I know, despite doctors specifically telling him otherwise after he just killed his grandparents. It’s like what was he thinking and how did he make it this far to be in that position of work
@@clearshade3560 IT is unfortunately a very widespread idea amongst laymen that mothers will always do what's best for their child (or at least try to) and that a mother's love is the best cure for a troubled teen and so on and so forth.
Ed Gein & Edmund Kemper are both the perfect examples of how bad parenting can ruin an individuals life to the extent of making them a serial killer. Both their mother hated either of the sex & made them do the same. Ed Gein's mother hated women & Edmund kemper's mother hated men. Both of these hatreds traumatized both the ed's. Their mothers are to be blamed too...
@@neoasura that's bs, mothers are blamed all the time for serial killers' behaviours! I dont know a single documentary where they dont talk about the relationship to the mother! In movies its the same! Starting way back at "Psycho"
@@fehyndana7725 A. Talking about the relationship between killer and mother does not equal blaming the mother And B. You've obviously not actually seen Psycho, because that is not what happens.
Many years ago I saw a documentary in which the consulting psychiatrist said that if we want to stop creating serial killers, we have to stop brutalizing our children. Made a lot of sense then, and it still makes a lot of sense. It seems like Edmund Kemper is an excellent example of that pyschiatrist's wisdom.
Forever Hopeful it’ll stop killers like Kemper from being created. It wouldn’t stop the creation of others. Some, like Kemper, seems a victim of nurture. For others it’s nature
I agree with Forever Hopeful, it would at least help with the issue. I would add that we also need to work on making mental health care more available and less stigmatized. Then people suffering from mental illness would have a better chance of getting the help they need before things really escalate. Obviously, that would be of benefit to many people, not just potential serial killers. In the interest of destigmatizing mental illness, I'd like to share that I actually see a psychiatrist and take medication for anxiety.
"His mother was convinced that he would hurt his sisters" Ironic because he didn't ever lay a finger on his sisters. But, he sent that wretched woman to the grave in a brutal fashion. Unfortunately a bunch of other women had to suffer before he got up the courage to take out his anger on the one person who caused it .. his own mother.
@@zarasbazaar watch his interview with a french guy i think it last 1:48:00 hours he explains what happened, idk if its true but if it is, its a reasonable reaction from a child...
My best friend was a prison guard and told me some terrible things about crime. A number of offenders have done....um.....creative things that fit that term. They are too terrible to describe.
He turned himself in because he knew he was gonna get caught, he wanted to do it in his own terms, if he didnt kill his mum and her friend he would of probably carried on killing
@Perlas Negras XII I'd assume 69 would either fail or quit halfway through to start crying, assuming that he could actually work up the courage to even try
Geez he doesn't sound that abused I had to see animals killed and eat my "pets" i did not have to kill cats his parents divorced and he had to sleep in the basement? It says nothing about him being beaten as a child. I used to read history books about war and disasters too none of that sounds like cause to kill people I had a single Mom with a boyfriend I disliked lots of kids had that.
@@AnnaLVajda do you think abusing just mean get beaten?!!!! mental abuse is way worst, you are not in the center of the world, to compare every one with yourself! people are different, some events might trigger some thing in some other people that might not have effect on you, human brain and psychology is complected, you need to broaden your mind
Alot of people need to understand that some human beings are alot more susceptible to emotional harm which can be influenced both by mental and bodily harm by others.
I cannot imagine the moment you are sitting in a car and realize that the huge man in the car with you is not the gentle giant you thought he was. How horrifying those last minutes must have been.
So much is focused on the killer the poor people they killed are completely forgotten how very sad 😔 talk about the victims not the killer and I believe things would change because they should not be highlighted at all except for psychological testing and that’s behind closed doors in prison. I feel so sad for the people that were murdered.
Maybe but not everyone with traumatic childhoods become serial killers and of that heinous degree. Tbh his childhood wasn't even that bad comparatively to what many endure. His mother made him give himself up to the police when he killed his grandparents. Idk why he would be let out after that? Maybe because of people like the commentators here who blame everyone and everything except the perpetrator.
@Tusumia Probably why his mother's instincts made the creep sleep away from his sisters... She did not have a chance to explain herself unlike him who seems to be almost seen in a sympathetic light now :(
@@carey579 yeah ofc not everyone ends up bad from bad experiences, it's individual. But it certainly increases the chances. Like not every soldier gets PTSD, but they are correlated. Not all people who use Heroin become junkies, but a minority does.
I feel bad for his childhood, he needed love and mental health care. I feel like he was failed in so many ways. His mother and grandmother were nothing but detrimental to his development.
You're right! You never know who may be a killer! My friend's sister married a guy who grew up a few houses down from Jeffrey Dahmer. He said that Jeffrey seemed like a perfectly normal person, actually seemed like a nice guy.
which is scary because imagine your neighbor being a serial killer and all you go out of your way some days to have a conversation with him without knowing that he murders people for pleasure 😬
ED & JEFFREY HAVE THE IMAGE OF BEING NORMAL PEOPLE, I KNOW I PROBABLY WOULD HAVE MISS THE RED FLAGS ,BECAUSE THESE TWO REALLY KNEW HOW TO HIDE THEIR DEMENTED WAYS & THAT'S HELL OF SCARY!
This man will never stop to fascinate me. Imagine the things he could've achieved if he got the right help earlier in his life and was able to put his time and energy towards something useful...
Erika Sinervä better yet, imagine the things the young women he slaughtered could have gone on to achieve. This man at least has been able to contribute something to the psychology of serial killers and murderers. Those women never had that chance and could have contributed something wonderful to society themselves.
@@Amsayy turns out that’s what happens when you have a person who kills someone recovers and then the incompetent government sends him back to the instability that drove said person to murder. not saying it’s excuse less but it’s kind of stupid how they forced him to go back to his mothers house even though it would’ve been smarter to let him free and do what he wanted with his life.
@@aeris2001 i think the show was less about how Kemper really truly acted, and more about using him as a representation of the bizarre and idiosyncratic nature of most serial killers. as someone who hasn't watched the interviews, his performance was one of (if not THE) best part of the show.
15:42 *If we can learn anything from this story, it is not that we should distrust one another, but that some children are in dire need to be saved from their parents/families... either that, or the consequences may be quite severe and long-lasting.* There, fixed it for ya.
Did the judge that sent him back to his mother get charged with negligence or anything after the killings? It seems to me that sending someone to their trigger for their mental breakdowns after being warned by the psychiatrists would be a clear case of negligence.
@@lucieb9824 actually he said it was because he felt it had become a folly, that being said it’s not hard to not kill people so his head was obviously not right and he ended up preferring living like an ant
I honestly feel for Ed Kemper, I know what it's like to be abused by your mother. I guess the big difference between us is that I'm not angry, I'm heart broken. I could never imagine hurting anyone, especially not my mom. My deepest desire is for her to want me and the idea of losing her makes me panic. I wish I could be angry, but I can't.
I feel the same way to my mental mom. John Douglas, the FBI profiler behind Mindhunter, mused that men were likelier to become serial killers than women because when women are abused, they tend to either internalize it (that's that heart-broken feeling we both have), flagellate themselves (by turning to drugs or prostitution) or taking it out on their family (like being an abusive mom). Whereas men are likelier express anger than internalizing disappointment, and this anger may manifest itself in the form of sex crimes towards strangers or spree-killings.
