences were imposed under law, which mandated for multiple murders involving aggravating factors such as torture and . Gacy pursued a direct appeal to the Illinois Supreme Court, which affirmed the convictions and death sentences on June 6, 1984, rejecting claims of evidentiary errors, , and improper . The U.S. denied on March 4, 1985, upholding the state court's ruling. Subsequent post-conviction petitions, including one denied by the Illinois in 1988, alleged newly discovered evidence and constitutional violations, but these were rejected for failing to demonstrate prejudice or . Federal habeas corpus relief was sought in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and appealed to the Seventh Circuit, which affirmed the denial in 1993, finding no merit in claims regarding jury comprehension of sentencing instructions or other due process issues. The U.S. denied in 1994, exhausting Gacy's appeals and clearing the path for his execution on May 10, 1994. Throughout the appeals, Gacy maintained his innocence for some victims while admitting others, but courts consistently upheld the as overwhelming.

Incarceration and Execution

Life on Death Row

Following his conviction on March 13, 1980, Gacy was transferred to death row at in , where he remained until his execution on May 10, 1994, a period of approximately 14 years. His cell measured 8 by 9 feet without a window, and he described the routine as monotonous, consisting of repetitive daily activities including playing cards in the recreation room. Due to good behavior, Gacy received privileges such as freedom of movement in the visiting room, permission to perform tasks like repairs using tools including a , and access to television and radio. Gacy pursued extensive legal appeals throughout his incarceration, with his attorneys filing petitions for over 12 years, though all were ultimately denied by state and federal courts. He maintained an obsessive defense of his innocence, responding to an estimated 27,000 letters from correspondents, receiving frequent visitors, and establishing a telephone number that charged $23.88 for a 12-minute recorded message in which he proclaimed his innocence and positioned himself as "the thirty-fourth victim." Gacy denied recollection of most murders, attributed body burials to associates like David Cram and Michael Rossi, and insisted no written or recorded confession existed, claims rejected in his legal proceedings. A significant activity was his , for which he acquired supplies in 1982 and produced numerous works, including self-portraits as Pogo the Clown, depictions of other clowns, , Jesus Christ, and Snow White's , with pieces valued between $200 and $20,000 at the time of his death. These efforts generated controversy, including a civil over profits from his sales, which was dropped prior to his execution. Gacy was noted as "very chatty" in interactions, reflecting his outgoing demeanor even in confinement.

Final Days and Execution

Gacy was transferred by helicopter from to in , on May 9, 1994, in preparation for his execution. During his final hours, he remained chatty with guards, discussing topics such as the Chicago Cubs baseball team and his ongoing efforts to profit from paintings created in prison, showing little preoccupation with his impending death. His last meal consisted of a bucket of original recipe Kentucky Fried Chicken, 12 , , a pound of fresh strawberries, and a . The execution proceeded at 12:58 a.m. on May 10, 1994, via using a sequence of to induce unconsciousness, to paralyze breathing, and to stop the heart. Complications arose when the intravenous line clogged, delaying administration of the second drug by 10 to 20 minutes and extending the total procedure to approximately 18 minutes—four times longer than typical for the method at the time. Witnesses included lead prosecutor William Kunkle, who reported that Gacy spoke no words during the process. Accounts of Gacy's final statement vary: some uncorroborated reports claim "Kiss my ass," while Director Howard Peters cited Gacy protesting that the execution would not compensate for the victims' losses and amounted to state ; Kunkle and other observers maintain silence prevailed. Outside the facility, pro-death penalty demonstrators gathered, singing "Na Na Hey Hey (Kiss Him Goodbye)" amid broader protests. Gacy was pronounced dead at 12:58 a.m., marking the end of 14 years following the exhaustion of his appeals by the Illinois Supreme Court and denial of stays by the U.S. .

