Mind of a Serial Killer - BEST OF 2025: The Night Stalker Pt. 2
Episode Date: January 1, 2026Happy New Year! As we look ahead to 2026, we’re excited to bring you even more fascinating cases and gripping investigations. More importantly, we'd like to thank you for listening, and making 2025... an unforgettable year, your support and curiosity keep us coming back week after week. Please enjoy our Best of 2025 selection, The Night Stalker! Killer Minds will be back next week with a brand new episode. Richard Ramirez believed Satan protected him, but he couldn't outrun justice forever. In Part 2, we explore "The Night Stalker’s" gruesome 1985 killing spree, the chilling trail of clues left in his wake, and the courageous community that ended his reign of terror in an unforgettable showdown. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Killer Minds to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Killer Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Murder True Crime Stories, Crime House Daily and Crimes and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson.
Exciting news. Conspiracy theories, cults, and crimes is leveling up.
Starting the week of January 12th, you'll be getting two episodes every week.
Wednesdays, we unravel the conspiracy or the cult, and on Fridays we look at a corresponding crime.
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on your podcast app because you're about to dive deeper, get weirder, and go darker than ever before.
When we confront the shadows of our past, we often use the term overcome our demons,
Whether it's dealing with lingering trauma, ending a problematic relationship,
or moving on from something hanging over our heads,
it's a way to acknowledge that we all have burdens that haunt us.
Richard Ramirez was no exception.
Whether it was his father's abuse or his cousin's obsession with murder and sexual violence,
Richard's past hung over him, like demons lurking behind his shoulder.
But instead of battling those demons, Richard embraced them.
And in doing so, he unleashed a reign of terror on an entire city.
The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love.
and hate. But sometimes it drives people to commit the unthinkable. This is Killer Minds, a
crimehouse original. I'm Vanessa Richardson. And I'm Dr. Tristan Ingalls. Every Monday and Thursday,
we uncover the darkest minds in history, analyzing what makes a killer. Crime House is made
possible by you. Please rate, review, and follow Killer Minds. To enhance your listening experience
with ad-free, early access to each two-part series and bonus content, subscribe to
Crime House Plus on Apple Podcasts. A warning, this episode contains depictions of murder and
sexual assault. Listener discretion is advised. Today, we conclude our deep dive on serial killer
Richard Ramirez. After a childhood full of violence and trauma, Richard was consumed by darkness,
Fueled by an obsession with Satan, he went on a sadistic killing spree throughout California
in 1984 and 1985.
His brutal crimes and penchant for attacking his victims under the cover of darkness earned
him the nickname the Nightstalker.
As Vanessa goes through the story, I'll be talking about things like the concept of Satanism
and its impact on Richard's psyche, why some killers show immense pride in their crimes,
and how a killer's bravado can lead to their downfall.
And as always, we'll be asking the question,
what makes a killer?
In 1985, Richard Ramirez was likely having the best summer of his life.
The 25-year-old had convinced himself that he was carrying out a mission in Satan's name
to kill as many people as possible as brutal.
as possible. And as far as he was concerned, he was accomplishing his goals. By August, he'd killed
nearly a dozen people around Los Angeles County and two more up in San Francisco. After many
of those crimes, Richard left evidence of his devotion to the devil behind. In at least two of his
attacks, he drew pedigrams at the scene, and in other cases, some surviving witnesses
said he mentioned Satan multiple times.
visit why Richard would be drawn to Satanism in the first place. When we think about it, it makes
sense from a psychological and developmental standpoint. People often assume Satanism is about evil,
but in Richard's case, it's providing a framework, a belief system that validated his violent
impulses, justified his lack of empathy, and gave his crimes a sense of meaning. It gave him
permission to embrace his cruelty, view his sadism as strength, and see empathy or mercy as weaknesses.
Satanism allowed Richard to build a belief system around his most dangerous impulses
which gave him the ability to celebrate them.
And leaving pentagrams at the scene was a signature for him and it was reinforcing his identity.
He wants his crimes to be perceived as intentional, as righteous and a mission with purpose.