I too was abused, but by my father. I see a lot of similarities in myself and Ed Kemper, I hate all men, including myself, I often fantasise about killing men who have authority over me, like my managers at work etc, and it all boils down to the mental abuse I received from my father as a child. I’ve never acted on it, not yet
Well it's actually the genetics combined with the environment they grew up in. I have no doubt he wouldn't have killed if the mom didn't put him through pure hell.
Every single person has the potential to become a serial killer, it just takes the right conditions to allow it to fester into becoming a serial killer. It also doesn’t help that most serial killers have a higher potential to become serial killers. Ed's potential was low. Higher than normal, but way below other serial killers. Everything had to go as wrong as they had in order to cause such a Bright life as Ed's to stray into darkness. It’s really a tragedy, what happened to Ed and what he did because of it.
If his mum hadn't had locked him in the caller constantly as a kid and treated him badly he wouldn't have been a monster in my eyes, I think he would have been in the FBI
@@carey579 Thats how things are on a farm. Farmers have thier kids kill chickens from an early age if they are to take over since as a chickenfarmer you often kill chickens to check thier health (as in the health of all chickens not the one you just killed :P). Easyer to learn as a kid then an adult.
My mind is boggled by the amount of brilliant information you concisely squeeze into more or less twenty minutes. I'm totally hooked. For this insatiable history junkie you are my i.v. drip. Thank you very much., I adore you.
I would love to watch an alternate history where Ed Kemper becomes a cop. A super intelligent giant police officer who hunts other killers. That would kick ass.
I'd like to think he was generally remorseful. It's possible. It's also possible that after the death of his mother, the state became his mother figure and father confessor all in one. He was at his happiest when he was looked after by the mental hospital. Many patients and inmates become institutionalised and dependant. Thank for another well delivered piece
He didn't seek institutionalization until after he had committed many crimes. At that point he may simply have concluded it was necessary, as it clearly was.
Kemper’s case will never fail to perplex and amaze me. Not only did the system fail itself and Ed, but the way he went about these murders and his life around them is truly remarkable. His mind is an incredibly complex one where everything he did was so well thought out.
@@sMASHsound I assumed that like most movies they were either artificially exaggerating his height or hired an abnormally tall actor to make him more intimidating. Surprise, surprise the real Ed Kempor was about FOUR OR FIVE INCHES taller than the actor portraying him!
dear overeager editor - please, you can't cut to a closeup at the end of every sentence ;;;;;; it's a bit tough not to notice the pattern that way. Otherwise great work everyone!!!
OMG! I Like these videos but those close ups dude! ::close up:: They get a bit annoying. I was scrolling through the messages to see if anyone else has noticed. Lol.
a tragic story of a man who could’ve been saved. watching mindhunter really gives more insight on this guy. great show. rest in peace ed. rest in peace.
I'm now very concerned by how much I relate to this man. The delusions, poor impulse control, unbridled rage towards abuse parents, it all... Resonates with me. It's honestly quite scary, especially considering what I've done as a child. Reminds me why I keep trying to seek help. So I don't wind up a murderer like him.
The scariest thing I heard was BTK neighbour describing how she knew him before: "if I would need to go through the wood at night, I would want Dennis to accompany me"
Possibly, but the main witness against his mother is the man who killed her and then sexually violated her face, among other things. He may not have had the most objective opinion of her.
It’s so upsetting to know that if he was raised right, he would have been a very different man, and those people wouldn’t have been killed. In the very beginning he just sounded like a sweet little boy who wanted his parents to love him. Yet they forced him to be desensitised to gore and killing animals. I feel so sorry for his victims and their families.
i haven't been able to find a good true crime channel to watch while high but now I found one. the way you talk and the pauses and just everything. finally
@@FP19487 Half is a bit pushing it. If 1 out of 2 marines had killed at least one person, then the fucking middle east would've been depopulated long long ago. Fact of the matter is warfare in general isn't nearly as brutal as the cinemas make it out to be. Mostly just waiting around, maybe providing suppressing fire in the thick of it, but you'd rarely actually come into life or death situations, let alone have the willpower to kill your enemy.
His mother being speculated to have BPD upsets me as someone also diagnosed with that. 99% of us wouldn't hurt anyone, in fact it's almost always ourselves we hurt. If you are reading this please dont buy into the stigma that we are all awful people
Mental illness is not your fault any more than a physical illness is your fault. It is important to destigmatize it, because treatment for individuals makes things better for the community as a whole. But lots of mentally ill people are kind, just like most abused children don't become serial killers.
You feel bad for someone who killed multiple daughters who were innocent and did nothing wrong. Ok. A whole whole lot of people have terrible family situations and don't kill innocent people.
@@theprettybond159 If there’s a chance that this man would not have turned to murder had he received the correct care as a child, then yes it is absolutely reasonable to feel sorry for him. There were more victims of his circumstance than the ones reported on the news
@@supersoaker317 It just comes off very strange that your sympathies are with the man who brutally murdered, raped, and beheaded women. Maybe he doesn't need your sympathy as much as the innocent people he butchered.
@@pegleg2959 key word “was”. After being shown the cruelty he felt from killing the chickens he connected that feeling to being normal. Due to his high intelligence and upbringing he was able to see that cruelty as universal regardless of the type of animal (or human).
I will never defend Kemper but I have to admit his self-awareness is heartbreaking. The man could've been great and famous for so many reasons but instead he was given the darkest type of fame. May his victims rest in peace.
Simon, I pride myself on being the 'kind man next door'. I grow tomatoes plants on my front fence, and make 'Free Tomato' signs. I have hens, I give eggs to every house in my street. THANKS, now they think I am a killer.
Had his evil mother never been allowed to raise him he never would have become The Co-Ed Killer he was a smart man who started out with a kind gentle heart and truly would have become a gentle giant had it not been for his mother's hatred for men corrupting his once Pure Heart I blame his mother for every action he took for without her hatred and crooked influence raising him he never would have killed I also blame the judge for allowing his mother custody of him again too many times have the young been corrupted by terrible parents and going on to become heinous killers and ruthless dictators as the old saying goes "evil is not born it is created" through the corruption of Youth and the mental breaking of men and women alike.
MyPussyBleeding You don’t blame him for being a serial killer because he had a bad childhood You blame his mom for being a bad mom even though she too, had a bad childhood. Double standards.
I hope the judge who's bright idea when a mentally disturned murderer makes a change in his life begs not to be sent to his mother, and a mental hospital says that living with his mother could make him have a psychotic break and relapse thought "nah, I know better than doctors" sends the giant to live with his insane mother at least lost his fucking job
A lot of people have screwed up parents, they don't grow into mass murderers, Also how do we know his mother was even as bad as he claims? He is the only who beheaded people, not her!!!
Honestly I'm surprised this hasn't been turned into an extended episode for The Casual Criminalist, where it details Eds up brining, the murders and Eds life after turning himself in to the police.
Law enforcement have a facinating 10-80-10 theory. 10% of people will commit any crime for any reason, 10% will never commit any crime for any reason and the other 80% can be pushed, coerced, forced to commit some (usually non violent) crimes. That is a very simplistic rundown but it seems to hold true.
