Morbid - John Wayne Gacy Part 3
Episode Date: May 12, 2020Finally, we have reached the conclusion of John Wayne Gacy's mad world. Honestly, this dude is a pig and we are so glad to be out of his headspace. In this episode, we discuss how he got caught, his i...nsane confessions and his trial and subsequent imprisonment until his early death. Enjoy and make sure you hydrate. I feel like he's so gross, you should hydrate. Sources: John Wayne Gacy: Defending a Monster by Sam Amirante The Man Who Killed Boys: The John Wayne Gacy Story by Clifford L. Linedecker Buried Dreams: Inside the Mind of John Wayne Gacy by Tim Cahill Killer Clown by Terry Sullivan Thanks to our sponsors! Hunt A Killer Right now, just for our listeners you can go to HuntAKiller.com/morbid use promo code MORBID at check out for 20% off your first box. Head to Stamps.com Right now, our listeners get a special offer that includes a 4-week trial PLUS free postage AND a digital scale without any long-term commitment. Just go to Stamps.com, click on the Microphone at the TOP of the homepage and type in MORBID. Cowritten by Alaina Urquhart, Ash Kelley & Dave White (Since 10/2022)Produced & Edited by Mikie Sirois (Since 2023)Research by Dave White (Since 10/2022), Alaina Urquhart & Ash KelleyListener Correspondence & Collaboration by Debra LallyListener Tale Video Edited by Aidan McElman (Since 6/2025) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, weirdos, I'm Elena.
I'm Ash.
And this is morbid.
Morbid.
Two of us this week.
It is. It's just me and Ash.
Hey, yo.
Just us.
Just the OGs.
The OGs of the morbid.
But having M on was a fucking blast, guys.
A blast and not to be like fan girl 101, but a fucking dream.
come true.
It really was.
It was kind of surreal.
It was like, whoa.
And they're just so easy to talk to.
I felt like I was hanging out with an old friend.
Yeah, it truly did.
Like, I think they were saying at one point that they felt like, like they knew us already
and that we feel the same way about them.
So it was funny that it all just kind of clicked.
And we were like, oh, we've all just hung out before, right?
Like, it was exciting.
And it was exciting and it was just fun.
And it was a chill-ass time.
It really was. These collabs during quarantine have been so much fun because it's just been cool to connect with other creators and just get different points of views.
And it's been fun to kind of sprinkle these in.
It is fun. I enjoy it quite a bit. And actually, later this week, we have a second guest for the show.
And I'm sure this one will be easier to guess, but, you know, you just never know who it's going to be.
It's going to be awesome. It's going to be awesome. It's going to be great. And, you know, like we've been.
doing everybody we're going to be doing the same you know like just the ashen i episodes in between
you'll still be getting the same amount of ash in my episodes uh so these collab episodes are just
bonus episodes really so enjoy exactly enjoy and then actually we're going to be putting out a patreon
episode uh in the next couple days i think i'm recording it tonight with a special guest a very fun one
yes woohoo special guest special guests all around y y'all and tonight
we're going to be finishing up the fucking hellscape that is John Wayne Gacy.
I'm pretty stoked to wrap it up with him.
Yeah, I'm really psyched to be out of this man's psyche and out of his world after this.
I'm going to take a step back from John Wayne Gacy.
And, you know, I feel like I smell him now.
So I just, I need to be away from it.
I'm excited to not be exposed to his psyche anymore.
Right.
I'm glad not to be giving it to you.
So that's good.
Thank you.
The expose and the expose.
We're glad to be just out of it.
But no, this has been crazy because I found out some stuff during research that I didn't know.
You know, which I always feel like I do.
I always end up finding something that I'm like, well, shit.
It is fun.
But it'll be nice to wrap this one up because this one wraps up in a nice bow where we can say bye-bye, John.
Bye-bye.
And we can say kiss my ass.
How about that?
Kiss my ass.
Well, before we delve into the end, the final, the finale of John Wayne Gese, we are going
to shout out some shows.
We sure are.
So these are being rescheduled June 2nd and June 3rd.
June 2nd is at the Good Night's Comedy Club in Raleigh, North Carolina, and June 3rd is
at the Comedy Zone in Charlotte, North Carolina.
We will let you know the reschedule dates.
We just don't have them yet.
Just hang on to those tickets, because they will go wherever we go.
Yes.
October 11th, we have two shows at Talia Hall in Chicago, Illinois.
That's going to be so much fun, guys.
I'm really excited for that one.
July 8th at the Comedy Works South in Greenwood Village, Colorado, which I just found out is sold out.
Yeah, Colorado.
Thanks for selling us out.
What, what?
The reschedule date for the Wilbur is the, I believe it's the 26th, right?
It's, yeah, it's going to be in 2021.
Yeah. So that's fun. Yeah. So I think it's going to be March 26th, 2021, I believe. I think that's the new date.
You'll be informed of it anyways, but we'll make sure to tell you. And then the 11th of August, we're going to be in Philadelphia at the Punchline Comedy Club. September 16th. We're going to be in Washington, D.C. at the D.C. Improv. The 23rd of September will be in Nashville, Tennessee, two shows at Zanis. And last but not least, the 24th.
4th of September, Huntsville, Alabama at Stand Up Live.
Alabama.
So there we go, guys.
We're going to make these happen.
We just, we're rolling with it.
We're rolling with the homies.
I watched Clueless the other night.
Yeah, such a good show.
Such a good show.
That actually was a good show.
It was a good show at one point.
Wait, was it really?
It was a show.
You didn't know it was a show?
I did not know it was a show.
I'm pretty sure that movie came out maybe the year I was born.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it did.
Yeah, either that or before you were born.
And yeah, it was a show at one point.
And it had the original Amber in the show.
Oh, but it didn't have Alicia Silverstone.
Oh, hell no.
She wasn't going to do a show.
Well, see, then I don't care.
But it still worked.
The girl who played Cher Horowitz, I can't remember her name now.
And people are probably screaming it at me.
But she was great.
So you always say that I'm just like Sharon Clueless.
And actually, Annie quite agrees with you.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I think everybody.
Everybody listening right now, I think can agree that you are shared from Clueless.
You know what? I vibe with that. But the only thing that I'm going to need if I really am
fucking Cher from Clueless is that computer program to put my fucking clothes together in the morning.
Yeah, you should have that. Like, I'm actually sad that you don't. I feel like if anybody does need,
like should have that at their disposal. It's you. Thank you. I appreciate that.
You're welcome. We'll talk to people in Silicon Valley. We'll see if we can make it happen for you.
program. App people out there. What up? App people. Um, so I think on that note, we will just
dive right into part three. Okay. The final part of John Wayne, motherfuckerucking Gacy.
We went from one end of the spectrum to the complete opposite. Yeah. I mean, I think a perfect segue
between worlds is share Horowitz. I quite agree. I don't know why. Do I keep saying I quite something,
something something you do you've you very much yeah i don't know if i've been watching like british television
or like what the deal is yeah i haven't have you have you been listening have you have you been watching
down to nabby no it's very proper i like it thank you also just before we start this gnarly thunderstorm
just started where i live so this is like perfect timing yeah and as i'm looking outside right now it's
getting like super dark and spooky and i'm assuming it's rolling my way right now so you know i don't know
You can hear the thunder, but it's fucking insane.
And I'm in the attic, so it's shaking the attic.
I love that for you.
That's fun.
All right.
Well, John Wayne Gacy, let's get it.
Well, when we left off in part two, we had left off when he had brutally murdered 15-year-old Robert Pist on his mother's birthday, which was December 11, 1978.
The same year, which this is just an interesting little note, same year in 1978, before he had killed.
before he had killed Robert, he took a photo with Rosalind Carter.
Oh, I've seen this photo.
Yeah.
So he took a photo with the first lady, Rosalind Carter.
He was the director of the Polish Constitution Day Parade, which is like, I guess it's an annual parade, and it celebrates the advent of democratic government in Poland.
And he was the director.
He had been the director for three years in a row.
Oh, damn.
And in order to meet Rosalind and get that photo, he had to have secret service clearance, which he received.
That is bananas that John Wayne Gacy received secret service clearance.
What the fuck?
It's beyond words because in order for him to get that, they talked to, like later when all this was found out, they talked to this, because the secret service got a ton of shit for this.
Because they were like, you literally let the most prolific serial killer in American history at that point.
point into a photo with the first lady of the United States of America.
Yeah.
What happened there?
What breakdown of community?
Because it's not like he was this squeaky queen, queen.
Squeaky queen, like, he was not a squeaky queen.
No, he was not a squeaky queen at that point.