Whatever was driving Richard's obsession with Satan, it gave the police a lot of leads to follow.
After his double homicide in San Francisco in August of 1985, the authorities in L.A. were able to connect it to his crimes in Southern California.
It was a late-night break-in, a pentagram was drawn at the scene, and the bullet shells looked like the ones they'd found at his other crime scenes.
Within hours of making this connection, the lead investigator on the Night Stalker case, Detective Frank Salerno,
boarded a plane in mid-August with his partner, Gil Carrillo, and flew to San Francisco.
After taking a look at the crime scene, Frank and Gill went to the city's police headquarters,
where they met with local detectives and compared notes from their investigations.
The next morning, they gave this information to San Francisco's mayor, Diane Feinstein.
Her first concern was her constituent's safety,
so she quickly called a press conference to warn the public that the night stalker was looes.
in their city. She offered a $10,000 reward to anyone who had information that helped catch
the killer. But during this press conference, she also revealed a few key details that the police
hadn't shared with the public, namely the make of the killer's gun and the brand and size
of his shoes, which they'd identified through footprints at a few of his crime scenes.
When Frank Salerno found out, he was livid. He was afraid the nightstocker would
start destroying evidence, or worse, flee the country, and they'd be back to square one.
And he was half right. Richard saw the press conference on TV when he realized the police were
onto him, he went to the Golden Gate Bridge and dropped his gun and shoes over the side.
Up until this press conference, Richard was operating under the belief that he was protected by Satan,
which gave him a sense of invincibility and allowed him to commit these unspeakable acts without
shame, fear, or even hesitation. Now that illusion is shattered. Suddenly, Richard was a man on
television. He's being named and hunted. And that's when something changed in his psychology.
Learning that he's not invincible could be very destabilizing, almost crisis level. Panic and
disorganization could set in, and his grandiosity is certainly challenged. And by that, I mean,
Richard believed he was serving some cosmic purpose, that he was guided and protected by Satan
and therefore unstoppable.
But when a very human agency of law enforcement caught up with him,
it forced him to reevaluate,
and that's why he disposed of those items.
He knew they were incriminating,
which is actually a very significant moment
from a forensic psychology lens
because it demonstrates that Richard has an awareness of consequence.
Do you think that his faith in Satan now is wavering,
or was this just a practical reaction
to finding out the police were onto him,
so he's got to get rid of the evidence?
Yeah, this reaction makes me,
question whether or not these were clinical delusions to begin with in terms of psychosis. Because if they were,
generally speaking, I would expect to see him become defensive, reactive, even double down by looking
for distorted evidence to continue supporting the delusions, even when that evidence is contradictory,
like it is right now. Instead, he panicked and he tried to dispose of incriminating evidence. Richard was
rooted in reality enough to want to avoid getting caught and was watching the news for updates on his own
manhunt. And this is diagnostically important information. So to answer your question, was his faith
wavering? Perhaps to a degree, his belief in Satanism was functional. And once that function was
challenged, it wasn't strong enough to override basic survival instincts. The second he saw he was on police
radar, he dropped the ritual and he became pragmatic. He became practical. He worshipped Satan in
theory, but only until self-preservation took over. This was a practical reaction, and his interest in
Satanism appears to, again, have been purely for identity validation, inflating his ego, and
justifying his cruelty. And so as a result, I really don't think that he was delusional in a
psychotic sense. After ditching his shoes and gun, Richard decided to lay low for a while.
He spent the next few days smoking pot, listening to heavy metal and visiting adult movie
theaters in the area. But before long, he got restless. Richard couldn't contain his urge to kill.
He knew he couldn't stick around San Francisco, though.
There was too much heat on him there.
So on August 24th or 25th, about a week after Diane Feinstein's press conference,
Richard drove his stolen Mercedes back to L.A.
Once he got there, he dumped the car, then stole an orange 1976 Toyota.
With his new ride, Richard went out that night looking for someone to hurt.