That just isn't true. Most abused kids don't grow up to be psychopaths, it is literally an excuse to try to make someone else responsible for his actions. Many people, having been hurt, make the opposite decision, to make the world a better place, to not harm others. HE was a bad person..HE killed people, and no crappy childhood can rationalize or minimize his responsibility for that.
@@FollowingUsernamesR exactly! Some horribly abused kids later become the best parents because they want to make everything better than their own parents. Everyone has personal responsibility. Also there is always a genetic component to serial killers that gets triggered by certain events, but it was there all along. If you don't have it, you won't become a killer even if the same happens to you.
@@fehyndana7725 Not always. Otherwise we should be worried about all the descendents and relatives of war "heroes" that killed in any of the wars. And even without all the wars, anyone by your logic is capable of killing. Our ancestors were hunters and gatherers.
This is just a tragic story for everyone involved and even though I know what it's like to have a really screwed up family it doesn't make what he did right at all I just hope that the victims families can have at least some measure of peace knowing that justice has been served and that he will likely never kill again
The fact that this comment section is full of sympathy for this man is a testament to what a succesful manipulator he is. All the things he's done and he still makes you feel sorry for him. Think about it.
once I had a substitute teacher who had studied forensics and subsequently, serial killers. That was an interesting discussion in roll call when he read my name... (no relationship btw)
Imagine the life he might have had if his parents weren't just outright psychotic and abusive to the point where it makes you wonder why they even thought of bearing children, the kid could've worked wonders
Out of all serial killers I’ve researched I think Ed Kemper is at the top of my favourites list. He has so much insight into what he is and why. He has never attended a single parole hearing knowing he will never be sure that he won’t kill again.
As someone with BPD I believe it that his mom had it. I’ve never been like her towards those in my life but I have lashed out. And unchecked, untreated BPD can leave the victim of childhood trauma (themselves) repeating the cycle on others. The scariest thing is how some cluster B’s perpetuate the abuse they received and yet can’t see it nor think they are doing it. Others once diagnosed can see it and like a lot I’ve met like me get help. At the heart of it it depends on what type of BPD you have. Some forms are way more malignant than others. And many with BPD aren’t bad people and do seek help and don’t abuse. Also BPD is the only personality disorder with the possibility of full remission. But God help the person at the hands of an undiagnosed malignant Borderline like his abusive mother.
"You just might never know that that kind man sitting next to you... is a serial killer" Well that's going to ruin my week. How about in the next one, do a bio of the best secret santa the world has ever seen? Sadly, I don't know who it is!
I can’t stand all these sympathetic comments. The dude was a killer. Just because he had a tough childhood doesn’t make it ok for him to be a mass murderer. Tired of all this “I feel for him” BS
@@kirstenkim5011 Was!! French chemist that lived in the late18th century and was guillotined like many others of the nobility by the French Revolution.
Shows like this make a person wonder; it also makes a person such as I very happy that I live in such a small town, where there are no murders, and a bad day crime wise is if there is a speeder through town and the SO arrests a drunk driver on the same day. Sure I have lived in high crime areas, Tacoma Washington, El Paso Texas and Arlington Va, but that was years ago when I was a soldier. Perhaps that's why, when I became totally disabled, I came home to South Dakota where there is little crime, alas there isn't much of anything else to do either. Sure glad I have these videos to watch so I don't get to bored.
Thanks for giving intelligent commentary and not blaming his mother. Surely, yes she did abuse him psychologically and was the source of his rage and inspired his deadly impulses, but we are all responsible for our actions at the end of the day and his should not be excused. Certainly that are people that are born psychopaths that will inevitably hurt people because their brain is “wired” that way, but he was not one of those cases. I am glad he turned himself in.
Edmond Kemper actually fascinates me. I'm not a serial killer groupie but his case is the most interesting to me. A lot of information about Kemper has been conflicting. You get two or three different stories on one incident.
WOW! This was the most informative documentary on Edmund Kemper , I have ever watched. I am very impressed. have you done Ridgeway? I've heard he was a necrophiliac. fascinated with your work. 😘
He also had head injuries as a child. I wonder what would have happened if he wasn't returned to his mother's care from the mental hospital and was somewhere where his genius could have been embraced and encouraged.
This is probably the only serial killer I feel bad for. Genius level intellect, sensitive side, probably would have accomplished great things. His mother's abuse turned him into this monster. He didn't seem destined to be a killer like all the other serial killers were. He didn't possess the psychology, it was torn into him.
Literally every serial killer in history is a product of there environment and I don’t see how anyone in there right might could feel bad for someone who decapitated women and had sex with there heads. What about the 10 women’s lives who he just ended right then and there for his own sick gratification do you feel bad for them. There is nothing on the planet that can justify his actions and he should have never been released from mental care after he killed his grandparents period.
@@JayCD1997 Keep your moral boner in your pants and use your frontal lobe for a second. You aren't special because you feel compassion for the obvious, genius. You act like feeling bad for victim and for perpetrator should be mutually exclusive. That indicates an insecurity in your moral fiber. Humans can and do feel bad for both good and bad guys. And no, not every serial killer is a product of their environment. There is blame to be cast on nature as well as nurture. Many of the other killers were naturally psychopathic and thus had a higher likelihood to be murderous. But not Kemper. He was tormented into his bloodlust. This gives his case an aspect of preventability. Hence the sympathy.
@@Nimbus3690 How can you not discuss morality when it comes to murder and especially in the sickening fashion he did it in, If this was truly just fits of rage brought on by the abuse he recieved he would not have sexually violated him in the sickening way he did, how can you not say he did this for his own pleasure. Most abused people do not become serial killers. Dont get tricked into thinking they'd otherwise be good people, sympathy is what they want. I feel like you have not done much research on him to be making these claims, he was screwed the second he came out of the womb.
@@dyslxeic11 I think you are being too cynical towards him. I've looked into him quite a lot over the years. So I'm not just providing impulsive reactions. Firstly, his mind was scrambled so bad he didn't even know why he was killing women until he killed his abusive mother. That's why he turned himself in. Idk what you'd call that, other than remorse. If he loved doing it, he would have stayed free and continued killing like all the other killers. This is a huge point you didn't consider. You know, if you wanna make the argument that he just wants sympathy, it has to actually be shown to be to his advantage, which you haven't done, because it isn't. He got imprisoned, and has refused to be let out early due to good behavior. I fail to see how this is beneficial to him in an evil way. Secondly, I despise this argument so much: "most abused people don't turn out this way". What is this supposed to mean? That all abuse is equal? That all trauma should result in the same outcome? That all brains work exactly the same way? It's such a flawed argument it's not even funny. Not to mention, of all people, abused people are the ones to become horrible, regardless of how many or how few of the total do so. So what exactly did you want to say with this? Because you can't quantify abuse. So Idk how you came up with this equation. Thirdly, bro, sexual violation is a form of anger release. It's not just for horny impulses. In this case, he clearly projected his hate for his mom onto other women, and tried to defile them as much as he could. As hard as it is to understand, this IS a fit of rage.