No, he was not a squeaky clean little innocent boy at that point.
No.
He had a sodomy charge on him that he went to prison for before this.
And then like multiple other accusations.
Not even accusations.
they fucking happened, but...
Well, and when they asked the Secret Service later,
they were like, what happened there?
Why did you not?
And they were like, yeah,
we might not have looked into, like,
where he lived before those records.
Good.
So they literally admitted we didn't check
to see where he lived before
if he had a record.
So he had that record,
and they just let him skate by.
Which loosely translates into,
we didn't feel like doing our job that day.
Like, holy shit, the incompetence.
That's unbelievable.
Yeah. So that's just crazy. Now, going back to after he killed Robert, he said that he stripped him of his clothes and he stuffed cloth down his throat because remember that's like his thing. And he does that, like I said in part two, because he doesn't like that after you die, you tend to leak fluids and that can get messy. So he stuffed something down your throat so it doesn't come out of your throat.
That's awful. Yeah, super awesome. So he went through Robert's clothes.
clothing and like he he liked to put the clothing which this is really fucked up he drives a lot of
the boys clothing to a Salvation Army clothing donation box yeah and he did that with robin you
I am not shitting you so he's like and he'll just yeah that's fucked up yeah he's just donating
his victim's clothing so people unknowingly could have been wearing this kids not only clothing but
the clothing he died in that's like well it is worse but it reminds me of um
Was it Ivan Malat who was his girlfriend was wearing the shirt of one of his victims?
Yep, there was a photo of her wearing the clothes, like the shirt.
And it's haunting as fuck.
He's dead.
So fuck that guy.
So he went through Robert's clothing.
He went through the pockets.
And he liked to just take things out because as we find out later, John Wayne Gacy loves to keep trophies.
He loves to keep things.
He was keeping the, I mean, he would keep bracelets.
rings, licenses, just anything.
He would really just keep anything.
And it really bit him in the ass later because a lot of them were traced back to his victims.
So he went through the pockets and he ended up finding a receipt from the pharmacy where Robert worked, where he had picked him up from.
Uh-oh.
And it was a receipt for developing film.
So Gacy took that and he just kind of put it away.
Now, so then he drove to the Salvation Army donation box, dumped his clothing.
And this is that same evening, Robert's parents went to the Des Plains Police Department and reported him missing.
Okay.
That night at like 1130, I believe it was.
Because again, this was, he was an honor student.
He was a good kid.
He was close to his family.
This was the wrong, the wrong victim to choose.
Not that any of them deserve it at all.
But this was the one that was going to get him caught.
This is a big mistake.
Yeah.
But he liked to choose, you know, victims that would be, like a lot of these assholes choose, that would be, quote unquote, less dead, you know, like sex workers and transients and drug addicts.
It's people who these assholes assume the police are not going to allocate a lot of resources for and that their families are probably not going to be looking for them because they assume their runaways.
But so December 12th, the day after Robert was abducted and killed, Gacy's now.
suddenly being looked at by the police.
So very quickly, they were like, yeah.
He was the last person seen with Robert and he was seen at the pharmacy by plenty of people.
And he's a known creep when it comes to teen boys.
Right.
Everyone knows he's a fucking creep.
So he was called on December 12th.
And the police were like, what do you know about this disappearance?
And he was like, I don't know anything about it.
Like, yeah, I saw him that night, but last night, but I didn't do anything.
So Lieutenant Joe Kozenzak was put on the case.
He was only named Chief of Detectives a year before this.
So he was like pretty new, but he was like, fuck this guy.
I'm going to get this guy.
He was immediately like, yeah.
Now, Lieutenant Kozenzak actually had a son, Robert's age, who went to the same high school as Robert.
And he was like, I just felt compelled.
He was like, this is, he's like, I know you're not supposed to like,
put it in like personal terms, but I immediately felt like I had to find this kid. Well, and it's like
sometimes I feel like it's good to do that because it helps. It's like you have a horse in the race.
You know what I mean? Yeah. It's like it motivates you because you could put yourself in their
parents' shoes. You know, I want to find this kid for that family. So, um, so the lieutenant,
he checks out the pharmacy, Nissan pharmacy, where Robert was working and where he was abducted from.
And he found out that the place had been recently renovated. Now, who?
Who did the renovation work, you ask?
John Wayne Gacy's squad.
PDM contractors.
Good.
Yeah.
And, you know, as we know, that's John Wayne Gacy's company, that he ran basically to abduct
rape and murder young teenage boys.
So now he had that connection.
And he finds out from witnesses that Gacy was indeed the guy who everyone saw chatting
with Robert that evening.
And they said he was asking him about a contracting job.
He was telling him he could make him money.
Like they had all, people watched this whole conversation.
Now, remember, he told his mother he was seeing about a contracting job when he called her on the phone.
He was like, this guy is asking about that.
And so this was sloppy as fuck because he's left such a breadcrumb trail to what was going on.
People saw him talking to John Wayne Gacy.
They see him talking to John Wayne Gacy about a job.
He called his mother and told him, I talked to this guy named John about a job.
and then all of a sudden he goes missing.
I mean, thank God that this one went so horribly wrong.
Yeah, it was just sloppy as fuck on Casey's end.
And you can tell that he was getting very big for his britches being like, I can do this and no one's ever going to catch me.
So like I said, Robert was a really good kid, never gave his parents any reason to believe he would run away.
They were just like, no, that doesn't make any sense.
So, so sad.
So Lieutenant Kozenzak felt like he was like, this is now my mission.
I'm going to do this.
So he immediately had his detectives searching through missing persons reports, and he was like, find similar victims.
Because now we're going to start piecing these together because he was like, I think this guy did something.
So at 9 p.m., Lieutenant Kozenzak and three other detectives knocked on the door at Gacy's home.
Dun, dun, done.
He answers the door, and they're like, hey, we would like you to come down to the station for questioning.
So Gacy is like annoyed and they said he was just like, ugh.
And he's like, I have to wait at home for a super important call from my mother because my uncle passed away.
And so the detectives are like, yeah, you know what?
This is about a missing kid.
Like we really need you to come down.
This is really important.
And they were like, can you either just wait, you know, take the call later or can you call your mother now and like get this over with so we can take you down?
So he's pissed.
And then he accuses Lieutenant Kozenzak of having, quote, no respect for the dead.
Are you kidding me?
This man who is standing in his home, which contains the bodies of over 30 teenage boys rotting under his feet that he brutally tortured, raped, and murdered, is standing there telling this lieutenant you have no respect for the dead.
And if you picture this conversation like I am, it was probably at the front door, which is literally right.
right over one of the dead bodies.
Exactly. And guess what?
While they're having this conversation,
Robert Pice's body was upstairs in his attic.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
So they agree finally.
They're like, you know what?
Whatever.
Wait for the call.
But they were like, we want you to come in after the call.
Right.
So we're going to be waiting for you to come down.
So at 11 p.m. that evening,
John Wing-Gacy calls the police station back.
And he's like, do you still want me to come in for questioning?
And they're like, yeah.
Get here immediately, you sloppy fuck.
So, I bet that's exactly what they said.
Get here immediately.
You're sloppy fuck.
So he's like, all right, give me a half hour.
I just got to get ready.
I'll come down.
So 1 a.m.
He still hasn't shown up.
So that's like two hours later.
It's like, what do you have to get ready for?
Like, just put on some pants and come on over.
Well, that's the thing.
They're like, what is he doing?
Well, what he was doing was he was getting Robert's dead body from the attic,
driving it to the Desplains River and tossing it in.
on his way to the police station.
Yeah.
To go tell them that he didn't do anything.
Now, that fucker doesn't show up until after 3 a.m.
And he's covered in mud.
Like, covered.
So the detectives weren't there at this point.
He was like, I want to talk to the Lieutenant Kozenzak.
And they were like, he's not here.
And we're not calling him in because you're disgusting.
So they were like, no.
So they were like, quote.
Yeah.
They were like, come back at the morning, you dumb asshole.
So he shows back up at 9.15 a.m.
and it begins.
So he denies everything.
He's like, no, I don't know anything about this kid.
I don't know anything.
We talked about a job.
That was it.
I left.
He went home.
That was it.
And they were like, yeah, this is not what happened.
But Lieutenant Kozenzak had ordered background checks, obviously.
And Gacy's came back with all his fucking nonsense.
Now, like the sodomy charges, the assault charges, all this shit.
So when he saw that he had served prison in time or prison time for sodomy of
teenage boy, his antennas immediately went out.
And he's like, this dude is lying.
Yeah.
Right.
So, Cousinzac went to circuit judge Marvin J. Peters.
