Albert DeSalvo after turning himself in for escaping imprisonment |
The Boston Strangler was a presumed serial killer that
operated in the Boston area from June of 1962 until January of 1964. The killer
(or killers, as some would say) was responsible for the deaths of thirteen
women. Of course, as with most serial killings, it is difficult to know whether
more murders took place in other areas. One man in particular–Albert DeSalvo–is
widely believed to have been responsible for the Boston Strangler murders.
However, it is important to bear in mind that he was never charged with the
murders. In fact, no one ever was.
The Boston Strangler first struck on June 14, 1962. The
victim was 55-year-old Anna Slesers. Anna's son found her on the floor of the
bathroom in her apartment on Gainsborough St. in Boston. She was wearing only a
bathrobe, which had been left open, exposing her nude body. She had been
sexually assaulted, but not raped. Anna was strangled with the belt of her
bathrobe, which was left around her neck. It was tied in a bow.
Notably, the killer ransacked Slesers' apartment, but stole
nothing. This would be the case in many of the murders to come. Why the
attacker did this, no one knows. It was obvious to police that it was not a
robbery gone awry. The killer must have known this after the newspaper reports
on the murder came out. Why did he continue with the farce if he wasn't trying
to throw police off his trail? Did he gain some sort of pleasure from rifling
through his victims' belongings?
The Boston Strangler killed is second victim on June 30,
1962. Her name was Nina Nichols and she was 68-years-old. Nina was also
sexually assaulted, but not raped. She was also in her bathrobe, which was
pulled up, exposing her from the waist down. Her murderer strangled her with
her pantyhose and he, again, left the weapon around his victim's neck, tied in
a bow.
On July 2, 1962, the body of Helen Blake was found in her
apartment on Newshall Street in Lynn. Post-mortem showed that the 65-year-old
woman was killed on June 30. She had been strangled with her nylons looped through
her bra. As before, they were left around her neck in a sadistic parody of a
gift decoration. Also as before, her body had been violated, but not raped.
The Boston Strangler struck again on August 19, 1962. His
latest victim was 75-year-old Ida Irga. Her body was not found in her apartment
on Grove Ave. in the West End for three days. She had been strangled with a
pillowcase that was left in the now familiar bow around her neck. Her body had
been violated and left in a sexual pose.
The next Boston Strangler victim was discovered in her
apartment on Columbia Road in Dorchester on August 30. She was 67-year-old Jane
Sullivan and she had been dead for ten days. She was found in her bathtub with
her nylons tied around her neck. Police were unable to ascertain if she had
been molested due to decay. However, it can probably be assumed that she was.
This was the first time the killer did not ransack the apartment.
There would be a lot more changes in the next murder
attributed to the Boston Strangler. His next victim was 20 years old,
African-American (all before her had been Caucasian) and she had been raped.
Her name was Sophie Clark and her body was found in her apartment in the Back
Bay on December 5. She had been strangled with her stockings, which were around
her neck, along with her slip. She was otherwise naked and she had been
positioned sexually. If this was the Boston Strangler, he was progressing to
rape and widely expanding the victim pool.
On December 31, 23-year-old, Patricia Bisette was found in
her apartment in the Back Bay. She had been raped and strangled with her
stockings and her blouse. The murder weapons were still around her neck.
However, unlike the others, she was not lewdly positioned; she was covered with
her blanket up to her neck. She was one month pregnant at the time of her
death.
On May 6, 1963, the Boston Strangler murdered 23-year-old
Beverly Samans. She was found on the couch in her apartment. An attempt had
been made to strangle her. However, the cause of death was stab wounds to the
neck and chest. The murderer left his signature bow around her neck, this time
made out of two hankies and a stocking. One handkerchief was stuffed in her
mouth, another lie over it. The knife used to kill her was in the sink.
The Boston Strangler briefly returned to older victims on
September 8, 1963, with the murder of 58-year-old Evelyn Corbin. She was found
in her apartment in Salem lying nude face up on her bed. Police found sperm in
her mouth along with underwear that had been stuffed there.