Can't help but feel sympathy for the young Kemper. However, my sympathy ends when he flipped over to the dark side. With that kind of an I.Q. he obviously was perfectly aware of what he was doing, why he was doing, how devastating his actions were for his victims...yet, he did it anyway. I don't believe he was ever truly delusional, just angry (justifiably) at the world, his parents and unfortunately his victims.
when you get down to it people have to be genetically predisposed to this how many people have suffered terrible abuse as children and yet don't become killers and some people who have the best childhood possible become the worst killers
Not really... It all depends on perspective. An abused child, who doesn't stop hoping that nice people exist, won't become a serial killer. Another abused child who gives up that hope, will. It's just that they have a different perspective... Meaning: it's not genetics but compartmentalizing. Which means that ultimately the abusive relationship is at fault even though the killers choose the path of darkness themselves.
I can only recommend his interviews. Certainly a very interesting character. To his credit, he seems to regret his actions and turned down every parol hearing. I can only wonder, what might have happened to Ed, had he had a better childhood.
@@TeamMemberNumberEight I agree with you,but if you stay to think many dictators lived like kings and Ceaușescu was one of them,but he wasn't always like that,he tried to make our nation stronger and prosperous but the power make him blind,so he couldn't see the problems of Romania
That judge that sent him back home with mom should have gone to prison as well.
I know, despite doctors specifically telling him otherwise after he just killed his grandparents. It’s like what was he thinking and how did he make it this far to be in that position of work
was looking for this comment. agreed.
@@clearshade3560 IT is unfortunately a very widespread idea amongst laymen that mothers will always do what's best for their child (or at least try to) and that a mother's love is the best cure for a troubled teen and so on and so forth.
That mom was a weirdo as well...I would certainly not let anyone live with me that killed my parents
Why should he be sent to jail when he, like many other judges in many other cases, did exactly what his feminists overseers told him to do?
Ed Gein & Edmund Kemper are both the perfect examples of how bad parenting can ruin an individuals life to the extent of making them a serial killer. Both their mother hated either of the sex & made them do the same. Ed Gein's mother hated women & Edmund kemper's mother hated men. Both of these hatreds traumatized both the ed's.
Their mothers are to be blamed too...
Well, it's not politically correct to blame mothers for any problems when it comes to killers.
@@neoasura what does this have anything to do with politics
@@neoasura not mothers particularly,parenting plays a huge role in shaping an individual
@@neoasura that's bs, mothers are blamed all the time for serial killers' behaviours! I dont know a single documentary where they dont talk about the relationship to the mother!
In movies its the same! Starting way back at "Psycho"
@@fehyndana7725 A. Talking about the relationship between killer and mother does not equal blaming the mother
And
B. You've obviously not actually seen Psycho, because that is not what happens.
Many years ago I saw a documentary in which the consulting psychiatrist said that if we want to stop creating serial killers, we have to stop brutalizing our children. Made a lot of sense then, and it still makes a lot of sense. It seems like Edmund Kemper is an excellent example of that pyschiatrist's wisdom.
Forever Hopeful are these the same ones that set him free? 🙄
Forever Hopeful it’ll stop killers like Kemper from being created. It wouldn’t stop the creation of others. Some, like Kemper, seems a victim of nurture. For others it’s nature
Stopping the single mother epidemic by cutting welfare would diminish greatly these issues very rapidly.
I agree with Forever Hopeful, it would at least help with the issue. I would add that we also need to work on making mental health care more available and less stigmatized. Then people suffering from mental illness would have a better chance of getting the help they need before things really escalate. Obviously, that would be of benefit to many people, not just potential serial killers. In the interest of destigmatizing mental illness, I'd like to share that I actually see a psychiatrist and take medication for anxiety.
@@NoFrameHell Cutting welfare is not going to stop women from becoming single mothers. It will only make their lives worse.
"The child not embraced by the village will burn it down to feel it's warmth"
Yup
what's this from?
@@hyacinth1320?
@@hyacinth1320 old saying used in moviues to
@@hyacinth1320 I think it's an old African Proverb.
"His mother was convinced that he would hurt his sisters" Ironic because he didn't ever lay a finger on his sisters. But, he sent that wretched woman to the grave in a brutal fashion. Unfortunately a bunch of other women had to suffer before he got up the courage to take out his anger on the one person who caused it .. his own mother.
He didn't lay a finger on his sisters, but he used to mutilate their dolls.
@@zarasbazaar watch his interview with a french guy i think it last 1:48:00 hours he explains what happened, idk if its true but if it is, its a reasonable reaction from a child...
The doll was retaliation against his younger sister who had broken one of his toys.
@@angryscouserinamerica2949 Where do you think he learned to act out his anger that way?
@@abebuckingham8198 His father cutting up his pet chickens and desensitizing him him to those scenes when he was very much uncomfortable.
"Sexually violated her face." is one hell of a term.
Especially spoken with a polite British accent!
If you read or watch documentaries on him you will realize why simon said it so politely.
@@DuckYou69 Thanks.
My best friend was a prison guard and told me some terrible things about crime. A number of offenders have done....um.....creative things that fit that term. They are too terrible to describe.
Phyuck Yiu and pissed on her I heard
The fact that he turned himself in, and being the voice Behind countless audiobooks, including Star Wars..adds to his notoriety.
Wait what star wars?
@@callumwong611
The novel version of Episode 4 from 1979
He turned himself in because he knew he was gonna get caught, he wanted to do it in his own terms, if he didnt kill his mum and her friend he would of probably carried on killing
@@samuelsparks3632 wow that's amazing how did you read his mind from across time?lmao
@@samuelsparks3632 Yeah, totally. That's why he pledged for "Death by torture" in his court case.
imagine being killed by someone who is 6’9 probably the scariest thing ever
@Perlas Negras XII I'd assume 69 would either fail or quit halfway through to start crying, assuming that he could actually work up the courage to even try
Imagine being the guy getting dunked on by LeBron James. That's the closest thing to getting murdered by a 6'9 dude.
Nice
Not quite as scary as 6'10"
Well I am 6'6, so if a 6'9 guy tries to kill me and succeeds, I guess I would be okay with it. Well done.
This could have been a brilliant man if he wasn’t abused as a child
Geez he doesn't sound that abused I had to see animals killed and eat my "pets" i did not have to kill cats his parents divorced and he had to sleep in the basement? It says nothing about him being beaten as a child. I used to read history books about war and disasters too none of that sounds like cause to kill people I had a single Mom with a boyfriend I disliked lots of kids had that.
@@AnnaLVajda do you think abusing just mean get beaten?!!!! mental abuse is way worst, you are not in the center of the world, to compare every one with yourself! people are different, some events might trigger some thing in some other people that might not have effect on you, human brain and psychology is complected, you need to broaden your mind
Maybe yes maybe no. You can’t say that for certain.
@@michelleg9194 That's why that person wrote " could have" it's the same
Alot of people need to understand that some human beings are alot more susceptible to emotional harm which can be influenced both by mental and bodily harm by others.
I cannot imagine the moment you are sitting in a car and realize that the huge man in the car with you is not the gentle giant you thought he was. How horrifying those last minutes must have been.
So much is focused on the killer the poor people they killed are completely forgotten how very sad 😔 talk about the victims not the killer and I believe things would change because they should not be highlighted at all except for psychological testing and that’s behind closed doors in prison. I feel so sad for the people that were murdered.
”He was the kind of person you could imagine having a fascinating conversation with...”