Around 1 a.m., he ended up in Mission Viejo, a city about 50,000.
miles south of Los Angeles, and chose a house at random. In a nearby yard, a 13-year-old
boy, James Romero, was up late fixing his scooter. James saw the Toyota pull into his neighbor's
driveway, then he watched Richard, a tall, long-haired man wearing gloves, get out of the car,
and disappear into the shadows. Richard didn't notice James, though. He was focused on entering
the house he'd chosen, which belonged to a car.
computer engineer named Bill Carnes and his fiancée Carol. Like everyone else in the city,
Bill and Carol knew about the Nightstocker and had taken precautions. They'd locked their doors
and closed their windows. But Richard didn't let that stop him. Somehow he was able to remove a
window pane and slip inside. He crept from room to room until he found the bedroom. Then he went in,
took out a new gun and aimed it at Bill's head.
As soon as Bill woke up, Richard shot him three times.
Carol had been sleeping next to him.
When she heard the commotion, she tried to hide under the covers,
but Richard had already seen her.
However, he didn't kill her.
Instead, he ripped off the blanket,
dragged Carol out of bed, and gave her a command.
Profess her love for Satan, or he would kill her.
Carol did as she was told, but Richard wasn't satisfied.
He bound her with neckties, then raped her, all while insisting she swear her loyalty to Satan.
When he was finished, he ransacked the house.
Throughout it all, Carol waited for him to finally kill her.
But after taking some money and briefly mocking her, Richard disappeared.
So Richard went from being in self-preservation mode and destroying evidence.
to once again killing and doing so carelessly. Given that he has shown he is capable of
self-awareness of consequence, this is not just a matter of him not being able to stop. He just
doesn't want to. And that's terrifying. His behavior has escalated to the point where the act of
domination itself became addictive to him. Each time he got away with a crime, it reinforced the
idea he was untouchable. And now it's become compulsive. And we know from his childhood, his impulsivity,
and his history of head injuries,
that neurologically and biologically,
Richard lacked the internal mechanism
that most people have to regulate this behavior.
And he was operating in a fantasy world
where Satan was his shield
and control was all that mattered.
And it's important to remember
that there is no one in his life still
at this point who can hold him accountable
or who's monitoring his behavior.
And all of this contributes to why he continued to kill
even when he was so close to being caught.
As soon as Carol was sure Richard was gone, she was able to free herself from her restraints
and ran to a neighbors for help, which was when she saw the orange Toyota speed away.
She wasn't the only one who saw Richard take off.
Her young neighbor, James Romero, was still fixing his scooter outside and had also seen the Toyota leave.
James had been unsettled by Richard's arrival in the first place,
so when the car peeled out, he wrote down the license plate number.
He told his parents about the whole encounter the next morning, and they called the police.
Richard had no idea he'd been spotted.
He cruised back to Los Angeles, convinced he'd just pulled off yet another murder for Satan.
But as he drove, his adrenaline and the hot Southern California summer started getting to him.
And at some point, he took off the gloves he was wearing to air out his hands.
Then he headed to the Wilshire area in the center of Los Angeles,
where he wiped the car down and abandoned it.
But when he did this, Richard missed something
and left behind a major clue.
On the outside of the rearview mirror,
there was a single fingerprint.
In the early hours of August 27, 1985,
Richard Ramirez attacked Bill Carnes and his father,
fiancee Carol at their home in Mission Viejo, California. Both of them survived the assault,
and Carol was able to call the police. The next morning, investigators started processing the crime
scene. Bill was in critical condition, but Carol was well enough to answer some questions.
What she told them was alarmingly similar to what they'd been hearing all summer. Her attacker
was a tall man with scraggly hair and terrible breath, who was obsessed with sick.
Satan. This had to be the nightstocker, and those suspicions were confirmed after the investigators
talked to James Romero, the 13-year-old boy who saw Richard going in and out of Bill and Carol's
house before taking off in the stolen orange Toyota. After Carol and James's statements, police
put out a county-wide alert for officers to be on the lookout for the vehicle. While they
waited for news about the car, authorities got an even more promising lead.
A man named Jesse Perez called the station and said he believed he'd met the night stalker.
As soon as the tip came in, Frank Salerno sent a pair of officers to Jesse's house in East L.A.