And he was like, we need a search warrant for Gacy's house.
Oh my God.
And he got it.
Yeah.
So this is when it gets crazy.
So investigators show up at the home and they begin their search.
And while this is going on, Gacy's neighbor walks over because he's like, what the
fuck is going on?
Because remember, he's, the neighbors love him.
He's a weird guy.
but he's a great guy. That's how they all feel. Yeah. So they're like, what's going on at John's house?
So they walk up, the neighbor walks up to one of the police officers and is like, what the hell is happening?
And they're like, yeah, we're like, we can't reveal D.U.I. We're searching the home, but, you know, we're just doing a search.
So the neighbor was like, just so you know, there's an attic and a crawl space in that house. Like, I don't know if you should know that.
Because they were like, it's like hard to tell from the plans. And they were like, I don't know what you're looking for.
like this two of those places.
Good hiding places.
So the police are like, cool.
Yeah.
So they're like, cool.
So at first they didn't really take it that seriously because they're not looking
for 30 plus dead bodies.
They're looking for Robert.
Yeah.
And that's all.
That's all they think is happening here.
They think they're looking for one kid.
I know.
I'm actually glad you said that because in my mind, I'm like, they're looking for like
blood splatter or something like that.
And then I'm like, oh, yeah.
They're literally looking for a kid.
They're literally looking for this like this 15 year old kid.
That's all they're looking for.
So they ended up taking a ton of shit from the house.
And what they took was they took his 1979 Oldsmobile Delta 88, his work van for PDM, and his
1978 Chevy pickup that he also used for PDM.
So what they also found, and I found a list from this book, The Man Who Killed Boys, and I will list all these books again.
I listed them in the first two parts, but I'll list them again in this show notes.
Cool.
They found, so what they took from the house was they found a piece of rug that had stains.
Now, the rug didn't have stains on top.
It was like they lifted the rug up and they could see someone had cleaned the top, but it had leaked into the bottom.
Oh.
So they took that section of rug.
They took clothing, a pair of yellow underwear, color photos of drug stores, an address book, more than a dozen books, including Bike Boy,
Pederasty, sex between men and boys, 21 abnormal sex cases, tight teenagers.
Ew.
Yep.
The American Bicentennial Gay Guide, and they also found seven porn films.
A hypodermic needle and syringe.
We, uh, weed and rolling papers.
Bottles of pills, including Valium.
A scale, a switchblade knife, a pistol.
handcuffs and keys, nylon rope,
39 inch long, two by four board
with holes in it, the rack.
A temporary driver's license
belonging to Michael B. Baker, one of the victims.
Oh, no.
A main high school class ring
with the initials JAS,
which we find out who that belongs to later.
A driver's license issued to James O'Toole,
another victim.
And the coup de grace,
the receipt from Neeson Pharmacy
for the film from
Robert's pocket. So just like stuff in everybody's home. Yeah. So, you know, we all have,
you know, switchblade knives and, you know, clothing from dead people. Nylon, you know.
Just the casual necessities. And a torture, torture board, you know. It makes me so sad, too,
that, like, books like that even exist. Like, like, like, I know. What did you say, like,
between grownups and teenagers? Like, fuck that. Yeah, like sex between men and boys. That's her
If you wrote that, like, tight teenagers, what the fuck?
Like those, and then that's not porn.
That's like a whole different thing.
Yeah, that's a whole, that's pedophilia.
And then it's like, and the list included like the American bicentennial gay guide, which I was like, that's like a normal book.
But it's like, but it's just, it's attributed to him because of the whole like enigma of him saying, being very like put off by being called gay.
but also saying he's bisexual but also saying he's straight at times.
It's just a very odd thing.
So they also found hair in his vehicles and a cadaver dog was used and hit on the Oldsmobile
after it was given Robert's clothing to use as a scent.
Oh, wow.
So that indicates that he was in there.
They asked Robert's mother about the pharmacy receipt that they found and she said it was
likely his girlfriends.
Okay.
So they contacted her.
Her name was Kim Bowers and she said it was hers.
Because she said Robert had given her his jacket when she was cold a few days before his abduction.
The purest.
And she said she, right, that like hurts my heart.
Yeah.
And she told police the serial numbers on the receipt and they matched.
So they were like, okay, that checks out.
Now it was time to talk to literally everyone Gacy knew.
So they talked to all his friends, all his family, all his coworkers, his neighbors.
Most of them had nothing but nice things to say about him, that he was.
kind of a weird guy, kind of like an over-the-top guy. But in general, they were all like,
yeah, we like him. He's cool. Like, we hang out. He's a hard worker, all that. So they also,
Lieutenant Cozenzantzac also ordered 24-7 surveillance on Gacy now, which is very necessary.
Oh, yeah. So now cops are following him everywhere. And they're blatantly just sitting in his
driveway and cop cars, like just watching him. I love it. I love it. And he was telling friends that
he was being harassed and shit.
And it was all like a misunderstanding.
He was telling them, you know, this is going to blow over.
They're just trying to pin something on me.
No, it's not, buddy boy.
Some of them believed him.
Some of them were like, yeah, this is crazy.
You're being harassed.
So at this point, Robert's friends and family are really searching for him as well.
They were handing out flyers, asking around.
And remember, like we said in the beginning, he made the mistake of abducting a kid
that had a lot of friends and family support around him.
So they were going hardcore.
Helicopters were overhead searching forests in like the riverbanks.
They were on it.
Meanwhile, as this is going on, Gacy is unreal because he has hired defense attorney Sam,
I think it's Amarante, and he decided to file a $750,000 civil lawsuit against the city of Displanes
because he said they were causing him mental.
anguish and loss of reputation in the community, deprivation of his liberties, and loss of his
personal property, because they were taking things out of his house. And he thought he was going to get
out of this spot free. Oh yeah. He thought he was not only getting out of it, but he was going to get
out of it with money from the lawsuit. Right. And again, he really just goes to show what's working
upstairs. Oh yeah. And he, and again, he's claiming that he's being harassed and abused.
Right. And he said his one of the things in a lawsuit was he,
wanted the surveillance in the investigation to cease immediately.
The whole thing.
He wanted it stopped.
Oh, of course he did because he was like, shit, shit, shit.
And it's like, what an egotistical slice of shit.
Like, you really think that you can sit here and call the shots after you fucking
murdered, like 30-something kids.
So Gacy starts fucking with the cops that are tailing him.
So what's he doing?
He'll drive aimlessly to make them follow him just like all over the place with no purpose
at all.
He probably thought that was so funny too.
Oh yeah.
And he does it at all times a night and he's just being a dick.
He also will just stand there and take photos of them.
And he'll like walk up to them and say weird shit.
Like he'll just and he'll say very incriminating things, but like do it in a jovial way because he knows they can't nail him on it.
Like they'll say something about like a clown.
And I think I say it at the end.
But like he says something like, well, clowns can get away with murder.
And like, what the fuck?
And it's like, actually you can't.
Yeah, and then he invites them in a lot.
He'll be like, yeah, you want to come in and have a sandwich?
Like, he's just a dick.
And so one morning, he invited Detective Robert Schultz and his partner in for breakfast.
And the two guys were like, you know what?
We'll come in because we want to see what's going on.
And they're like, sure, we'll come into your house.
And Robert Schultz used the bathroom.
And he said it was freezing outside because it was wintertime.
And he says, so the heat kicked on.
And he said, I'd already smart.
smelled in there, but he goes, when that heat kicked on, it blasted into that bathroom, the
unmistakable smell of rotting flesh. Because Robert, Detective Schultz was like, I've been to a
morgue. I've smelled a rotting body several times. Right. That is an unmistakable smell and that's what I
smelled. And so, but they didn't- And for him to just invite them in and be like, yeah, it's fine.
Like, he knows that his place smells like death. Oh, it's over the top. Like, over the top, just like,
I it's unbelievable it really is it's hubris of like the highest order it's just like something in
his brain was like you can do anything you want to do and you will get away with it and then you
also wonder like did a part of him want to get caught I was just going to say that I was literally
about to say that because you're asking to get caught at that point you really are and I wonder
if he was like I don't know I wonder if it's like he was
in over his head or he was getting tired of the lifestyle he was living?
I don't know. Probably not, but I think that's just like the sane part of our brains.
I know. I think so. And I wonder if it's like a subconscious part of him. Because I feel like that
happens a lot with serial killers is like a subconscious part where they don't even know it's active,
wants this to end because it's like the human part. I was going to say it's like the tiny little
human sliver that's left in. Exactly. It's like that hair line of just humanity and
somewhere.
Yep.