*dramatic close up*
”...Over a cup of coffee.”
*gasps Britishly*
D
...and an egg salad sandwich 😂
Why is everyone talking about him in past-tense like he's dead? The mf is still alive.
I can't help but feel like his mom and grandma contributed to him becoming a serial killer. 😞
Well they did... if they where normal he would have probably be just "wired" at worst.
Feminism.
Maybe but not everyone with traumatic childhoods become serial killers and of that heinous degree. Tbh his childhood wasn't even that bad comparatively to what many endure. His mother made him give himself up to the police when he killed his grandparents. Idk why he would be let out after that? Maybe because of people like the commentators here who blame everyone and everything except the perpetrator.
@Tusumia Probably why his mother's instincts made the creep sleep away from his sisters...
She did not have a chance to explain herself unlike him who seems to be almost seen in a sympathetic light now :(
@@carey579 yeah ofc not everyone ends up bad from bad experiences, it's individual. But it certainly increases the chances. Like not every soldier gets PTSD, but they are correlated. Not all people who use Heroin become junkies, but a minority does.
I feel bad for his childhood, he needed love and mental health care. I feel like he was failed in so many ways. His mother and grandmother were nothing but detrimental to his development.
You're right! You never know who may be a killer!
My friend's sister married a guy who grew up a few houses down from Jeffrey Dahmer. He said that Jeffrey seemed like a perfectly normal person, actually seemed like a nice guy.
which is scary because imagine your neighbor being a serial killer and all you go out of your way some days to have a conversation with him without knowing that he murders people for pleasure 😬
ED & JEFFREY HAVE THE IMAGE OF BEING NORMAL PEOPLE, I KNOW I PROBABLY WOULD HAVE MISS THE RED FLAGS ,BECAUSE THESE TWO REALLY KNEW HOW TO HIDE THEIR DEMENTED WAYS & THAT'S HELL OF SCARY!
Dahmer was a pretty nice guy...unless you were a handsome gentleman. Even then, he didn't like being violent.
Dhalmer was a very nice guy, had me over for dinner once....he whipped up one of his famous mystery meat dishes 🍽
Everyone is a killer
"Ed later went on to kill a cat"
Amongst other things
A cat is not a thing. A stone is.
@@oliveryt7168 everything is a thing
@@panzerofthelake506
nothing exists
Both everything and nothing: confused screaming
This man will never stop to fascinate me. Imagine the things he could've achieved if he got the right help earlier in his life and was able to put his time and energy towards something useful...
Erika Sinervä better yet, imagine the things the young women he slaughtered could have gone on to achieve. This man at least has been able to contribute something to the psychology of serial killers and murderers. Those women never had that chance and could have contributed something wonderful to society themselves.
@@Amsayy turns out that’s what happens when you have a person who kills someone recovers and then the incompetent government sends him back to the instability that drove said person to murder. not saying it’s excuse less but it’s kind of stupid how they forced him to go back to his mothers house even though it would’ve been smarter to let him free and do what he wanted with his life.
I remember him from the tv show mindhunter. Very good job by the actors there.
Agreed. The guy who played Kemper was quite astonishing.
@@ComaDave I disagree, the actor plays him completely wrong, it's like he never watched the interviews
Yes! I was hoping someone already made this comment. They made great casting choices all around with "mindhunter"; and I can't wait for season 2
@@aeris2001 i think the show was less about how Kemper really truly acted, and more about using him as a representation of the bizarre and idiosyncratic nature of most serial killers. as someone who hasn't watched the interviews, his performance was one of (if not THE) best part of the show.
What actors? I only saw actual photos of him and his victims.
15:42 *If we can learn anything from this story, it is not that we should distrust one another, but that some children are in dire need to be saved from their parents/families... either that, or the consequences may be quite severe and long-lasting.* There, fixed it for ya.
Tommy Vaske
Amen to that.
Did the judge that sent him back to his mother get charged with negligence or anything after the killings? It seems to me that sending someone to their trigger for their mental breakdowns after being warned by the psychiatrists would be a clear case of negligence.
@@GoofyAhWizardMan During that era, society's revulsion towards psychiatry surpassed its contempt towards child abuse.
@@GoofyAhWizardMan Couldn't very well send to his father, Ed had murdered his mother and father.
@@debrajones7344 He killed both his grandparents and his mother, but his father was alive and well.
I'm pretty sure that this guy is way happier in prison than he was as a free man
Yes he is, he turned himself in because he didn´t want to kill
@@lucieb9824 actually he said it was because he felt it had become a folly, that being said it’s not hard to not kill people so his head was obviously not right and he ended up preferring living like an ant
@@Obs23456 is he dead?
@@babyyyz7948 no he’s still alive in prison, like I said an ant
@@Obs23456 why an ant though
I honestly feel for Ed Kemper, I know what it's like to be abused by your mother. I guess the big difference between us is that I'm not angry, I'm heart broken. I could never imagine hurting anyone, especially not my mom. My deepest desire is for her to want me and the idea of losing her makes me panic. I wish I could be angry, but I can't.
I feel the same way to my mental mom. John Douglas, the FBI profiler behind Mindhunter, mused that men were likelier to become serial killers than women because when women are abused, they tend to either internalize it (that's that heart-broken feeling we both have), flagellate themselves (by turning to drugs or prostitution) or taking it out on their family (like being an abusive mom). Whereas men are likelier express anger than internalizing disappointment, and this anger may manifest itself in the form of sex crimes towards strangers or spree-killings.
SUS
Seek therapy. If she doesn't love you, she's not worth it.
I too was abused, but by my father.
I see a lot of similarities in myself and Ed Kemper, I hate all men, including myself, I often fantasise about killing men who have authority over me, like my managers at work etc, and it all boils down to the mental abuse I received from my father as a child.
I’ve never acted on it, not yet
Lesson of the video: Treat your children right.
@SAMURAI 武士 yeah abusing a kid makes a child's chance of being a serial killer higher not all kids who are abused kill but most are
@SAMURAI 武士 if my teacher hit me I'm hitting them back
@SAMURAI 武士 ... I'm indian
@SAMURAI 武士 don't worry I live in America I'm part Indian American
@@glendeaton4470 did the samurai dude delete his comments or his account.. because all his comments are gone
It’s gives to show that monsters aren’t born, they are created.
Well it's actually the genetics combined with the environment they grew up in. I have no doubt he wouldn't have killed if the mom didn't put him through pure hell.
It's Nature and Nurture that create antisocial people.
Ted bundy......
It can be both, and quit calling people monsters. They're just variations of humans. Why is nuance so difficult for people to get?
Every single person has the potential to become a serial killer, it just takes the right conditions to allow it to fester into becoming a serial killer. It also doesn’t help that most serial killers have a higher potential to become serial killers. Ed's potential was low. Higher than normal, but way below other serial killers. Everything had to go as wrong as they had in order to cause such a Bright life as Ed's to stray into darkness. It’s really a tragedy, what happened to Ed and what he did because of it.
Seeing Edmund Kemper on mindhunter and him and Ford just having conversation is probably some of my favorite moments on the show
Imagine getting and listening to an audiobook to later find out that the guy narrating it is one of the most notorious serial killers of all time
1:05 - Chapter 1 - Early life
3:50 - Chapter 2 - Kemper's first victims
6:20 - Chapter 3 - Stolen youth
8:35 - Chapter 4 - The blood lust begins
12:45 - Chapter 5 - Catching kemper
Not all heroes wear Cape!