Victims and Identification Efforts

Bodies Found in Crawl Space and Property

Police began excavating Gacy's residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in Norwood Park Township, Illinois, on December 26, 1978, following a issued after the disappearance of Robert Piest. Initial discoveries included five bodies in the beneath the house. Over the next several days, additional remains were unearthed, with four more bodies found by December 27, bringing the total to nine, and six further recoveries by December 29, reaching 21 bodies primarily from under the structure. Excavations continued into early January 1979, ultimately yielding 29 bodies from the property, of which 26 were buried in the approximately 40-foot-long , a shallow, confined area measuring about four feet in height that Gacy had filled with victims after luring them to his home. One additional body was recovered from beneath the floor of the garage, where Gacy had initially stored it before attempting to bury it in the . Another was found in the backyard, and reports vary slightly on a possible second attic or additional subsurface location, but the held the bulk of the remains, many decomposed due to lime Gacy applied to accelerate decay and mask odors. The victims, mostly teenage boys and young men aged 14 to 21, showed signs of , , and death by asphyxiation or strangulation, with bodies often bound, gagged, or wrapped in materials from Gacy's construction business. Identification efforts at the time relied on dental records, , and personal effects, succeeding for most but leaving eight unidentified initially; subsequent DNA advancements, including exhumations in 2011, have resolved several, though five remain unknown as of recent reports.

Des Plaines River Victims

Following John Wayne Gacy's December 1978 confession to dumping bodies in the due to his becoming overcrowded, authorities conducted searches that recovered three victims' remains from the waterway. These disposals occurred in the latter part of Gacy's , from mid-1978 onward. Timothy David , a 20-year-old resident, disappeared on June 23, 1978, after frequenting gay bars, areas where Gacy sought victims. His body was the first recovered from the during the post-confession drag operations in late December 1978. O'Rourke was identified through dental records and other forensic means. Frank William Landingin, aged 19, vanished on November 4, 1978, from . His body was retrieved from the shortly after Gacy's arrest, with identification facilitated by his discovered in Gacy's home. Landingin had been part of local social groups prior to his abduction. Robert Jerome Piest, 15 years old from Des Plaines, was last seen on December 11, 1978, after Gacy visited his workplace pharmacy under the pretense of a job discussion. Piest's disappearance prompted intensified police scrutiny of Gacy, leading to the initial investigation. His body was recovered from the Des Plaines River on April 9, 1979, near Lockport, Illinois, confirmed by dental records. The cause of death was determined to be asphyxiation, consistent with Gacy's methods of strangulation using a rope tourniquet.

Identified and Unidentified Victims

Of the 33 young men and boys murdered by John Wayne Gacy between 1972 and 1978, 28 have been identified through methods including dental records, fingerprints, personal effects recovered with the remains, and DNA analysis conducted decades after the crimes. These victims were typically teenagers or young adults aged 14 to 21, many from the Chicago area, whom Gacy lured with offers of construction work, parties, or other enticements. Early identifications relied on missing persons reports and physical evidence linking remains to known cases, while later efforts by the Cook County Sheriff's Office utilized genetic genealogy to match DNA from skeletal remains to distant relatives. Notable identified victims include Timothy Jack McCoy, a 16-year-old from Iowa whom Gacy stabbed to death on January 3, 1972, marking his first known murder; John Butkovich, an 18-year-old employee who disappeared after confronting Gacy over unpaid wages on July 31, 1975; and Robert Jerome Piest, a 15-year-old who vanished on December 11, 1978, after leaving his job at a pharmacy to discuss employment with Gacy, an event that prompted his parents to alert authorities and led directly to Gacy's arrest 13 days later. Francis Wayne Alexander, aged 21 or 22 at the time of his death circa 1976, was the most recent identification, confirmed in October 2021 via DNA matching to a relative after initial efforts failed due to limited family records. Five victims remain unidentified, their remains exhumed from Gacy's residence at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue in late December 1978 and early January 1979. DNA profiles have been extracted from all five using modern forensic techniques, with estimated disappearance dates spanning 1970 to 1979; these individuals likely included runaways, hitchhikers, or transients encountered at bus stations or on streets, some possibly unreported missing due to family estrangement or origins in distant areas. The Cook County Sheriff's Police continue identification attempts by comparing victim DNA to voluntary submissions from potential relatives via buccal swabs, alongside public tips and facial reconstructions for select cases. No additional identifications have occurred since 2021, despite these ongoing forensic initiatives.