On November 23, 1963, the body of 23-year-old, Joann Graff
was discovered in her Lawrence apartment. She was raped and strangled with a
nylon stocking that was tied in a bow around her neck. Her killer bit one of
her breasts during or after the attack.
The last victim of the Boston Strangler was 19-year-old Mary
Sullivan. Mary was left in a very gruesome near-sitting position with a
broomstick handle in her vagina. A bow made out of the nylons and two scarves
she was killed with was around her neck. There was a New Year's card resting on
her foot.
The above are the eleven murders that police had attributed
to the Boston Strangler, at that point. That number would go up by two when the
police heard a confession from a man who was awaiting trial for rape and
breaking and entering. That man was Albert DeSalvo.
Albert DeSalvo was a working-class man with a wife and two
children when he was arrested and jailed for breaking into women's houses and
raping or molesting them. Although, on some occasions he would simply tie them
up at knifepoint and then apologize before leaving the premises. He would later
claim that the number of women he had attacked was around 300.
Albert DeSalvo was raised by his mother after his father
abandoned the family when Albert was 8 years old. Albert's father Frank DeSalvo
was an alcoholic who abused his wife and children. There are even claims that
he brought prostitutes home and forced his children to watch him have sex with
them. This is not certain, though it is certain that Albert came from one
messed up background. When he was seventeen, he joined the army. He met and
married his wife while stationed in Germany. The couple moved back to the U.S.
in 1954, where DeSalvo was stationed at Fort Dix.
While Albert was stationed at Fort Dix, he was arrested for
molesting a nine-year-old girl. The charges were dropped and he was honorably
discharged in 1956. He and his family then moved to Massachusetts, where they
eventually settled in Malden. Despite having a job, DeSalvo turned to breaking
and entering and theft. Around the same time, he began a series of crimes that
earned him the title "Measuring Man." He would tell women that he
worked for a modeling agency and then convince them to allow him to take their
measurements, naked or clothed. He was never charged for anything regarding
this behavior. The police did take notice, however. DeSalvo was jailed for
breaking and entering in 1961 and served 6 months in prison.
Sometime after the last Boston Strangler murder, Albert
began his life as the "Green Man." The Green Man was the name Albert
was given during his time breaking into women's houses and assaulting
them. He was finally taken into custody
when one of his victims was able to identify him. He was first brought to the
Bridgewater State Hospital (a mental facility) and then placed in Cambridge
Prison. However, he was brought back to Bridgewater because of his mental
state.
While in Bridgewater, Albert DeSalvo told another inmate
that he was the Boston Strangler. That inmate (George Nassar) told his lawyer,
Lee Bailey. Lee Bailey contacted the police and informed them that he was going
to question Albert, which he did. Albert gave them a startlingly accurate
confession. However, it should be noted that Albert gave them a few false
details as well. He also confessed to two other murders that the police had not
linked to the Boston Stranger, those of Mary Brown and Mary Mullen. It should
be pointed out that Albert DeSalvo was known for being a boastful man. That is
not to say that he lied, but that it is possible he wanted the attention that
being the Boston Strangler would get him.
Prosecutors were unable to try Albert for the murders
because his confession was useless unless they let him plead insanity, which
they would not. However, DeSalvo was found competent to stand trial for the
rapes he had committed, and for those he was found guilty and sentenced to life
in Bridgewater State. After he escaped from Bridgewater State and turned
himself in, he was sent to Walpole maximum-security prison. He was stabbed and
killed in his cell there on November 25, 1973.
Many people have claimed that Albert DeSalvo was not the
Boston Strangler. They say that because his motive for confessing may have been
money and that some of the details he gave in his confession did not add up
that he must not have been the killer. Furthermore, some people have stated
that the Boston Strangler did not exist and that several killers were at work.
The killer may not have been Albert DeSalvo, but one thing is certain. He was
linked by DNA to the murder of Mary Sullivan in 2013. The similarities between that
case and the others make it likely he was behind all of them.
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