He believed the night stalker was a guy named Rick, who Jesse had met at a bus depot earlier that month.
Jesse had wanted to come forward sooner, but he had a criminal record himself and was worried about talking to the cops.
Still, his daughter insisted he say something because there were a lot of similarities between the man
he'd met and the descriptions the media had provided about the night stalker.
This Rick was tall with shaggy hair and terrible teeth, and he told Jesse that he was a burglar.
Rick also talked a lot about Satan and admitted to Jesse that he'd done terrible things
like kill two Asian women in 1984.
So why would Richard reveal himself like this?
I think people underestimate how heavy the burden of secrets can be.
Richard built his entire identity around his crimes and his allegiance to Satan,
but identity is meaningless if it can't be shared.
He may have felt compelled to hint at the truth as a way to maintain that identity,
not for accountability, but for recognition.
He also saw himself as powerful, feared, and invincible,
and someone like this would want the opportunity to boast when he could,
And this is not uncommon for serial killers.
But also, he was compulsive and risky and telling Jesse was both of those things.
It allowed him to test his limits and see just how far he could get to being discovered without facing any consequences.
Do you think he possibly saw a kindred spirit in Jesse, who was also a former criminal?
So if a serial killer decides to confide in someone, the person they choose to do this with, even if it's superficially, is significant.
it can tell us a lot.
I think to Richard, Jesse represented someone
who had a similar moral code.
Regardless of what Jesse was convicted of previously,
they had a shared criminal identity in some way,
and this could have created a false sense of safety
or sense of solidarity for Richard.
But also, we need to remember Richard's history with Miguel.
Miguel spoke to Richard in the same way.
He boasted about his criminal acts and framed them as honorable.
And in this interaction with Jesse,
Richard is modeling that same behavior.
It's the only way he knew how to socialize.
And Jesse likely represented someone who would, quote, get it.
And perhaps Richard thought that this would make him feel honorable in return.
It's definitely an indication that he's emulating what he was taught from Miguel.
Regardless of what drove Richard to share this information with Jesse, it gave the police a bona fide lead.
And not only did Jesse give a good description of the night stalker, Richard had sold him one of his guns.
guns, a 22-caliber pistol. The Nightstalker had used at least four different guns during his spree,
and a 22-calibre was one of them. Unfortunately, Jesse said he gave the gun to a female friend
for protection when she went on a trip to Tijuana. Still, it was a promising lead, and it wasn't the
only one. Before the authorities could try and track down the gun, they got another break in the case.
On August 28th, the day after Bill and Carroll were attacked, police found the stolen orange
Toyota.
It was at a shopping center off Wilshire Boulevard, right where Richard had dumped it.
When they scoured the car for evidence, they found most of it had been wiped clean,
except for one small spot on the rearview mirror where Richard had left his fingerprint behind.
Authorities had found prints at some of the other crime scenes, but hadn't been able to do
anything with them. Until this point, there was no digitized searchable system, which meant they
needed to identify a suspect in order to compare the prints. But California had just finished building
a new computerized database, and with this print, they were able to run it through that system
and compare it to all the other fingerprints that were on file. When they did this, the print was a match
from an incident in December 1984
when a man had been arrested
for driving around Los Angeles
in a stolen vehicle.
The name on that file?
Richard Ramirez.
After months of mysterious,
puzzling murders,
police could finally give the notorious
Nightstalker a name.
They immediately put the word out
and released the mugshot from Richard's 1984 arrest
to the public.
As the authorities waited for any tip,
to come in, they scoured every inch of LA and even posted officers in the cities where
his family members lived.
But Richard had skipped town, not because he knew the police were onto him, but because
he decided to take a trip to Tucson, Arizona with his older brother.
He had no idea that while he was on vacation, the rest of the country was looking for him.
But he caught on pretty fast once he got back into town.
Richard took a bus back to Los Angeles on August.
31st, and when he got there, he saw the station was swarming with officers.