Ongoing Identification Initiatives

As of October 2025, five of John Wayne Gacy's 33 victims remain unidentified, with the leading ongoing efforts to resolve these cases through advanced DNA analysis and . These victims, all males estimated to have gone missing between 1970 and 1979, were recovered from Gacy's Norwood residence during excavations in late 1978 and early 1979; many were likely transient individuals, such as hitchhikers or those frequenting bus stations, who were never reported missing due to or origins outside local jurisdictions. The Sheriff's Office has generated full DNA profiles for each of the five using modern extraction techniques on preserved remains and compares these against voluntary submissions from potential relatives via buccal swabs. This includes partnerships with genealogical databases and nonprofits specializing in identifications, such as uploading profiles to public platforms like to trace family trees and solicit tips. Public appeals encourage families of missing males from the era—particularly those aged 15 to 25 who may have left home without formal reports—to contact investigators at (708) 865-6244 or via online forms for DNA testing. These methods yielded successes in reducing the unidentified count from eight to five, including the 2021 identification of Francis Wayne Alexander (victim #5), a 21- or 22-year-old native living in , matched through DNA linking to distant relatives. Cook County investigator Jason Moran, who has spearheaded three such identifications overall, continues the work amid challenges like degraded samples and the transient nature of victims, with no further matches reported through 2025. The efforts have influenced broader policy, such as legislation in 2025 eliminating waiting periods for missing persons reports to aid similar cases.

Psychological Profile and Motives

Clinical Diagnoses

During pretrial evaluations and his 1980 murder trial, John Wayne Gacy underwent extensive psychiatric assessments, primarily to determine his sanity under law, which required proof that a mental disease or defect prevented him from appreciating the criminality of his conduct or conforming to the law. Earlier, in 1968 following a conviction for in , Dr. Leonard Heston diagnosed Gacy with , a finding later corroborated by Dr. A. Arthur Hartman. Defense experts advanced diagnoses supporting an insanity plea, including paranoid schizophrenia by Drs. Thomas Eliseo and Robert Traisman; pseudo-neurotic paranoid schizophrenia by Dr. ; with psychosexual deviations such as , , sexual sadism, and by Dr. Richard Rappaport; a psychotic process by Dr. Tobias Brocher; and mixed or atypical by Dr. , who cited psychological hallucinations involving victims. Gacy himself claimed dissociative episodes akin to multiple , attributing murders to an alter ego named "Jack," though this was not substantiated by clinical evidence and appeared manipulative. Prosecution witnesses countered with personality disorder diagnoses excluding psychosis: narcissistic personality disorder by Dr. Robert Reifman; mixed personality disorder incorporating narcissistic, obsessive-compulsive, antisocial, and hypomanic features by Dr. James Cavanaugh; and no evidence of psychosis by Dr. Jan Fawcett, who rejected causal links to legal . A 1979 forensic evaluation using the Rogers Criminal Responsibility Assessment Scales (R-CRAS) identified intermittent , delusional thoughts, , and antisocial ideation but concluded Gacy remained sane during the offenses, fit to stand trial, and influenced more by behavioral patterns than disqualifying mental defects, with possible early drug effects (1958–1964) and childhood abuse as background factors. The jury rejected the after weighing conflicting testimonies, determining Gacy was legally sane and culpable, consistent with prosecution views emphasizing calculated manipulation over psychotic breaks. Post-conviction analyses have retroactively highlighted extreme , with Gacy scoring 36/40 on the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R), manifesting in glib charm, lack of remorse, and ritualistic sadism, alongside traits like callousness and norm violation. These align with as the predominant framework, rejecting excuses of uncontrollable dissociation in favor of volitional criminality.

Analysis of Behavior and Rationality

Gacy exhibited a profound behavioral duality, maintaining an outward persona as a respected contractor, Democratic , and children's entertainer dressed as "Pogo the Clown" while systematically targeting vulnerable young males for and . This compartmentalization allowed him to evade suspicion for over six years, from his first confirmed killing on , 1972, until his arrest on December 21, 1978, by leveraging community involvement to gain trust and access to potential victims, many of whom were job-seeking teenagers or runaways advertised through his construction business. His demonstrated calculated rationality in the instrumental phases of his crimes: victims were lured with offers of employment or alcohol-fueled parties, restrained using a ruse involving demonstrated as a "police trick," sexually assaulted, and killed via strangulation or suffocation during or after the act, with 26 bodies buried in his home's and five discarded in the . Gacy's IQ of 118, above average, supported his ability to plan these acts without immediate detection, including pouring concrete over bodies to mitigate odors and timing disposals during overnight hours. However, this rationality was bounded by a psychopathic disregard for long-term consequences, as he rationalized his actions through a lens of perceived entitlement and control rather than or foresight. Irrational elements permeated Gacy's behavior, undermining his facade and hastening his downfall; he retained victims' identification cards and personal items as trophies, ignored persistent crawl space odors noticed by employees, and hired young males—some of whom vanished—without severing ties that could link disappearances to him. These choices reflect a failure in rational choice theory's emphasis on weighing full risks versus benefits, as Gacy's overconfidence in his manipulative skills led to sloppy evidence accumulation, including the final victim's, Robert Piest, connection via a job inquiry on December 11, 1978. His post-arrest conduct further illustrated this: after initial denials, he confessed to 33 murders but invoked discredited claims of dissociative blackouts or an alter ego named "Jack," which forensic psychologists rejected as fabricated to evade accountability. Ultimately, Gacy's rationality was selective and self-serving, prioritizing immediate gratification through dominance and sadism over sustainable evasion, consistent with antisocial traits that prioritize instrumental gains without moral brakes. evidence, including his lucid testimony and rejection of an , affirmed he comprehended the criminality of his acts and their wrongfulness, attributing his persistence to unchecked impulses rather than . This pattern underscores causal agency in his decisions, unmitigated by excusatory pathologies, as his high-functioning enabled deliberate predation under a veneer of normalcy.