So on the evening of December 21st, in the middle of the night, Gacy drove to his attorney's
office, Sam Amarante, and the police officers followed him.
They were like, what the fuck is he doing?
So officers Mike Albright and Dave Hackmeister followed him.
And they parked outside the office, like they always do.
But they thought this was weird.
They were like, why is he suddenly driving to his lawyers?
And while they were parked, Gacy, like, staggered into the office.
and just started confessing to his lawyer.
Like just started like spouting.
And he was clearly drunk, they said.
I was going to ask that.
And so Sam Amarante comes out and he says he walked up to the officers and he didn't know what to do.
And he said he told them, don't let Gacy leave, block his car in, do anything you can to stop him from leaving if he tries.
His lawyer?
And he was like, but he was like, I'm not going to tell you what he just said to me, but you need to keep him here.
Like, don't let him just run.
So he did end up leaving.
He did end up getting in his car, but they didn't let him just leave.
They followed him, obviously.
What?
But they were like, we can't just, we can't do that.
Like, we can't just arrest him because you tell me that you want him to not leave.
Like, we can't do that.
Right, you could fuck up like the whole thing.
Exactly.
Like, that would fuck us up.
We could lose all of this.
So they were like, all right, we just have to keep tailing him like we're doing.
So he ended up going to a service station and right in front of them sells pot.
to a kid right in front of them at the service station.
And they're like, he is asking to get caught actually.
Maybe I take this back.
So they were like, okay.
So they're like, well, we're not going to bust him on that because we need to see what else he does.
Like we're not just going to stop this because he sold some weed.
Like we're going to, we need to get him on something else.
So he leads them back to his house and he just goes in the house, gets his dog and brings his dog to the neighbor's house where he tells them that he needs help taking care of the dog because he needs to figure.
out this whole thing. And he says, you know, it's a big misunderstanding. I'm being pinned for something.
But my dog doesn't like being alone that much. And I keep having to leave him. So can you please
take care of him while I'm doing this? And his neighbors are like, it's always so weird when serial
killer, because like I can't think of another instance, but like with animals sometimes, they're so
caring. Yeah. It's very odd. It's like, that's so weird that he was like, my dog. He doesn't like to be
alone. Yeah, exactly. Or that he had a dog at all. It's like, because a dog requires a lot of care.
Yeah. And I guess the neighbor was like, yeah, sure, John. Like, of course we will. Because again,
everybody loves John. We're not like, of course we're going to help you. You're being railroaded,
my brother. It's like, they're all just like, sure. So the next morning, Gacy showed up at his friend.
The last name is Zarsna, Zarnas, I think, Zarnas. That's his neighbor. Okay.
And he said, I've been a bad boy.
Ew, gross, no.
And he's looking like shit.
He's like haggard as fuck.
So his friend is like, I, like, it was clear something was going on.
And he was clearly at a breaking point.
So he was like, what do you mean you've been a bad boy?
And he's like, so he gives him a scotch.
He like slaps him across the face.
Yeah.
And he's like, you got to, he's like, sit down on my couch.
Tell me what the fuck you're talking about.
So his answer is the end is near.
And he's like, cool, cool, cool.
And they're like, so what's going on?
Like, what do you mean?
What do you say?
And he's like, right, they're trying.
Yeah, he's like, they're trying to pin a murder on me.
And he's like, you know, it's all bullshit.
So his friend starts, like, pressing a little bit and John gets frustrated.
And he gets up and walks outside.
So he's like, all right, bye.
And the friend said, as he was walking out, he said to him,
I thought you wanted to tell me something.
Because that's like, he's like, I thought you were.
were here to tell me something, John. And then he turns back around, walks back inside, walks right up to
his friend, and says, I killed 30 people, give or take a few. Like, just right out with it.
How do you even respond to that? Like, so Zarnas like, okay, who are these people that you killed?
And he goes, bad people, blackmailing me, they were, they were going to blackmail me. They were
bad people.
That's what he said to him.
And then he started to cry.
So I'd be like, well,
that's all for today, John,
I think you need to leave. You gotta dip
right out of his house. You gotta go.
You gotta go, my friend. You're actually not welcome
anymore. Yeah, so
10.55 a.m.
he leaves his friend's house because now
he's just like shell-shocked. Like, what do
I do with this?
And Gacy goes to Michael
Rossi and David Cram's home. Those are the
two guys, the teenagers that like lived with him at one point, um, that dug trenches for him
and like spread lime for him at times. Yeah. Um, so he tells Rossi, now the police are
following them all time. So they have like, they're listening to him. And he says to, um, so he says
to Rossi, I'm glad you could make it. Come inside. This is the last time you'll ever see me.
Oh. So there are police already like, okay, what's happening? Um,
So they talk inside and they all end up coming out of the house, getting into a car.
This is around 11.30 a.m.
And before they leave, Gacy walks up to Officer Schultz in his car and said, you know, David Cram is going to drive me to a restaurant.
But he's like, you know, is that cool?
Can he drive me there?
Like, are you guys cool with that?
And the officers are like, yeah, we don't give shit.
So they're like, cool.
We're going to follow you, though.
So they follow them.
And David Cram, once they get to the restaurant, gets out, walks up to the police car and is like, hey, John wants to go to the cemetery to say goodbye to his father.
So Officer Scholes is like, dude, he admitted to killing like over 30 people.
Like, we're pretty sure he murdered a lot of people or he's at least saying he did.
Like, that's crazy.
He's probably going to kill himself.
Like, they were like, I'm guessing this is what's happening.
Right.
like you might want to get out of this situation right now because this is going to get bad.
You might not want to drive him there.
Yeah.
And so it's like, so Cram's like, oh, okay, cool, cool, cool.
So he's like, I'm going to drive him anyway.
So he gets in the car with him.
He's going to be a good friend.
Yeah, he's like, you know what?
It'll probably be fine.
We're just going to go to the cemetery.
So he gets in the car with him.
He drives out of the parking lot.
And immediately he is pulled over by the Desplains Police Department, the Cook County Sheriff's
Department and the Illinois State Department.
of law enforcement division of criminal investigations.
Good.
Because while all this had happened, his neighbor there had called the police and been like,
he just told me he killed 30 people.
And they had also been informed about the, that drug sale that he did, the like pot
sale that he did right in front of the officers.
Because now that they started having like him admitting to this, him acting like this,
they were like, you know what?
We can arrest him on that charge, like the selling.
weed in front of us charge. Let's just do it so we can get him. Right. So they get him. He's arrested.
Um, so he's, it's just, so he gets arrested for the pot charge. They don't have any body yet.
So they're just sitting here just grasping at what they can. Um, so he was held on a thousand dollars
bail for possession of a controlled substance because he had the valium. Um, and he was then,
and he was also held on that, uh, like the pot. So while he was,
He's held there?
The pot.
He's held on the pot.
He is held on the devil's lettuce.
He is held on the wacky tobacco.
So the police are like, you're like, that's enough.
You are being held here for smoking the reefer.
So while he's held there, they go back to his house.
And they told Gacy when they're going back, they're like, yo, we're going to rip up your floors.
Because we're fairly certain.
Yeah.
They're like, we're looking for Robert Pist.
We're going to rip up your fucking floors.
So he got nervous, obviously, because John Wayne Gacy knows what's under his floors.
So he's like, okay, yeah, you don't have to do that.
Because you know what?
I'm just going to come clean with you.
I did kill a man once, but it was in self-defense.
And he's not under my floors.
He's buried in the garage.
So they were like, so he was like, so you don't have to rip up my floors.
It's cool.
Don't worry about it.
Take my word for it.
He's like, you know what?
He's like, I'll totally bring you to the part in the garage and you can dig it right up.
And this can all be over.
And we can just.
And I'll get off on self-defense.
It's totally cool.
Yeah, totally fun.
So they were like, cool.
We'll dig this out.
Like, we're definitely going to dig this up.
But they were like, we're also going to look into your crawl space.
He was like, ah.
So at 10 p.m., they got the medical examiner, Dr. Robert Stein on the scene.
Imagine also doing this at 10 p.m.
Yeah, and they called Robert Stein, like the medical examiner, and he's like, cool, sure I'll get out of bed and come look at this.
Because they, in a member, right now, they think they are looking for a body.
One body.
Singular.
They think at least one.
So Dr. Stein actually aided in the scene at Jonestown.
So he was like a big deal, this medical examiner.