Wow. So Richard spent months believing that he was above consequence. He was the hunter,
but when he saw that police presence, suddenly he was the one being hunted. And that's a
huge shift. That realization would have created a massive psychological conflict, because on one
hand, he believed that he was doing Satan's work. On the other, he's now seeing that Satan was
once again not protecting him.
And that internal contradiction likely sparked panic, confusion, and possibly rage.
But more than likely, it sparked survival mode, since that is what happened historically.
Like when he went to the bridge and he threw over evidence.
There's also a degree of public humiliation.
And for someone with narcissistic and psychopathic traits, the idea of being seen as weak
or hunted can be more intolerable than the fear of actual punishment.
Richard wasn't just caught off guard, he was exposed.
And that can be psychologically destabilizing,
especially for someone who had built his entire sense of self
around dominance and control.
Whatever was going on in Richard's mind here,
he somehow managed to avoid the massive police presence
and disappear into the crowd.
And if he didn't know that he was the one authorities were looking for,
it became crystal clear shortly after.
Because that afternoon, Richard went into a liquor store
in downtown L.A. to buy a coffee
and saw his face on the front of a newspaper.
Before he could decide what to do,
an elderly shopper looked up and immediately recognized him.
She shouted out, El Matador, the Nightstocker's Spanish nickname.
It literally means the killer.
Richard froze as everyone in the shop turned towards him.
Then the store owner grabbed the phone to call 911, and Richard bolted.
He fled on foot to Boyle Heights,
a predominantly Mexican-American name.
neighborhood in East L.A. As he ran, all Richard could think about was stealing a car and
heading from Mexico. That's when he spotted a woman, Manuela Villanueva, sitting in a running
vehicle. He charged over to her and tried to pull her out, shouting in Spanish and English.
Manuel fought with Richard and called for help until her boyfriend ran out of a nearby bakery.
The two men started brawling, and a local barber came out to see what all the noise was. He recognized
Richard immediately and joined the fray.
At some point, Richard managed to pull away from the men and take off,
but there was no running now.
Richard had been unmasked,
and the people of Boyle Heights weren't about to let him get away.
With a crowd of people hot on his heels,
Richard tried to hijack another vehicle owned by a man named Faustino Pignon.
Faustino fought back too,
so Richard ran to a nearby driveway,
where a woman named Angel de la Torre was getting into her car.
She recognized Richard immediately and screamed El Matador as he grabbed the keys out of her hand.
Before he could get away, Angel's husband rushed out of their house and started beating him with a metal bar.
Richard managed to crawl away and struggled to his feet, but there was nowhere left to run.
His pursuers caught up to him and gathered around Richard, pummeling him until he sank to the
ground bleeding. The nightstalker's reign of terror had finally come to an end.
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After trying to run from police on August 31st, 1985, Richard Ramirez was finally caught by a group
of citizens in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of East Los Angeles. Soon, sirens filled the air
as police cruisers got to the scene.
Sheriff's deputy Andres Ramirez,
who had been raised a few blocks away,
was the first to arrive.
He knelt down by Richard,
who was still surrounded by the locals who had captured him.
As soon as Andres saw Richard's face,
he knew it was true.
This was the night stalker.
Richard was arrested and thrown into the back of a squad car.
He didn't bother trying to deny what he'd done.
On the way to the station,
he hummed the song Night Prouler by ACDC.
Once investigators had him in an interrogation room,
Richard told them his gun was in a locker at the Greyhound Station,
and he asked for the electric chair.
So humming Night Prowler wasn't a random act.
It was a form of self-identification.
The song had become associated with his media nickname,
and by referencing it, Richard appeared to be reinforcing that persona.
This behavior is similar to something we call a narcissistic collapse when a person's grandiose self-image is suddenly confronted by reality and begins to fall apart.
Instead of expressing remorse or denial, Richard seemed to accept his capture with a kind of resignation.
His attitude conveyed not, I'm sorry, but something closer to you got me, now let's get on with it.
In providing the location of his weapon wasn't a full confession, but it was a meaningful behavioral shift.
It indicated he understood, once again, the reality of a situation, and that the illusion of
control or invincibility had been broken.
We often see this kind of shift in individuals whose identities are built around power and
violence.