Critiques of Excuses for Criminality

Critiques of proposed mitigating factors for Gacy's crimes, such as childhood abuse, a reported , and personality disorders, center on the absence of evidence that these negated his capacity for rational decision-making or moral understanding. During his 1980 trial, Gacy's defense pursued an plea under law, which required demonstrating that a mental disease rendered him unable to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or conform to the law. Prosecutors countered with testimony from forensic psychiatrists, including Dr. Robert Reifman, who examined Gacy and concluded he possessed sufficient cognitive function to plan abductions, victims over extended periods—sometimes hours—and dispose of bodies methodically, actions inconsistent with legal . The deliberated for under two hours before rejecting the defense, convicting Gacy on 33 counts of murder, reflecting a judicial determination that his crimes stemmed from deliberate choice rather than uncontrollable pathology. Gacy's documented functionality further undermines excuses rooted in early trauma or neurological damage. Despite alleging physical and from his alcoholic father—beatings with a razor strap and belittlement as "dumb and stupid"—Gacy built a prosperous life as owner of PDM Contractors, employing dozens and generating over $200,000 in annual revenue by , while engaging in community roles like Democratic and hospital clown performer. Such achievements, alongside his meticulous evasion tactics—luring victims with job offers, using handcuff "tricks" learned from police interactions, and pouring concrete over burials—demonstrate premeditation and self-preservation incompatible with deterministic claims from , which afflicts millions without producing serial homicide. FBI profiler , who interviewed Gacy extensively post-conviction, described him as "gregarious and outgoing" yet transparently manipulative, revealing "patterns and motives" through calculated lies rather than delusional breaks, attributing killings to power assertion over victims he deemed "worthless little queers" rather than external compulsion. Claims of a childhood —allegedly from a neighborhood boy's at age 11, causing blackouts—have been invoked as a neurological excuse, with post-execution in 1994 revealing shrinkage potentially linked to trauma or alcohol use. However, Ressler and experts critiqued this as insufficient to explain organized predation spanning six years across 33 victims, noting Gacy's lucidity in denying responsibility, shifting blame to accomplices or , and maintaining business records amid killings. Diagnoses of , while fitting his deceitful charm and lack of remorse, do not equate to ; Gacy's 1978 arrest followed rational cover-ups until Robert Piest's disappearance prompted scrutiny, underscoring agency over disorder-driven inevitability. These elements collectively affirm critiques that Gacy bore full moral culpability, as his adaptive success and crime sophistication evince choice unbound by purported excuses.