That's what in those.
it. So Dr. Stein got all gowned up and they were, because they were like, you're going to have to go into a crawl space. So like get your medical examiner bros, get some gowns and get over here because we're going to send you under a fucking smelly house. And he was like, cool, cool. So he got all. He got all. He was like, great. I just hate to. Yeah. He was like super glad I chose this profession. So he got all gowned up. He went into the crawl space when he got there with like his aides that he brought. Immediately they noticed there is some bones that they believed belonged to one.
human being. So they were like, cool, we found the human. But they were also like, that is a very old
body. Like, there is not flesh attached to this body. So they were like, that's not Robert. So
everything else was buried. Everybody else was buried. But they were obviously getting suspicious
because under there, they said the smell was overpowering. I mean, they said it was. I can't imagine.
They were like, this did not, this smell did not belong to one body. It did not belong to two bodies. And
it certainly didn't belong to a skeletal body.
So they were like, what's happening?
Because you think of how bad, I mean, I don't know, but you know how bad one singular body smells.
Now, take that smell and multiply it by 33.
Yes.
And then put it in an enclosed hot crawl space.
That already smells like moldy and gross.
It's just the worst of the worst.
So they decide, you know what, we're going to further do this dig in the daylight because we need to be able to see.
well, like there's tiny bones.
Like, we don't know what we're going to into here.
So that same evening, while this is all going on, Gacy confessed to police that he killed
30-something teenage boys.
Like, he was like, you know what?
Here it is.
He was like, while I'm here.
He tells them.
Yeah, he's like, you know what?
Since you're looking in the crawl space, let me just let you know on a little secret.
There's some shit down there.
And let me tell you.
So he told them, he says, I raped them.
He said, he told them about the.
rope in the handcuff tricks.
He told them about the rack, and he said he often murdered them by getting behind them
and throttling them with a roper board.
He said he buried them in the crawl space, and then he said he dumped at least five in the
Desplains River because of spatial issues.
So he said Robert Pist was among those who would be found in the river.
So he was like he's not in the crawl space.
He then told them that, again, this is when they found out that, well, lieutenant, uh, lieutenant,
Kozinzak was at his home on December 12th asking him to come down to the police department that Robert Pist was in the attic.
So that must have been a gut punch.
So this was all sounding insane because even at this point they're like he might just be crazy.
Like he might just be throwing this shit out to like I don't know.
To fuck with us.
Yeah.
But I don't even know.
Yeah.
But then they're like, then they find out that a tow truck driver named Bob Kirkpatrick had shown up at the bridge near the Desplanes River on December.
12th when he was going in to be questioned by the police, he showed up around 2 a.m.
Because he had to get John Wayne Gacy's truck out of the mud and the snow because it got stuck
on that bridge near the Des Plains River.
So now they have somebody, a tow truck driver that's confirming the night he was coming in
for questioning when he didn't show up until 3 a.m. when he was covered in mud.
He was out on the fucking bridge over the Desplains River covered in mud.
so they're like he did do it like this is all being confirmed now that afternoon he was officially
charged with the murder of Robert Pist but they don't have a body so they're holding him on this
they don't have it yet now he kept confessing and he's I mean he's like letting it all go
it was rambling and crazy he's but he is giving times and dates like he's giving but he's very
crazy too that you can remember like the specific dates and like the times you know
mean. Seriously, because I don't remember dates or times for anything. Me either. It's fascinating to me
that he can do this. But he is hazy on names because he just didn't really care about their names.
Well, some of them, you probably didn't even know their names. Yeah. And he said, and they were like,
why did you do this? And he's like, I killed them to keep them quiet. Like they were going to tell
what I did. So that's why I did it. And then he also admitted, you know, watching them die makes me
sparky bit time, big time.
So he then
drew a map and a diagram
of his property and he said
this is where you're going to find all of them.
And he did a very accurate map.
So they search.
They find more of the
sex toys like the dildos
that he used. They find the mirrors
on the ceiling in the garage. They find
the red light, the porn. I can't imagine
walking into all of that.
It must have just been
a lot to take in.
And they also...
Can you imagine the therapy you would need after that?
Oh, yeah.
Because this was a really bad scene.
Like, I understand you're like a first responder and like you've dealt with stuff of the like,
but like really not of the like.
Oh, yeah.
I couldn't imagine.
And this is an assault on all of your senses because you're like, you're being assaulted
on every level by just the...
I mean, it's reeking of death.
You're walking through just like thick air of death.
sit there.
And so they also find out that he had soundproofed and insulated his garage.
So this ended up being like an archaeologist dig.
Like they were slowly getting pieces of bones, hair, just all kinds of shit.
Investigators called in Professor Charles Warren, who is a forensic anthropologist at the University of Illinois.
And Dr. Edward J. Poblich, a forensic odontologist.
Okay.
So they were both, like, leaders in their fields, and they were there for identification purposes, because they were like, we got a lot of bones, and we don't know if this is how many people there are, and we don't know who they are.
So Warren, Professor Warren found bits of forensic evidence like hair and clothing, small pieces of bone and, you know, jaws and everything that they could use for blood typing and identification.
and then Pavlik found, could work with dental offices and any jaw bones to search for dental
records to aid in identification.
So that's what they were trying to do at this point.
Now, like we said, the scene was horrific, absolutely horrific.
The smell was unbelievable.
And because they had rotted in an enclosed space together for so long, all these bodies,
the toxic gases being released from their decomposition, it was co-mingling.
with each other in this closed dark space, like moist space.
And it became dangerous.
I mean, the gases that can be released from there are dangerous and noxious.
So they had to wear full hazmat gear.
Neighbors and witnesses on scenes that they often would see someone staggering away from
the home in full gear, pull off their protective face stuff and just vomit all over the
lawn or just be sitting there gagging and like gasping for air.
Of course.
Like it was like, it was just hell.
It was a hell. And you're in full hazmat and you're still experiencing a reaction like that.
Oh yeah. And like walking outside just to throw up because it's so bad. Now, when the news broke, it went crazy. And families all around the area who had missing teenage boys were sitting there now waiting to see if their son was one of the bodies that was being excavated out of this house. So the news released a bit of the findings like the high school ring, which had the JAS initials on it. Well, that ended up.
being John
I can never
say this name properly and I feel bad
John seeks
that's what it is seeks
John seeks initials engraved on it
his parents were watching
when they brought the ring up and said
this has those initials
and they were devastated
yeah because they were like that's his ring
and then they had held out hope
at this point and they were like that's when I
knew like he's one of those under there
which I can't imagine being like my child
is rotting underneath this pig's home and we just have to wait because it's not even like he was
murdered like that's one step to get past what you could never get past that but that's one thing to
handle yeah and then to also deal with the fact that he's like you said been under this pig's house
i can't yeah just like rotting like a piece of trash under this fucking pig's home while he just
lives on top of him like that's a whole other like 10 steps of grief oh it's unbelievable and so
the picture started to become worse and worse for investigators.
And the scene at Gacy's home was compared to identifying victims from a massive airline
airline crash.
They said, because it was just fucking pandemonium.
And there were so many of them.
So there were also finding bodies stacked closely together in their graves.
And investigators were beginning to see that some of these boys were killed, like we said
in part one or two, on the same day or within days.
Right.
And so they, and he had called the times when he killed two in one day a double event.
A double event. He would call it that. Like, that was my double event.
That's like what Dennis Rader would say. I'm surprised Dennis Rader.
It really is. Fucking Dennis.
So they also began to notice that Gacy's DIY map that he drew for them was very accurate.
Like he remembered where everything was. And they also said that he had arranged the bodies where
it looked like the spokes of a wheel.
Like it looked like they were arranged in a way like they were spokes coming out like
to a wheel.
Did he ever like say that there was a purpose behind that?
He never said there was a purpose.
But people on like the investigators and professionals on scene like the medical examiner
and stuff were like this looks very like a very.
I can't think of the word.
Yeah.
Like methodical and just very purposeful.
Like this was done with purpose.
So they set out identifying more.
and they're laying bones and bodies along 30-something tables in a makeshift morgue that was set up.
They had several forensic pathologists helping out Dr. Stein.
They put together that Gacy tended to like victims to be young teenage boys on the thinner side, like thinner built, not like bigger.
And they liked light-haired Caucasian teenage boys.
Okay.
So they all did share a similar look.
Now, before the Christmas break that year, because this is right around Christmas, they got five bodies out of his home and one was attributed to him from the Des Plains River.
So by two days after Christmas, they removed 10 more bodies.
Six were removed the next day.
And on December 28th, my birthday, six more bodies were taken out.
Happy birthday.
28 bodies were now confirmed to be his murders.
and he was at this point officially the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history just by this point.
Bananas.
And they hadn't even found them all yet.
He was already way past.
So that same day, they added another one when James Mazara was pulled out of the Desplains River
with his underwear still jammed down his throat.