@@apeksharao6 a cape*
@@JacobG Nobody asked
If his mum hadn't had locked him in the caller constantly as a kid and treated him badly he wouldn't have been a monster in my eyes, I think he would have been in the FBI
'His father would force him to get over his sensitivity of watching animals killed.' Let's not turn a blind eye to his dad's role.
So he would've been a monster.
@@carey579 Thats how things are on a farm. Farmers have thier kids kill chickens from an early age if they are to take over since as a chickenfarmer you often kill chickens to check thier health (as in the health of all chickens not the one you just killed :P). Easyer to learn as a kid then an adult.
She might have locked him down in the basement because she saw the monster in him!
As an under-cover agent.. his height would definitely blow his cover. Any other position there he would suit a position nicely.
My mind is boggled by the amount of brilliant information you concisely squeeze into more or less twenty minutes. I'm totally hooked. For this insatiable history junkie you are my i.v. drip. Thank you very much., I adore you.
I would love to watch an alternate history where Ed Kemper becomes a cop. A super intelligent giant police officer who hunts other killers. That would kick ass.
seems a little disrespectful to his victims, don't you think bud?
@@matthoskins2318 It's a hypothetical situation, bud. Also, ever heard of the show Dexter, bud?
I'd like to think he was generally remorseful. It's possible. It's also possible that after the death of his mother, the state became his mother figure and father confessor all in one. He was at his happiest when he was looked after by the mental hospital. Many patients and inmates become institutionalised and dependant. Thank for another well delivered piece
He didn't seek institutionalization until after he had committed many crimes. At that point he may simply have concluded it was necessary, as it clearly was.
Kemper’s case will never fail to perplex and amaze me. Not only did the system fail itself and Ed, but the way he went about these murders and his life around them is truly remarkable. His mind is an incredibly complex one where everything he did was so well thought out.
Mindhunter introduced me to this one
the actor that played ed, did an amazing job. i was entranced listening to him.
This one? Disrespectful asf ur location will introduce me to this one
Just today i watched episode about him on netflix and at the evening yt recommended this video... Jesus Christ.
@@sMASHsound I assumed that like most movies they were either artificially exaggerating his height or hired an abnormally tall actor to make him more intimidating. Surprise, surprise the real Ed Kempor was about FOUR OR FIVE INCHES taller than the actor portraying him!
such a good show
dear overeager editor - please, you can't cut to a closeup at the end of every sentence ;;;;;; it's a bit tough not to notice the pattern that way. Otherwise great work everyone!!!
lol.. just noticed
miraculux damn why’d you have to point it out. Now I can’t stop noticing it lmao
😂 ugh I shouldn't of read the comments before watching the video
miraculux lmao it’s so bad
OMG! I Like these videos but those close ups dude! ::close up:: They get a bit annoying. I was scrolling through the messages to see if anyone else has noticed. Lol.
a tragic story of a man who could’ve been saved. watching mindhunter really gives more insight on this guy. great show. rest in peace ed. rest in peace.
I'm now very concerned by how much I relate to this man. The delusions, poor impulse control, unbridled rage towards abuse parents, it all... Resonates with me. It's honestly quite scary, especially considering what I've done as a child. Reminds me why I keep trying to seek help. So I don't wind up a murderer like him.
Seek legitimate help with people who don’t just pretend to care.
Okay edgelord calm tf down
The scariest thing I heard was BTK neighbour describing how she knew him before: "if I would need to go through the wood at night, I would want Dennis to accompany me"
Shannon, Jennifer, Shell and Simon. Thank you all for the wonderful programming. Simon you are the best commentator in the business.
He's got an unusual story, I think it was his mothers fault that caused it to happen
I know many people like him .
@@CuriousMindTH-cam ???
Possibly, but the main witness against his mother is the man who killed her and then sexually violated her face, among other things. He may not have had the most objective opinion of her.
It’s so upsetting to know that if he was raised right, he would have been a very different man, and those people wouldn’t have been killed. In the very beginning he just sounded like a sweet little boy who wanted his parents to love him. Yet they forced him to be desensitised to gore and killing animals. I feel so sorry for his victims and their families.
i haven't been able to find a good true crime channel to watch while high but now I found one. the way you talk and the pauses and just everything. finally
No one who kills people just to see what it feels like should ever be set loose on society ever again. That’s just common sense.
Kemper would probably agree. He doesn't want to get out of prison, and has regularly waived his parole hearings.
Probably should’ve arrested half of the marines then..
@@FP19487 Half is a bit pushing it. If 1 out of 2 marines had killed at least one person, then the fucking middle east would've been depopulated long long ago. Fact of the matter is warfare in general isn't nearly as brutal as the cinemas make it out to be. Mostly just waiting around, maybe providing suppressing fire in the thick of it, but you'd rarely actually come into life or death situations, let alone have the willpower to kill your enemy.
Captain Cancer are you in the military? Lol you sound like all of my ncos
Common sense is vastly overrated.
“Raised by conservatives” “his mother was a third wave feminist” wow. Really.
Definitely not conservative if it’s third wave feminism lmao
@@amb_.probably meant his grandparents.
This is great. More serial killers is exactly what I wanted to see. Thanks for running such a great channel and for listening to your audience :)
His mother being speculated to have BPD upsets me as someone also diagnosed with that. 99% of us wouldn't hurt anyone, in fact it's almost always ourselves we hurt. If you are reading this please dont buy into the stigma that we are all awful people
Mental illness is not your fault any more than a physical illness is your fault. It is important to destigmatize it, because treatment for individuals makes things better for the community as a whole. But lots of mentally ill people are kind, just like most abused children don't become serial killers.
As someone with experience with multiple men who have BPD, that is such a lie. They DO hurt people often, even if it's unintentional.
I feel bad for him he needed so much help and no one gave him the time of day his parents are as much responsible as he is
You feel bad for someone who killed multiple daughters who were innocent and did nothing wrong. Ok. A whole whole lot of people have terrible family situations and don't kill innocent people.
@@theprettybond159 i'm not excusing his actions i feel bad he didn't get the help he needed because if he did things might have turned out different
@@theprettybond159 If there’s a chance that this man would not have turned to murder had he received the correct care as a child, then yes it is absolutely reasonable to feel sorry for him. There were more victims of his circumstance than the ones reported on the news
SUS
@@supersoaker317 It just comes off very strange that your sympathies are with the man who brutally murdered, raped, and beheaded women. Maybe he doesn't need your sympathy as much as the innocent people he butchered.
The fact that he cried over 2 chickens that he cared
Shows how pure he was
Umm.
@@pegleg2959 key word “was”.
After being shown the cruelty he felt from killing the chickens he connected that feeling to being normal. Due to his high intelligence and upbringing he was able to see that cruelty as universal regardless of the type of animal (or human).
I can sympathize somewhat with Kemper. I was abused as a kid, and I think I could easily have went down the same route.
nah you too scared to do so words are easy to say
My Own Music omg wow you’re so quirky
Same thing happened to me . My mother's so stupid.
