Showing posts with label INSIDE DETECTIVE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label INSIDE DETECTIVE. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

"I'LL SHOW YOU WHERE I BURIED THE PIECES"


If you've ever watched MINDHUNTER, the lamentably short-lived, two-season Netflix series, you'll know that it's based on the true investigations of real-life FBI criminal profiler, John E. Douglas (played by Jonathan Groff as Holden Ford in the series). Along with his co-author, Mark Olshaker, Douglas wrote the book, "Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit", first published in 1995, about his decades-long experiences with interviewing high-profile serial killers such as Ed Kemper, David Berkowitz, the convicted Atlanta child murderer Wayne Williams, and even Charles Manson. Douglas references forensic psychiatrist Park Dietz's assertions about the influence of detective magazines on criminals in 1999's "The Anatomy of Motive" (again with Olshaker), and has his own opinion on the veracity of the subject. Commenting on Dietz's claims, Douglas wrote: ". . . it's very important to remember that in cases like this . . . the media don't cause the crime". He further added, "What they can do is influence and heighten the details. They don't create motive in people for whom it is not there already. That comes from someplace inside. Somewhere deeper and scarier".

In this issue of INSIDE DETECTIVE (August 1973), Ed Kemper's horrific crimes are detailed in a feature article.











Friday, November 30, 2018

THE 'MARK OF THE VAMPIRE' MURDER


One cool December morning in 1938, a man and his mother-in-law ventured out into a lonely, wooded area just north of the City of Oakland, CA to pick mushrooms. What they found instead was the stone cold dead body of young Leona Vlught lying in a ravine. The autopsy revealed three red puncture wounds on her throat. It wasn't long before the term "vampire" was being used to characterize the killer.

Railroad office stenographer Rodney Greig was eventually identified as a suspect by a tip provided to the police, and was thereafter apprehended red-handed with the murder weapon (a knife), as well as a locket that belonged to Miss Vlught. His reason? "Honest, I don't know why I did it," was his answer on the stand.

The story appeared in the August 1939 issue of INSIDE DETECTIVE, just a few years after Bela Lugosi played Count Mora in MGM's MARK OF THE VAMPIRE. The photo in the article used to suggest that the killer was indeed, a vampire is a vignette of Lugosi as Mora. The caption insists that Greig has an "astonishing" resemblance to Lugosi. I'll let you be the judge.

Knowing that the topic would be good copy to sell to readers, there are suggestions that connect the crime to vampirism, including the triangular punctures that further advanced the possibility that the neck wounds were made by fangs (a tri-cuspid?). Setting the scene is a quote "From An Old Carpathian Almanac" regarding vampires that precedes the story. 

Greig turned out to be nothing more than a garden variety human monster, a typical sadistic lust killer that murdered on impulse. Leona Vlught herself is characterized as a bit of a floozy, and she might have unknowingly contributed to at least some of the consequences of her ill-fated date with Greig as she was known as a girl that got passed around by multiple boyfriends. This is an interesting piece of true crime reporting that kept me reading until the end. I suspect it will you, too.