That's horrific.
Yeah.
That always, like, stresses me out.
So remember, this is a residential leave it to beaver neighborhood.
And so neighbors and looky-loos are just gathering every day to watch dozens of dead bodies being removed from this home.
And you could see footage.
I mean, it's like horrific.
It's just people bringing out like giant body bags and its clear bodies are just being taken out of the house.
I wouldn't even want to live like I can't, first of all, I can't imagine living next door or across the street or like any neighbor.
I don't, I wouldn't even want to live down the street or on a separate street near that.
for it's and I guess a lot of them started feeling like really shameful of like living near him
because they were like we should have known like why didn't we see anything but you can understand
why you would feel that way yeah like you would feel like maybe I should have thought yeah I would
wonder why didn't I see anything am I that not like am I really not observant like that but it's not
your fault I would move the fuck out of Chicago this whole thing was a a circus it was craziness
news cameras were everywhere.
There were people starting to harass the neighbors,
and that's when people started going into, like, other neighbor's yards
and being like, you must have seen something, you must have known,
like, shame on you for not saying something.
And like we all know, like in Dennis Raider's case,
his whole fucking family didn't know.
I mean, it's very impossible that they hide well.
Right.
So according to the man who killed boys by Clifford Linedecker,
one neighbor said they watched late one night as news crews
with huge floodlights, like filming sheriffs taking things out of the house.
And one sheriff's employee was taking a body bag out of the, or two of them were taking a
body bag out of the home. And the news people yelled, go back, we're not ready yet.
And they went back in the house with the body bag and then came back out to be filmed.
I'd be like, go fuck yourself. No. Like, this is not a news circus. This is somebody,
this is somebody. Yeah, like, this is not a fucking show. This is life. Like, this is someone.
one's child that we're placing out here. We're not doing this in takes. Go fuck yourself.
Like, fuck you. So now Gacy already had Sam Amarante on his defense team. And he added Robert
Mata. And then on the prosecution side, Chief Deputy State's Attorney William Cuncle
and Assistant State's attorneys Robert R. Egan and Terry Sullivan went on board. So Gacy was
indicted on seven counts for the Robert Pice case. He was indicted on counts of kidnapping,
sexual assault, indecency to a child, and murder.
And again, the body of Robert had not been found yet.
Gacy claimed he threw the boy over the bridge, like we said, but they were doing searches.
They just weren't finding him.
And now they were getting concerned that Gacy was lying and that maybe he buried him somewhere
because they were like he was covered up in mud when he came to the police station that night.
He didn't just like toss him over.
Exactly.
And when they looked at the place where he got.
got caught in the snow. They were like, it wasn't really muddy there. Like, where, why was he
covered in mud? So they couldn't figure out, you know, any of that, but they were like, you know what,
we're just going to have to keep looking. So they were doing like searches in the nearby
forests near the Desplains River because they were like, maybe he buried him in there. So January
4th, there was a huge service at a local church just to mourn the loss of the missing boys. And it was for
anyone to come. So like over 300 friends, victims, families, residents, members of the community,
church clergy, they all came to just have, you know, play their respects. January 8th, seven more
indictments for murder came down on Gasey for Butkovich, Gaudzik, Sikh, Johnston Langdigan,
and Mazara. The prosecution decided they were going for the death penalty at this point.
Yeah. Now, they demolished his first.
home on April 10th, 1979. They ended up giving pieces of it to people who asked for souvenirs,
like, while they were demolishing it and taken it away. If you asked for a brick or like a piece of it,
they would be like, here you go. I would not want anything attached to that brick or dirt or branch
or anything. Yeah. I mean, it's really, it's one of those, it's like a very morbid curiosity thing to
me where I feel very torn on those things, which I understand it. Like, I could see why, I could see why you
would want it, but not me. Yeah, it's between like respecting victims and their families, which I'm like,
you don't want a piece of that because that's a piece of this heinous thing that happened to this
family. And then on the other side is this weird morbid curiosity I am. I'm always very torn with
that. But I think it's good to err on the side of respecting victims families personally.
Yeah. I think there's certain things that are like okay for like morbid curiosity to take, but like other
things that's like maybe sit that one. Yeah, it's a hard. Yeah, that's a hard line to rock.
So he couldn't even show up for his hearing initially because security was such an issue.
They were worried someone was going to murder him.
And they were like...
They should just let it happen.
And he was only going to have to travel 20 miles.
And they were like, we don't think we can protect him for that long.
Like, literally, that's how bad it was.
And so he was housed at Kermak or Sirmak.
I'm sure somebody will tell me, hospital, under 24-7 guard watch.
And he was actually the first inmate to receive that kind of security.
He collected newspaper clippings of himself while there and kept them in a folder.
Weird.
He also found religion.
He had Bibles.
He said he prayed.
Nothing will save you, sir.
No.
I also found out that he was diagnosed with angina pectoris, which is what the heart condition is.
That makes him like faint and get, because I was trying to find that out last time and I couldn't find it.
Finally found it.
It's too bad.
It like never did the full job.
It didn't do the job. I know. So in April, there was a huge windstorm in Chicago and, like, fucked up a lot of stuff.
People, like, I believe two people died in the windstorm. It was like that bad.
Well, the wind may also have had a hand in dislodging something from the water.
So a body was discovered the day after above the locks of the Dresden Dam in the Illinois River.
So a crane operator had seen the body just laying there.
And they called the lockmaster Dan Callahan and he called police.
And they identified the body of that of Robert Pist.
So the wind had dislodged his body from the water.
Wherever he was, he must have been caught somewhere near the shore and had like thrown him somewhere, like out in the open, which I'm like, wow.
That's like some spiritual shit.
I'm not like a very religious person, but I feel like there's something that works together
to make shit like that happen.
There's some magic happening there.
That was like Mother Nature doing her job, I think.
You can't deny that.
Yeah.
So his family immediately, I mean, that must have been, because they're always going to hold out hope,
even though it looks like, you know, I'm sure they were probably sitting there trying to
reserve themselves to the idea that John Wayne Gacy likely killed their son.
But you're always going to hold that little shred of hope.
Of course.
But once they found his body, they were like, all right, we want to do something to honor him.
So his family immediately founded the Robert J. Pist Foundation to, quote, recognize and support
those individuals in organizations or activities committed to helping reduce crimes against children.
That's awesome.
I love when families, like, do shit like that.
They're like, I'm going to make, you know, I'm going to make lemonade out of lemons.
Well, and to have the strength to do that in such an awful.
awful, terrible situation.
Yeah.
To make something positive.
Yeah.
To make something positive out of a really,
really negative situation.
So January 10th,
he entered a not guilty plea,
L.O.
That's Annie's birthday. Happy birthday.
Hey, there you go.
And this is 79,
by the way.
They also tried to get him released on bond.
And obviously that was rejected.
Yeah, the judge was like, no.
Why even try?
Like, don't waste your time.
Oh, these different.
defense attorneys, I realize they're doing their job. I understand that. But knowing what you know,
it's really frustrating to hear them try to get this guy freedom. It's like, no, he needs to be behind bars.
They also wanted to try the insanity defense, of course. You would hope that he was insane. Yeah,
which I think I said that in the first part. Yeah, you did. And it's, it doesn't look like he was.
He wasn't. Uh, Dr. Robert A. Reifman, who is the director of the Psychiatric Institute of the Circular.
court of Cook County, he said the defendant was mentally fit to stand trial.
So his lawyer claimed, his lawyer Sam Anmarante was like, well, he, you know, he drifts
in and out of different personalities while we're talking.
And like he blames this personality named Jack for the murders.
And he says that Jack's the one who did all this.
Like I think he has multiple personalities.
Like he's sick.
I think he just knew what he was doing.
Yeah.
And they were like, yeah, no, that ends up falling apart later.
So during trial, he was happy as a fucking clam.
Like, totally happy.
Just sitting there like, whatever.
Like, didn't give a shit.
That's real weird.
The only time he ever even, like, flinched was when they mentioned that they were going for the death penalty.
And he looked like, oh, fuck.
Like, that's the only time that he looked, like, startled.
It became real.
But at one point, he would, like, turn around while they were doing jury selection and just, like, look at the crowd behind him and just, like, smile at people.
and he actually tried to hit on a woman sketch artist who was there doing sketches for it.
Like he like started trying to hit on her.
What?
She was like, no, thank you, sir.
She's like, I'm actually busy for the rest of my life.
It's so weird.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like, I'm actually leaving the planet.
So, sorry.
Yeah.
So the prosecution went hard and went into gruesome detail about the murders.