No one can catch me. In Third world countries cops are corrupt and stupid
Otto Anthony-Martellock what
@@oam6626 oh my gosh, wow... you're so b---y. ~
He has some interesting interviews on youtube. He speaks very well in them, which makes it listenable
It's very different than listening to Bundy who relished every minute of the attention.
I will never defend Kemper but I have to admit his self-awareness is heartbreaking. The man could've been great and famous for so many reasons but instead he was given the darkest type of fame. May his victims rest in peace.
Simon, I pride myself on being the 'kind man next door'. I grow tomatoes plants on my front fence, and make 'Free Tomato' signs. I have hens, I give eggs to every house in my street. THANKS, now they think I am a killer.
Had his evil mother never been allowed to raise him he never would have become The Co-Ed Killer he was a smart man who started out with a kind gentle heart and truly would have become a gentle giant had it not been for his mother's hatred for men corrupting his once Pure Heart I blame his mother for every action he took for without her hatred and crooked influence raising him he never would have killed I also blame the judge for allowing his mother custody of him again too many times have the young been corrupted by terrible parents and going on to become heinous killers and ruthless dictators as the old saying goes "evil is not born it is created" through the corruption of Youth and the mental breaking of men and women alike.
Nerdlin Geeksly His mothers mother was probably the same way, you can’t blame her either with that logic.
@@-bright-2457 why not?
MyPussyBleeding You don’t blame him for being a serial killer because he had a bad childhood
You blame his mom for being a bad mom even though she too, had a bad childhood. Double standards.
I hope the judge who's bright idea when a mentally disturned murderer makes a change in his life begs not to be sent to his mother, and a mental hospital says that living with his mother could make him have a psychotic break and relapse thought "nah, I know better than doctors" sends the giant to live with his insane mother at least lost his fucking job
A lot of people have screwed up parents, they don't grow into mass murderers, Also how do we know his mother was even as bad as he claims? He is the only who beheaded people, not her!!!
wait a minute, you can be too tall to be a cop? So Police academy lied and high tower would have never made it?
Honestly I'm surprised this hasn't been turned into an extended episode for The Casual Criminalist, where it details Eds up brining, the murders and Eds life after turning himself in to the police.
The reality is anyone can become a killer with enough provocation/abuse, sanity has a very tenuous control of our more primal selves.
Law enforcement have a facinating 10-80-10 theory. 10% of people will commit any crime for any reason, 10% will never commit any crime for any reason and the other 80% can be pushed, coerced, forced to commit some (usually non violent) crimes. That is a very simplistic rundown but it seems to hold true.
That just isn't true. Most abused kids don't grow up to be psychopaths, it is literally an excuse to try to make someone else responsible for his actions. Many people, having been hurt, make the opposite decision, to make the world a better place, to not harm others. HE was a bad person..HE killed people, and no crappy childhood can rationalize or minimize his responsibility for that.
@@FollowingUsernamesR exactly! Some horribly abused kids later become the best parents because they want to make everything better than their own parents. Everyone has personal responsibility. Also there is always a genetic component to serial killers that gets triggered by certain events, but it was there all along. If you don't have it, you won't become a killer even if the same happens to you.
@@fehyndana7725 Not always.
Otherwise we should be worried about all the descendents and relatives of war "heroes" that killed in any of the wars.
And even without all the wars, anyone by your logic is capable of killing. Our ancestors were hunters and gatherers.
No. That's not the reality.
I'm watching these for the first time. Are they available in podcast on spotify?
Yes. The early episodes are published there daily, we’re slowly catching up to the present day.
This is just a tragic story for everyone involved and even though I know what it's like to have a really screwed up family it doesn't make what he did right at all I just hope that the victims families can have at least some measure of peace knowing that justice has been served and that he will likely never kill again
Edmund Kemper had a horrible temper.
One of the best fucking albums ever
Haha, very funny Xerxes
@@strahm998 EVER??
aww. this one is kinda sad
The fact that this comment section is full of sympathy for this man is a testament to what a succesful manipulator he is. All the things he's done and he still makes you feel sorry for him.
Think about it.
I've met Edmund Kemper at CMF when you talk to him he is very articulate.
He is smarter than most people. Though I've heard most serial killers are on the low end of the iq spectrum. I guess there are outliers.
"The kind man next door might be a serial killer - The creepy dude might be the straight and narrow type.
once I had a substitute teacher who had studied forensics and subsequently, serial killers. That was an interesting discussion in roll call when he read my name...
(no relationship btw)
😂😂😂😂
vinny ! what was your youtube name when you commented this?
@@yungcoochiehugger Bruh read the last name
“Having a pleasant conversation over a..” *looks into the camera like a Sherlock James Bond “cup of coffee”
Imagine the life he might have had if his parents weren't just outright psychotic and abusive to the point where it makes you wonder why they even thought of bearing children, the kid could've worked wonders
Okay, thats enough Bio Graphic videos for today. Any more and I can see myself be added to some watch list by authorities
So hard to watch his interviews. He is so good at making himself feel like a decent person you almost feel sorry for him. A true genius level IQ.
This monster has always fascinated me, particularly the reaction to his mother
"And I said .... There is your sex"
Yes! I've been waiting for another biographic on a scary person. Excited!
I'm a scary person. I want tho excite you...
@@oaktree2406 How are you scary?
@@NixLaLoupe i didn't take a shower today and it's 11 am. Also i slept till 10. Are you scared...😀
@@oaktree2406 Not even slightly. Good try though. 🙄
@@NixLaLoupe damn. I need to get a bigger skeleton for my closet. Anyhoo..i like the tie dye...
Please bring this camera angle back on all channels Simon. It's entertaining
Out of all serial killers I’ve researched I think Ed Kemper is at the top of my favourites list. He has so much insight into what he is and why.
He has never attended a single parole hearing knowing he will never be sure that he won’t kill again.
Not a bad video. Not bad at all. I know pretty well Kemper's story, and you summed it up pretty well in 16 minutes. Good job.
As someone with BPD I believe it that his mom had it. I’ve never been like her towards those in my life but I have lashed out. And unchecked, untreated BPD can leave the victim of childhood trauma (themselves) repeating the cycle on others. The scariest thing is how some cluster B’s perpetuate the abuse they received and yet can’t see it nor think they are doing it. Others once diagnosed can see it and like a lot I’ve met like me get help. At the heart of it it depends on what type of BPD you have. Some forms are way more malignant than others. And many with BPD aren’t bad people and do seek help and don’t abuse. Also BPD is the only personality disorder with the possibility of full remission. But God help the person at the hands of an undiagnosed malignant Borderline like his abusive mother.
"You just might never know that that kind man sitting next to you... is a serial killer"
Well that's going to ruin my week. How about in the next one, do a bio of the best secret santa the world has ever seen? Sadly, I don't know who it is!
"You just never know if that kind man next door is a serial killer."
Thanks, Simon.
I can’t stand all these sympathetic comments. The dude was a killer. Just because he had a tough childhood doesn’t make it ok for him to be a mass murderer. Tired of all this “I feel for him” BS
Can you do a biography of Kim Il Sung? I cannot find a biography of him anywhere and I was wondering if you could do one
^^^^^^^^^^
his interviews are way better than any biography, There is a very good documentary about him also, don't remember the title
How about an episode on Antoine Lavoisier the father of Chemistry
Who is he?
