![]() Ramirez: It was the strangest experience. Me and my father went inside not knowing what we would find-(Tape shuts off.) I remember me and my father and my mother going. The incident happened.uh.he was arrested, taken to jail, His.Mike’s mother called my father and my mother a week or two later asking them if they would go into the house and get some things for them. It was a sunny day, I had been with Mike that day hanging out and.uh.he got to his house about 3 p.m.-I was with him. I can't say for sure, I was probably eleven. ![]() Could you tell us how that made you feel, to see that-and later on when you went back with your dad. He was intelligent, driven by simple, yet complex desires, a Satanist and had a very deranged childhood, seemingly propelled by his family troubles, including a somewhat failed father and older brothers who were all involved in crime and drugs.Īdd the facts that Ramirez was grown up near a nuclear bomb-testing ground and had some head-trauma at an early age, but that's not as interesting as the following, from the book:Ĭarlo: Your cousin Mike had just returned from the Vietnam and he was stressed because of the war, from being in three tours of duty, and got into an argument one day with his wife and shot her and killed her. ![]() ![]() ![]() This was a fascinating book, mostly because the author has described everything as it happened, which I deem to be a very hard thing to do considering a) the subject and b) how much research he has put into this.įirst, Richard Ramirez is a serial killer seldom witnessed. ![]()
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