Like, they were like, we are going to show you that this is a fucking evil man.
Like, I'm sorry, but you're going to hear some shit.
So, and they wanted to show, woof.
And they wanted to show like the callousness of John Wayne Gacy.
That's what they really wanted to show.
This at one point they said, like, because one of the workers at the home was like,
if the devil is alive, he lived here.
Like they were literally like, this man is the fucking devil.
So apparently, Gacy had bragged, and they brought this up in trial,
that when Greg Gaudzick was working for him before he murdered him, he said,
funny the kid unknowingly dug his own grave one day that's not funny at all isn't that the most
fucked up shit you can think of i mean that's fucked up he he had this kid dig a trench in the crawl
space and he told him he was doing it so he can move pipes into there that ended up being where he
buried him that's some twisted fucked up sadistic shit that's so beyond that's so beyond um
and the victim's families all got up on the stand
they gave like harrowing testimonies
talking about like you know
that they were walking on the streets trying to find
their missing children that like you know
just giving all those victim impact statements that you need
Des Plains police detective
David Hackmeister recalled that
a few days before they arrested Gacy
they said he walked up to some of the people that were
the officers that were surveyed like doing the surveillance
on him and this is when I mentioned this earlier
he said he or um i think they were talking about pogo the clown like the officers were like so you're a
fucking clown and he was like oh yeah and they're talking about it and he goes you know clowns can get away
with murder and he said it right to them and like you didn't think that was kind of come back to haunt you
later and that got brought up of course and uh it's in fact they also were talking about how uh clowns
professional professional clowns in that area were losing work when this all came out because
parents didn't want clowns around their kids because they were like yeah what the
fuck which I feel bad for like professional clowns of that area because they're like we're
not all fucking brutal like we actually just wanted her spread joy to your children we
literally just want to make your kids happy it's like that's right but I get it like yeah I
wouldn't if I was a parent I'd be the same way but I'm like wow poor clowns so uh catch
22 yeah so Dr. Thomas Alicio who is a clinical psychologist from Rockford said
that Gacy was very bright, very intelligent.
And he said that he would probably rank among the top 10% of the population in intelligence.
Wow.
Which is interesting.
And he also said that he said he thought he was borderline schizophrenic.
He wasn't going to diagnose him as schizophrenic, but he said he was borderline.
He said, quote, he was a person who on the surface looks normal but has all kinds of neurotic, antisocial, psychotic illnesses.
I don't agree with that.
I was just going to ask you that.
A lot of people don't.
A lot of other clinical psychologists don't.
They also, because they brought a ton of doctors and clinical psychologists because
they were really trying to get that insanity defense.
So they brought in Dr. Richard Rappaport, who was a psychiatrist and a professional
witness for like this kind of thing.
And he had been, he had sat in for.
65 hours of interviews with John Wing-Gacy.
And he said, after all that, he said he's not psychologically ill.
And he said, there is no evidence of brain disorder or disease.
He's just a fucking evil guy.
That's terrifying.
So they brought in Dr. Leonard L. Heston, who's a professor of psychiatry.
And he actually had examined Gacy during his sodomy conviction.
So they brought him back for this.
And he agreed.
Not cool, but like, wow.
But he was, yeah, but he was, like,
like I've seen this guy before.
I know what he's capable of.
And then he was like, he's sane as fuck.
He's just evil.
It was like redemption for him to be like, Jesus Christ, please listen to me this time.
Yeah, like I said it earlier.
I say it again.
Right.
And then they brought who we discussed in part two, I believe, Robert Donnelly, who was
the 21-year-old who Gacy, let me remind you.
And by the way, trigger warning, this is real bad.
Gacy brutally raped him, tortured him.
I mean, this kid took the stand and had to describe that he was beaten.
He was assaulted.
He was raped to the point of unconsciousness several times.
He was, Gacy played Russian roulette with him.
Oh, my God.
Is he the one that threw up on the stand?
No, that's Jeffrey Rignall.
Oh, okay.
They bring him back up.
But, and they use, that he used an array of different sized dildos on this poor man.
that Gacy held his head underwater in a bathtub until he passed out
finally dropped him off in an alley after all of this
and told him not to go to the police because he was like you won't be believed anyway
and that happened and he went to the police and he wasn't believed so cool
and while he was on the stand he broke down like several times
and then he started to scream this is hell this is hell
like he literally was and when you see the physical reactions that are happening
from his survivors, you're like, what is that house?
Like, that house, what happened in that house must be beyond what any of us can conjure up.
No.
Because this poor kid is literally like this 21-year-old kid, like normal adjusted kid,
after what happened in that house, is sitting there screaming and sobbing and saying,
this is hell, this is hell.
That is your absolute worst nightmare times a million, I would say.
It truly is.
And this is when they brought Jeffrey Rignall.
onto the stand and he told his tale about being raped and he's the one who said that somebody else
was in the room he believed oh i was going to ask you that um i didn't know if it was the boy that testified
before yeah this is um and he's the one who said i mean he had the same kind of stuff done to him
he was put in the rack um and when he was on the stand during this this is the guy who um
ended up throwing up on the stand and they had to recess the jury they had to bring they literally
had to like carry him out because he was like absolutely falling apart.
That's awful.
Yeah.
So then they brought Dr. Arthur Hartman, who is the chief psychologist of the psychiatric
institute of the Cook County Circuit Court.
He went on the stand and he was like, you know what?
I think that John Wayne Gacy totally understands what his actions are wrong.
He totally understands what he's doing.
He is sane, but he goes, I think he is psychotic and I think he's sexually deviant.
Yeah. So he said, clearly.
And he was saying basically he has a personality disorder. He does not have a psychological illness.
Like those are two very different things. And he said no one's, because they were trying to argue, the defense was trying to say he had psychotic breaks every, like temporary insanity every time he killed someone.
That's basically what they were trying to argue. That's very convenient to happen 33 times.
Well, this guy was like, no one suffers from 33 moments of temporary insanity to this level.
Like, no one does that.
So he said, he also said, I sat with him.
He did the fucking multiple personality thing with me.
It's fake as fuck.
Like, he was like, I can spot that a mile away.
And he was like, what people don't understand.
Well, that's it.
He was like, what people don't understand is they think that they know what multiple personality disorder is.
So they think they should just fade into different personalities.
And that we're going to be like, whoa.
You really have it.
And he's like, but what people don't understand is that people who legitimately suffer
for multiple personalities, they don't remember the events when another personality takes over.
So they would be like, oh, that was Jack.
I don't know what Jack did.
Right.
Because I'm not Jack.
Like, I'm John.
And I don't recognize who that person is.
But when John Wing-Gaisie is telling everybody, well, Jack did this, he's going, well, then Jack took the garot and he did this.
And then Jack raped this boy and Jack did this.
And he's like, well, that's all well and fine.
But you wouldn't know what Jack did.
Because if Jack took over control of your body in your mind, you're not you.
So why would John know what Jack did?
He wasn't there.
He's like, you can call yourself Jack, but you're still John.
Well, and that's, I think the jury was like, oh, shit.
I think that's when it made it very clear, like, it's very easy to fake multiple personality disorder,
but it's very easy to spot when you are trained for it.
And he was basically being like,
he should have read more about it because he did the classic fuck up with it he's like basically all
around this guy sucks basically he's a fucking idiot even though he's really smart but that's not and a
fraud um so so that jury went uh for deliberations for two hours only two hours that long for
murder conviction though of this magnitude two hours is not a long time yeah um they came back
and found him guilty and when he was let out
of the courtroom, he smirked and winked at the deputy sheriff.
As he was let out after being charged with, after being convicted of 33 murders.
Yeah, he just doesn't give a shit.
Also, they were thinking initially of trying to do separate trials for each victim.
But they were like, it's going to cost a shit ton and we just want to get.
And I think the victim's families were like, I just want him gone.
We just wanted it over with.
Yeah, we don't want to sit through all this.
Now, during sentencing, Cuncle for the prosecution, said, quote, that John Wiengacy was, quote, competent.
He was a skillful torturer and a murderer.
And then he said, quote, if you allow this evil man to walk this earth, then God help us all.
Because he was telling me, he was saying, do the death penalty.
Right.
And then he said, quote, if this is not an appropriate case for the death penalty, then there is no death penalty in Illinois.
This is a case that cries out, not only for the voices of 33 dead, but the voices of 33 families.
But yes, the voices of every single citizen of the state.
And that voice says, John Gacy, enough, enough.
So they had two more hours of deliberation, under two hours of deliberation for the sentencing.
Came back, death penalty for John Wayne Gacey.
Good.