Once that structure collapse, either through capture or loss of control, they may not fight it.
Instead, they disengaged, having no clear sense of self outside the role that they've
constructed.
It certainly wasn't about remorse or redemption, but rather resignation, which also explains
why he asked for the electric chair.
While other officers went to the bus depot to collect the gun,
Detective Frank Salerno and his partner, Gil Carrillo,
came down to the station to question Richard.
When they entered the interrogation room,
he was sitting at the table scratching something into the surface.
To Frank's surprise, Richard recognized him from an article he'd read in the paper.
Frank tried to use that familiarity to engage Richard in a conversation,
but all of a sudden, Richard wasn't interested in talking.
He just asked for a lawyer and continued to scratch the table.
However, when Gil spoke to Richard in Spanish, he opened up a little.
Richard told Gil about his abusive father and his cousin Miguel, who taught him to burglarize and kill.
He also explained how he came to love Satan, but he stopped just short of a full confession.
When the detectives got up to leave, they saw what Richard did.
had been scratching into the table while they spoke.
It was a pentagram.
But Satan wasn't coming to save him.
Richard was fingerprinted, booked, and charged with 14 counts of murder
and 31 other felonies, including burglary, rape, and robbery.
Shortly after, officers returned from the bus depot,
they'd searched Richard's locker and found his gun.
It wouldn't be the last weapon they found.
Police followed up on the lead from Jesse Perez, who'd bought a gun from Richard, then given it to a friend in Mexico.
In early September, authorities located that gun in Tijuana and eventually connected it to at least one of Richard's victims.
Just a few days later, on September 9th, officers questioned Richard's family in El Paso, Texas.
The night stalker was national news by this point, and the Ramirez's were shocked to learn this terrifying
killer was their sweet, sensitive Richard. They could only hope that this was all some kind of
mistake and police had the wrong guy. Families almost always struggle to accept that a loved one
could be responsible for violent crimes, especially something as horrific as serial murder like this.
The Ramirez's reaction is very typical in cases like this. This kind of response is a form of
cognitive dissonance. It's incredibly difficult, sometimes emotionally impossible,
to reconcile the person you know intimately with the kind of brutality described in the news.
And even if there were warning signs, most families are not equipped to interpret them as precursors to violence on this scale.
And when the public narrative and private image are so vastly different, the emotional gap between who they thought he was and who he actually became is often too wide to process, especially all at once.
Do you think it's possible that Richard really did disguise his true nature that well?
or does it seem more like maybe they were in denial?
I think it's likely both.
It's very probable that he hit his true self very well.
I can't imagine that he ever openly expressed these fantasies with them,
let alone confessed anything he had done,
especially his family's Catholic.
I don't see him sharing with his family, his allegiance to Satan.
But not to mention, he endured abuse and neglect from his family.
Generally, parents are aware of who their children spend time,
with and who they are influenced by and they knew Miguel's history. Richard was a teen and it doesn't
sound like they attempted to protect him in any way, especially from Miguel's grooming. So it's
equally probable that his family who were very religious were incapable of seeing the signs or
acknowledging them or neglected to see them. There could have been some form of denial on their
part as well. Well, any hope of this being an unfortunate mistake was dispelled at Richard's
arraignment on October 24, 1985. During the proceedings, Richard showed the court and the cameras
a pentagram he drew on his hand and yelled, hail Satan. But even though he was embracing the
spotlight, that didn't mean Richard was owning up to his crimes. And thanks to a slew of logistical
hurdles, he wouldn't go on trial for another four years. During that period, the legend of the
nightstocker only continued to grow. While Richard was committing his crimes, the United States
was in the midst of what would later be called the satanic panic. It was a time when there was a lot
of fear around satanic cults and the devil, making Richard's crimes even more fearsome. So when
his televised trial finally began on January 30, 1989, the whole country was watching. Over the next
three months, prosecutors made their case, presenting over 400 pieces of evidence. They included
stolen pieces of jewelry that Richard had taken from his victims and sold or pawned. The fingerprint
found on the Toyota and other prints found at multiple murder scenes and plenty of witness
testimonies. Richard had started this legal process with a lot of bravado, but four years later
and in the face of a pile of mounting evidence, he slowly lost it.