@@kirstenkim5011 Was!! French chemist that lived in the late18th century and was guillotined like many others of the nobility by the French Revolution.
Shows like this make a person wonder; it also makes a person such as I very happy that I live in such a small town, where there are no murders, and a bad day crime wise is if there is a speeder through town and the SO arrests a drunk driver on the same day. Sure I have lived in high crime areas, Tacoma Washington, El Paso Texas and Arlington Va, but that was years ago when I was a soldier. Perhaps that's why, when I became totally disabled, I came home to South Dakota where there is little crime, alas there isn't much of anything else to do either. Sure glad I have these videos to watch so I don't get to bored.
he killed his grand parents at 16.
you: no1 could have guessed he could have killed 10 people.
????
Poor ed, who cares that he killed his mom, grandparents and countless women/teenage girls. Poor Ed 😢
@@slamyourheadin9449 that’s gotta be a satire comment..... right?
What he did was horrific but so is what his mother did to him. How could a mother do this to her own child?
It's a damn shame, I genuinely feel bad for the guy.
"........as a third wave feminist, she truly despised men."
i liked that honesty.
Thanks for giving intelligent commentary and not blaming his mother. Surely, yes she did abuse him psychologically and was the source of his rage and inspired his deadly impulses, but we are all responsible for our actions at the end of the day and his should not be excused. Certainly that are people that are born psychopaths that will inevitably hurt people because their brain is “wired” that way, but he was not one of those cases. I am glad he turned himself in.
What a master narator! Thank you
Edmond Kemper actually fascinates me. I'm not a serial killer groupie but his case is the most interesting to me. A lot of information about Kemper has been conflicting. You get two or three different stories on one incident.
I watched a documentary where they stated his height like 20 times. I feel like some guy felt really chaffed that he'd found a giant.
"According to Kemper...." "In Kempers words..." "Kemper claims..."
WOW! This was the most informative documentary on Edmund Kemper , I have ever watched. I am very impressed.
have you done Ridgeway? I've heard he was a necrophiliac.
fascinated with your work. 😘
These videos are amazing. More info in any other documentary I've watched on mass murderers. Thank you!
“You just might never know that that kind man next door is a serial killer”
Ughh that hit me in places
He also had head injuries as a child. I wonder what would have happened if he wasn't returned to his mother's care from the mental hospital and was somewhere where his genius could have been embraced and encouraged.
This is probably the only serial killer I feel bad for. Genius level intellect, sensitive side, probably would have accomplished great things. His mother's abuse turned him into this monster. He didn't seem destined to be a killer like all the other serial killers were. He didn't possess the psychology, it was torn into him.
Literally every serial killer in history is a product of there environment and I don’t see how anyone in there right might could feel bad for someone who decapitated women and had sex with there heads. What about the 10 women’s lives who he just ended right then and there for his own sick gratification do you feel bad for them. There is nothing on the planet that can justify his actions and he should have never been released from mental care after he killed his grandparents period.
@@JayCD1997 Keep your moral boner in your pants and use your frontal lobe for a second. You aren't special because you feel compassion for the obvious, genius. You act like feeling bad for victim and for perpetrator should be mutually exclusive. That indicates an insecurity in your moral fiber. Humans can and do feel bad for both good and bad guys. And no, not every serial killer is a product of their environment. There is blame to be cast on nature as well as nurture. Many of the other killers were naturally psychopathic and thus had a higher likelihood to be murderous. But not Kemper. He was tormented into his bloodlust. This gives his case an aspect of preventability. Hence the sympathy.
@@Nimbus3690 How can you not discuss morality when it comes to murder and especially in the sickening fashion he did it in, If this was truly just fits of rage brought on by the abuse he recieved he would not have sexually violated him in the sickening way he did, how can you not say he did this for his own pleasure. Most abused people do not become serial killers. Dont get tricked into thinking they'd otherwise be good people, sympathy is what they want. I feel like you have not done much research on him to be making these claims, he was screwed the second he came out of the womb.
@@dyslxeic11 I think you are being too cynical towards him. I've looked into him quite a lot over the years. So I'm not just providing impulsive reactions. Firstly, his mind was scrambled so bad he didn't even know why he was killing women until he killed his abusive mother. That's why he turned himself in. Idk what you'd call that, other than remorse. If he loved doing it, he would have stayed free and continued killing like all the other killers. This is a huge point you didn't consider.
You know, if you wanna make the argument that he just wants sympathy, it has to actually be shown to be to his advantage, which you haven't done, because it isn't. He got imprisoned, and has refused to be let out early due to good behavior. I fail to see how this is beneficial to him in an evil way.
Secondly, I despise this argument so much: "most abused people don't turn out this way". What is this supposed to mean? That all abuse is equal? That all trauma should result in the same outcome? That all brains work exactly the same way? It's such a flawed argument it's not even funny. Not to mention, of all people, abused people are the ones to become horrible, regardless of how many or how few of the total do so. So what exactly did you want to say with this? Because you can't quantify abuse. So Idk how you came up with this equation.
Thirdly, bro, sexual violation is a form of anger release. It's not just for horny impulses. In this case, he clearly projected his hate for his mom onto other women, and tried to defile them as much as he could. As hard as it is to understand, this IS a fit of rage.
Can't help but feel sympathy for the young Kemper. However, my sympathy ends when he flipped over to the dark side. With that kind of an I.Q. he obviously was perfectly aware of what he was doing, why he was doing, how devastating his actions were for his victims...yet, he did it anyway. I don't believe he was ever truly delusional, just angry (justifiably) at the world, his parents and unfortunately his victims.
I love so much how Mr Whistler says "...over a cup of coffee" 0:28
It's the reassuring " kind man next door " that helps to keep me feeling safe .
when you get down to it people have to be genetically predisposed to this how many people have suffered terrible abuse as children and yet don't become killers and some people who have the best childhood possible become the worst killers
Not really... It all depends on perspective.
An abused child, who doesn't stop hoping that nice people exist, won't become a serial killer.
Another abused child who gives up that hope, will.
It's just that they have a different perspective...
Meaning: it's not genetics but compartmentalizing.
Which means that ultimately the abusive relationship is at fault even though the killers choose the path of darkness themselves.
Bingo. Genetic predisposition
I can only recommend his interviews. Certainly a very interesting character.
To his credit, he seems to regret his actions and turned down every parol hearing.
I can only wonder, what might have happened to Ed, had he had a better childhood.
Nicolae Ceaușescu next?He was called and "The king of communism"
Seconded, that would be interesting indeed.
The Danube of thought! The genius of the Carpathians!
Lol kind of a contradiction in terms, don't you think?
@@TeamMemberNumberEight I agree with you,but if you stay to think many dictators lived like kings and Ceaușescu was one of them,but he wasn't always like that,he tried to make our nation stronger and prosperous but the power make him blind,so he couldn't see the problems of Romania
Holy crap, I walk by "the Jury Room" bar in Santa Cruz pretty much daily. I had no idea.
Just found this channel :) it's like finding extra Casual Criminalist episodes 🥰
Do one on John Wayne Gacy
He did
@@Makarosc oh
@@Makarosc No he hasn't.
@@septube26 oh right that was someone else my bad