Now, he went to prison.
He seemed to be fine in prison.
that he painted a lot.
There's a lot of John Wayne Gacy art floating around in the world right now.
He painted clowns, right?
He did paint clowns.
He would paint a lot of, like, self portraits of himself outside of clown makeup and also
as Pogo.
He also did a lot of weird Disney, like paintings, like the seven dwarves.
That's like Ed Kemper reading, like, children's books.
It's very strange.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think like two business guys bought a bunch of his paintings at one point,
just so they could buy them an auction.
do like an auction to raise money for the victim's families just so they could destroy them.
Like they paid a shit ton of money for them just to destroy them.
That's incredible.
Isn't that cool?
Yeah.
And but you know, like you can, they're in a lot of places.
He would also answer like surveys and stuff like which you can find.
We'll try to post a couple if I can find them because his answers are very strange to some questions.
But July 14th, 1980, artist and professional.
and renowned facial reconstructionist Betty Pat Gatliff reconstruction reconstructed the faces of the
unidentified victims because right now there's a lot of unidentified.
So she painstakingly reconstructed these and they were like beautiful busts of just all these boys.
And the Cook County medical examiner Robert Stein, who was part of the case, tried to convince
so they did a press conference where they unveiled all these and were like, does anyone know who these
boys are and they were they were wondering for a while like why more families hadn't come forward they
were like why do we have all these unidentified boys i mean they're teenagers and they were like
trying to figure out if you know missing usually missing kids of this age they're going to have a
family it's cleared up right away yeah so dr robert stein went on this press conference and he
tried to convince families to come forward because he was like i think he was basically like i think
they're not coming forward because they think that their kids were associated with Gacy somehow
or associated themselves with Gacy.
And it had a lot to do with like, you know, the gay lifestyle.
They were basically like, we don't want to admit that our boys were possibly getting into
some like sexual thing with this older man.
But like they might not have been, but that doesn't mean that all of these people were.
Well, and that's the thing.
So at the press conference, Dr. Robert.
Stein said, after they unveiled the faces, he said, quote,
there is no evidence that an individual child here participated in any sexual deviate practices.
Yeah.
So he was trying to be like outwardly like, we think these kids were abducted.
Like they please do not think that your child had anything to do with this and like please come forward because we want to identify them.
You claim your child.
And Robert Stein actually was like such a fucking like champion for these kids.
He sounds like it.
He made it his duty to identify these boys.
Like, so there were nine donated brown caskets that they used for the boys for the
unidentified remains.
They put yellow mums and daisies in a semicircle outside Abbey Chapel of Oak Ridge Glen Oak Cemetery.
They had a service with nine, or I'm sorry, they had a service for the nine unidentified
victims, like a full service.
And then each one is buried in a separate cemetery with its own, it had its own graveside service, each boy.
Like they made sure to make it.
And he wanted this to happen.
And they each got its own marker that say, quote, we remembered.
Wow.
So they don't want.
And then he is quoted as saying, quote, I don't want to see you go to your final resting places as just numbers.
Yeah.
That's.
Which it's like, great.
what a fucking guy like you're just saying it's like that is a death investigator like that is that is what a medical examiner
should be like that is your whole job is to fight for someone who cannot fight for themselves anymore
like that's your whole job and that's justice to see him be like I'm going to fight for these kids
not to have to go to their graves unidentified forever like they will not be this will be the final
place it's like you're such a badass and
what's awesome is some of these boys have been identified.
So I'm going to skip ahead and then I'm going to go back to the fun part about John
Wing-Gacy dying.
Okay.
So, because I want to skip forward and just say some of these boys were identified as a
result of this hard work.
So November 9th, 2011, DNA identified 19-year-old William George Bundy.
So he was identified through DNA.
July 19th, 2017.
DNA from a brother and sister
identified 16 year old victim Jimmy Hakenson.
So they gave their DNA.
It was able to match up with the DNA they collected.
They were able to identify him.
So they have two more identified.
So that's huge.
Now, going back, so Gacy's in prison,
you know, he's painting fucking portraits.
He's talking to people.
He's being a dick.
He's claiming that there was accomplices,
that he didn't do all this.
by himself. He's trying anything at this point.
He, uh, so on May 10th, 1994, at age 52, he was executed at 12.58 a.m. at Stateville Correctional
center. Bye. His last meal was 12 deep fried shrimp, a bucket of original recipe chicken from KFC.
I'll never eat at the same. French fries and a pound of strawberries. A pound. A pound.
pound of strawberries.
And his last words,
kiss my ass.
Those were his last words.
What a gem.
What a fucking gem.
What an absolute upstanding member of society.
Gacy, keeping it classy till the very fucking end.
Like, good riddins.
So, yeah.
So I think the last thing I just wanted to mention
was the accomplices thing,
because that is a theory.
What are your thoughts?
He's been floating around?
I don't think so.
I mean, if he had accomplices, maybe the teenage boys, like, didn't know what was going on but had an idea and maybe just dug trenches for him because they were like, we don't want to die.
Yeah.
I don't know if he had.
But Jeffrey Rignall does say that he thought somebody else was in the room.
What do you think about that?
To me, I can't discredit that.
If you thought he saw someone in the room, it's like maybe someone was in the room.
Here's my takeaway.
I think he's, like, trying to say that he's.
had accomplices in the murders.
I wonder if the accomplices were like people that joined, like, they thought it was like
some kind of sex ring or something like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But they weren't involved in the murders.
That's what I wonder.
I wonder if they were involved up to a point and then he took the final plunge.
Because he was very open about the fact before.
He did a Ted Bundy.
He switched his tune and then all of a sudden was like, what?
I don't know anything about this.
You're like, fuck you do.
They were found in your house.
Already said you did.
Yeah.
And they were all found.
your fucking crawl space. Like, get the fuck out of here, dude. Like, no one just crawled into your
house and buried all these bodies. Like, get out of here. And he'll have you believe that.
He will have, I've seen interviews with him where he's like, yeah, I came in and Michael Rossi
and David Cram had just murdered this kid. And I was like, what's going on? And then I left.
And then I came home and he was gone. They must have buried him in my crawl space. And it's like,
are you seriously trying to think, you really think people are going to believe that, you dumbass.
But he did. He absolutely believed that. For a real.
smart guy. You're real dumb.
Or he just thinks that everybody else is
dumb. Yeah, I think that's what it is.
So there is one that does raise
a big flag.
The murder of Robert Gilroy.
Gacy was in
Pittsburgh when Robert Gilroy
disappeared on September 15th
1977 and it is confirmed
by plane tickets.
So that's
something that he was found in the cross space
but I don't know.
So that is
that to me says
did he have an accomplice for
the abduction part? Like did somebody
did maybe these teenagers
help him
lure other teenagers
and maybe that's how it happened then when he came home
he murdered Robert Gilroy?
Or do you think somehow the Pittsburgh timeline just got
fucked up? I don't know. I don't know
if it got fucked up. I think maybe
I don't know. I really don't
I think he's the main
guy but maybe he
intimidated some teenage boys.
around him into helping him get people into his grasp.
That's what I think.
It's very eerie.
It is.
But that is the sordid tale of John Wayne Gacy.
You did a wonderful job.
That was a doozy.
Sorry these are so long, guys, but I, you know, I can't, I can't do it.
Oh, wow.
We're almost on an hour and a half.
Wow.
Sure are.
That felt way faster.
I was like, oh, that was only 45 minutes.
Yeah, it did.
It felt really fast.
That was weird.
Damn.
Time flies when you're doing this.
When you're really grossed out and horrified.
Yeah.
But I think before we leave you, I think we want to just say thank you to some patrons
because this episode is basically sponsored by them.
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Yeah, T-I-A-H-N.
I literally didn't hear a word you just said.
You know what?
I like the spelling and I wish I do how to pronounce it.
Yeah.
But it's awesome and you're awesome.
You're the best.
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it weird. But not so weird that you try to pretend to have multiple personality disorders and then
the multiple personality disorder guy is like, ah, that's not right jacket or John or whatever your
name is. And it's just like you can't really lie about everything. And don't keep it so weird
that you eat a pound of strawberries at once because I feel like that's probably not normal,
especially if you eat original recipe chicken and shrimp with it and whatever French fries,
like that's just not good. And don't keep it so weird that your last words are kissed my ass,
because that's actually pretty disrespectful and you shouldn't say that. Bye.
Rude. I also feel bad for the person who did his autopsy if they did it because
that's a stomach.
Yeah.
That's some stomach contents.
That's something.
Anybody that was associated with him in any way, I'm so, so sorry.
Me too.
So bye.
Bye.