Theories of Accomplices

Gacy's Claims and Suspects

Throughout his legal proceedings, appeals, and post-conviction interviews, John Wayne Gacy asserted that he did not act alone in the murders, claiming that accomplices participated in some killings or assisted in body disposal, while others dumped victims on his property without his involvement. These assertions varied over time, often conflicting with his initial on December 22, 1978, where he admitted to killing at least 30 young men, most buried in his . Gacy's statements were characterized by investigators and prosecutors as manipulative attempts to deflect sole responsibility, given his documented history of and inconsistent narratives. Gacy specifically implicated two of his construction company employees, David Cram and Michael Rossi, both of whom resided at his home at times and assisted with excavation and concrete work in the crawl space during 1976 and 1977. He alleged they helped bury bodies there, including drawing maps of burial sites and participating in the crimes, though Cram and Rossi provided alibis for key dates, admitted only to routine labor tasks, and passed tests administered by authorities. No charges were filed against them, as forensic evidence and witness testimonies did not corroborate Gacy's accusations. Another suspect Gacy named was Phillip Paske, a former associate who briefly worked for Gacy's contracting firm in the mid-1970s and was linked to a Chicago-area and ring operated by . Gacy claimed to have witnessed Paske strangle at least one victim, Russell Nelson, in 1977, and suggested Paske committed additional murders independently before disposing of the bodies at Gacy's residence. Paske, who had a including convictions for aggravated assault and child exploitation, was interrogated by police but provided verifiable alibis and lacked physical evidence tying him to the homicides; he died in 1998 without facing charges related to Gacy's victims. In a 1992 with CBS 2 reporter , Gacy denied personally committing the murders, reiterating claims of external involvement without naming new specifics, and suggested amnesia or frame-ups as explanations for the evidence against him. He occasionally referenced unnamed "hit men" or associates in vague terms during recorded discussions with his defense team post-arrest, but these lacked substantiation and aligned with his pattern of evasion. Despite these allegations, investigations from 1978 onward, including polygraphs, alibis, and searches of suspects' properties, yielded no convictions for accomplices, attributing the 33 confirmed murders primarily to Gacy acting independently.

Evidence Examined

Investigators scrutinized Gacy's accusations against potential accomplices, including employees David Cram and Michael Rossi, as well as acquaintance Phillip Paske, but found insufficient evidence to implicate them in the murders. Cram and Rossi, who worked for Gacy's construction company and occasionally resided at his home, admitted to assisting with body disposal in the crawl space under police questioning, such as Cram sketching a map of burial locations; however, both denied participation in the killings themselves and provided alibis corroborated by timelines of Gacy's activities. Rossi underwent a polygraph test that supported his denial of homicidal involvement, and neither showed forensic ties—such as fingerprints, DNA, or witness sightings—to the crime scenes beyond post-mortem handling. Phillip Paske, a convicted who briefly lived and worked for Gacy in the early , drew suspicion due to Gacy's claims of shared criminal acts and Paske's links to a ring led by ; Paske had delivered materials to Gacy's address and associated with vulnerable youths, but no connected him to specific victims or murder methods. Police records from Cook County and Des Plaines investigations revealed Paske had relocated from by 1975, predating many killings, and lacked alibis only for isolated periods without victim matches; forensic reviews, including victim autopsies showing consistent ligature and drowning patterns attributable to Gacy's solitary methods, yielded no Paske-linked traces. Broader evidentiary review, including Gacy's taped confessions and from , highlighted his pattern of fabricating accomplice stories to deflect responsibility—such as initially blaming "hit men" or addicts—while contradictions emerged under , where he admitted acting alone in most instances. Michael Albrecht, present for Gacy's post-arrest confessions, noted the killer's detailed solo accounts of luring and strangling victims matched physical evidence like rope fibers and traces exclusive to Gacy's possessions, with no indications of multiple perpetrators from scene reconstructions or witness reports of Gacy with others during abductions. Searches of suspects' residences uncovered no incriminating items, and timelines showed Gacy's employees often absent during peak killing periods in , leading prosecutors to conclude the absence of collaborative proof despite exhaustive interviews with over 100 associates.

Conclusions from Investigations

Investigations conducted by the Des Plaines Police Department, in collaboration with Cook County prosecutors and forensic experts, determined that John Wayne Gacy operated without accomplices in the abduction, assault, and murder of at least 33 victims from 1972 to 1978. Despite extensive searches of Gacy's property at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue, which yielded 29 bodies in the and yard, and four more dredged from the , no physical evidence—such as multiple DNA profiles on restraints, vehicles, or disposal sites—indicated involvement by others. Gacy's detailed confessions, including a hand-drawn diagram accurately mapping 27 burials, consistently described solo executions using chloriform-soaked rags, , and a makeshift board, corroborated by survivor testimonies and tool marks on victims' remains. Gacy repeatedly named potential helpers, including employees David Cram and Michael Rossi—who dug trenches but passed polygraphs and provided alibis—and Philip Paske, a convicted linked to a ring, but interrogations and surveillance yielded no corroborative of their participation in killings. Cram and Rossi admitted to assisting with non-criminal tasks like body disposal cover-ups post-facto but denied murders, with their accounts aligning under questioning; Paske's connections to , whose raided files included victim-like photos, were probed but dismissed as unrelated due to lack of direct ties to Gacy's crimes or timelines. Retired Des Plaines detective Michael Albrecht, who witnessed Gacy's December 22, 1978, confession, affirmed that investigators found no credible of co-conspirators, attributing Gacy's implicating statements to manipulation and a desire for notoriety rather than truth. The 1980 trial in Cook County Circuit Court focused solely on Gacy's culpability, resulting in 21 death sentences and 12 life terms without charging others, as reports confirmed ligature marks, drug residues, and burial patterns consistent with one perpetrator's physical capacity and access to the sites. Subsequent reviews, including by state authorities, upheld this finding, rejecting later private claims by defense attorneys of overlooked accomplices due to inconsistencies with primary evidence like Gacy's logged "rope tricks" and victim recruitment logs. This consensus reflects causal analysis of Gacy's opportunistic predation on vulnerable runaways and job seekers, enabled by his contractor business and isolated home, without requiring collaborative logistics.