He appeared gloomy and despondent and kept a pair of dark sunglasses over his eyes at all times.
It might be a few reasons why that is.
So during the peak of a serial offender's activity, especially someone like Richard,
there's this sense of power, control, and psychological or sexual gratification.
They often feel entitled and above the law.
They have emotional detachment.
They feel invincible and they're energized by planning and fantasizing and then executing their crimes.
By the time they're on trial, that entire psychological structure begins to unravel.
The courtroom isn't just a place of judgment.
It's a space where the offender becomes powerless.
They're exposed and they're redefined by others.
This explains why they may appear emotionally withdrawn or flat, despondent, defensive, or posturing.
But this is often compounded by the helplessness and lack of control they experience being incarcerated as well during pretrial proceedings.
For once, individuals who need to feel in power and control are at a total loss of it in every way imaginable.
It's also worth noting that Richard may be trying to maintain appearances.
Sure, he started off with bravado, but as that evidence continued to show the nation that he was killing because of his satanic beliefs,
maybe he felt he needed to maintain his appearance.
Maybe wearing sunglasses, brooding, and appearing despondent was his way of showing the world he was unaffected
and still in allegiance with Satanism.
How would Richard's brain have processed committing crimes then seeing them laid out in front of him like that?
Could that have changed the way he thought of what he'd done?
Or maybe did seeing that evidence only reinforce the reason he'd done it in the first place?
It's possible that over time, as the evidence piles up and the attention fades,
he might begin to feel the reality of what happened.
But for someone so deeply entrenched in grandiosity and externalizing blame,
it wouldn't necessarily translate into remorse.
More likely, it would become bitterness, resentment, or some kind of inward collapse, not responsibility.
For most people, seeing the damage they've caused would lead to shame, grief, or guilt.
But Richard's brain wasn't wired for that kind of moral processing.
If anything, the courtroom likely served to give his violence a spotlight, a legacy,
and in his mind a twisted form of validation and recognition.
Remember, he was taught that crime was honorable.
The trial went on for about six months until the end of July 1989.
The jury was sent away with over 8,000 pages of transcripts and 655 exhibits to consider.
But before they could come to a decision, one of the jurors was shot dead inside her home.
The others were terrified it was one of Richard's so-called satanic admirers and worried that they would be next.
However, the killer turned out to be a jealous boyfriend.
After a two-month hiatus, the deliberations resumed,
and on September 20, 1989, Richard Ramirez was convicted of 13 counts of murder,
five attempted murders, 11 counts of sexual assault, and 14 burglaries.
He was sentenced to death.
After he was sentenced, Richard had this to say,
Death doesn't scare me, I'll be in hell with Satan.
After his sentencing, Richard was taken to San Quentin prison and joined the 262 other inmates on death row.
While he was awaiting his execution, he developed a series of serious medical conditions and passed away in 2013 at the age of 53.
Richard's reign of terror, deemed by some as Satan's summer in the city of angels, has gone down as one of the most horrifying crime sprees in history.
The residents of Los Angeles spent the summer of 1985 in near total lockdown.
When they went to sleep at night, no one was sure if they'd be woken up in the dark to the stench of rotten breath and the face of a killer looming over them.
Thankfully, that nightmare eventually came to an end,
though not before over a dozen innocent people lost their lives.
But thanks to the efforts of investigators like Frank Salerno and Gil Carrillo,
along with the collective will of an entire community,
Richard Ramirez's reign of terror was eventually stopped.
And an entire city could sleep peacefully once again.
Thanks so much for listening.
Join us next time for a deep dive into the mind of another murderer.
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Killer Minds is hosted by me, Vanessa Richardson, and Dr. Trisely.
in Engels and is a crime house original powered by Pave Studios.
This episode was brought to life by the Killer Minds team.
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Thank you for listening.
your next listen. Hi, it's Vanessa Richardson, and I have exciting news. Conspiracy
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