Media and Cultural Legacy

Books, Films, and Documentaries

Several books have chronicled the investigation and crimes of John Wayne Gacy, with Killer Clown: The John Wayne Gacy Murders (1983) by Terry Sullivan, the lead prosecutor in Gacy's , and journalist Peter T. Maiken providing a detailed account based on trial evidence, witness testimonies, and Sullivan's firsthand involvement. The book emphasizes the forensic recovery of 29 bodies from Gacy's and the , as well as Gacy's attempts to manipulate investigators during interrogation. Films depicting Gacy include the 2003 biographical drama Gacy, directed by Clive Saunders, which portrays Gacy's double life as a contractor and killer, focusing on his enticement and of young men, though criticized for graphic content and loose adherence to timelines. The 1992 TV miniseries To Catch a Killer, starring as Detective Joseph Kozenczak, dramatizes the police pursuit leading to Gacy's 1978 arrest after Robert Piest's disappearance, drawing from Kozenczak's investigative records. Dear Mr. Gacy (2010), based on Jason Moss's book about corresponding with Gacy, features William Forsythe as Gacy and explores psychological manipulation through their letters, released on December 3, 2010. Documentaries extensively cover Gacy's case using archival footage, interviews, and audio recordings. Netflix's Conversations with a Killer: The John Wayne Gacy Tapes (2022), directed by , incorporates over 20 hours of previously unreleased interrogation tapes from 1978-1979, alongside survivor accounts and analysis of Gacy's 33 confirmed murders between 1972 and 1978. Peacock's Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy miniseries, premiered October 16, 2025, features Gacy's own words from interviews and those of impacted families and investigators, examining his community facade and the exhumations at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue. Earlier works include The Chicago Killer: The Hunt for John Wayne Gacy (2011), a documentary reconstructing the multi-agency search and Gacy's December 1978 confession.

Recent Productions and Public Interest

In 2022, released Conversations with a Killer: The John Wayne Gacy Tapes, a three-part series featuring previously unreleased audio recordings of Gacy discussing his crimes, alongside interviews with investigators and survivors, which drew over 10 million views in its first month and renewed scrutiny of the case's investigative flaws. The series emphasized Gacy's manipulative self-justifications in the tapes, recorded during his appeals process, highlighting his denial of direct responsibility for multiple murders. A scripted limited series, Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy, premiered on Peacock on October 16, 2025, comprising eight episodes that dramatize the investigation from the perspective of detectives and victims' families, starring actors portraying Gacy and key figures like victim Robert Piest. The production, which received a 95% approval rating on based on initial reviews praising its focus on evidentiary gaps over sensationalism, has sparked debates about omitted details such as potential accomplices and Gacy's business associates' roles. Public interest has surged alongside these releases, evidenced by the launch of podcasts like BURIED: Inside the John Wayne Gacy Investigation in 2025, hosted by attorney Bob Motta—whose father defended Gacy—and featuring exclusive Gacy audio tapes alleging investigative oversights, which quickly topped charts on platforms like . Similarly, Karen Conti's 2024 Killing Time with John Wayne Gacy: Defending America's Most Evil on Death Row details her experiences as an appellate confronting Gacy's claims of , contributing to discussions on death row psychology and legal appeals. These works reflect ongoing fascination with Gacy's duality as a community figure and predator, though critics note they often amplify unproven theories of external enablers without new forensic evidence.

References

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