Murder: True Crime Stories - Ted Bundy: One of America’s Most Infamous Serial Killers
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Serial killers. Unsolved murders. Investigations that gripped America. If you think you know these cases, think again. America's Most Infamous Crimes is a Crime House original hosted by Katie Ring. E...ach week, we go deep on one of the most notorious true-crime cases in American history. Not the quick recap version, but the full story told across multiple episodes every Tuesday through Thursday. We break down: What happened: the crimes, the victims, and the evidence How investigators closed in: the breakthroughs, the dead ends, and the mistakes Why it still matters: the lasting impact on American law, culture, and justice From the serial killers who terrorized entire cities to the cold cases that still don't have answers, this is the podcast that takes you beyond the headlines and inside the investigation. New episodes drop every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. America’s Infamous Crimes is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For more, Follow us on Instagram at @Crimehouse 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 Carter Roy.
I've got something special for you today.
If you're enjoying murder true crime stories,
then I know you'll love this new podcast from Crime House.
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whether unfolding now or etched into American history,
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I have episode one for you right now, where Katie begins her deep dive into the case of Ted Bundy.
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This is crime house.
Some killers hide in the shadows.
Ted Bundy hid in plain sight.
He was educated, clean-cut, charismatic, and even considered attractive by some.
The fascination surrounding him isn't just about the crimes he committed,
but the unsettling realization that evil people don't always look like monsters.
They can look like your neighbor, your co-worker, your classmate, or even your partner.
Every crime tells a story about the people involved, the system that tried to stop it,
and the nation that couldn't look away.
Some cases are so shocking, so deeply woven into who we are, that decades later, we're still
asking, how did this happen?
I'm Katie Ring, and this is America's most infamous crimes.
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Before I get started, please be advised that this episode contains descriptions of physical and sexual assault and murder.
So please listen with care.
This is the first of our three episodes on Ted Bundy, one of the most notorious serial killers of all time.
Today, I'll talk about his twisted origins, his descent into darkness,
and what turned him into one of America's most terrifying murderers.
From the moment, Ted Bundy was born, he was surrounded by lies.
Ted's mom, Louise, got pregnant in early 1946,
but his dad abandoned them,
which meant Ted was born out of wedlock that November.
This was a huge scandal that could have destroyed their family.
To avoid the stigma that came with being a young single mother,
Ted's grandparents raised him as their own son in Philadelphia.
He actually spent his early life thinking Louise was his older sister and not his mother.
In interviews, Ted claims that his upbringing was completely normal.
But according to some family members and biographers, Ted's grandfather, Samuel, was known to have a violent temper,
was racist and misogynistic, and would even harm animals.
And despite Bundy's claims, it seemed like whatever was going on in that household did have an effect on him psychologically.
One night in 1950, when Ted was just three years old, his teenage aunt Julia recalled waking
up and seeing him standing next to her bed.
But he wasn't there because he couldn't sleep or to ask for a glass of water.
As Julius squinted in the darkness, she saw Ted with a huge smile on his face and then realized
she was surrounded by butcher knives.
Of course, I'm not a psychologist, but this is not something that a three-year-old generally
thinks to do on their own.
They learned by copying behaviors they've seen.
So to me, this would indicate that something very wrong was going on in that house.
Luckily, Ted didn't try and hurt Julia that night.
But even with these signs that something was clearly wrong, his family didn't get him any help.
In fact, things only got less stable for him over time.
In 1951, when Ted was just four, he and Louise, who was still pretending to be his sister,
left Philadelphia and moved to Washington State.
It was supposed to be a fresh start, but it was a confusing adjustment for Ted.
Remember, he still thought his grandparents were his biological parents.
To him, it seemed like his older sister was separating him from his mom and dad.
This was just another moment of perceived betrayal that he'd remember for the rest of his life.
And things only got more confusing from there.
Shortly after moving, Louise met a guy named Johnny Bundy at church, but it wasn't long before things got serious.
They got married after just a few months of dating, and Johnny even adopted Ted.
But Ted never really accepted Johnny as his father.
He thought he was unintelligent and resented him for not being able to provide him with the
expensive clothes and items that he wanted.
Friends even recall Ted provoking Johnny and Johnny sometimes responding with violence.
They looked like a happy family on the outside, but Ted was just as miserable as he'd been in Philly.
And things only got worse when Ted found his birth certificate one day.
That's when he learned the truth that his birth father had abandoned him, and his older sister was
actually his mom.
As you'd expect, it turned his world upside down.
Ted became consumed by his bitterness.
He felt rejected and insecure, and as a teenager, he developed a reputation for being
kind of a loner.
His attitude was strange to his classmates, because on the surface, Ted seemed to have it all.
He was smart, good-looking, and well-spoken.
A lot of the girls at his high school wondered why he'd never went on dates.
That's the thing about insecurity, though.
It isn't always rational.
Despite everything he had going for him, Ted never felt like he fit in, especially around young women.
He was interested in girls, but Ted wasn't able to express those desires in a healthy way.
He was more comfortable being on the outside looking in.
Somewhere, he was in control.
So instead of letting himself be vulnerable, he started sneaking out at night to take walks around his
neighborhood, stalking women and peeping on them as they got dress. He'd fantasize about dominating
these women and controlling them. He graduated high school in 1965 when he was 18 with average
grades and moved on to the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington. A lot of young people
treat college as a fresh start, a way to reinvent themselves, but not Ted. He felt lonely and
aimless. He couldn't decide on a major and had trouble making friends. Ted thought that getting a
girlfriend would solve a lot of issues, both in terms of his identity crisis and his urge to peep on
women. He decided that if he was going to really make a major change in his life, he had to push
himself further out of his comfort zone. So in 1966, when Ted was 20, he transferred to the
University of Washington in Seattle. But instead of fixing his problems, it only made them worse.
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After Ted Bundy transferred to the University of Washington, it seemed like the move to Seattle
was a fresh start.
He decided to study Chinese, thinking he could work in the State Department someday
as a liaison to East Asia.
It might seem like kind of a random choice, but with Ted, everything was calculated.
In his mind, working for the government was the kind of position that was a way.
would give him the authority and control he wanted so badly. The change of scenery also helped Ted
get something else he wanted, a girlfriend. It wasn't long before he hit it off with a classmate
named Diane Edwards, a beautiful, driven young woman from a wealthy California family. When they
started dating, it seemed like Ted finally found everything he wanted. But the problem was he didn't
feel like he was good enough for Diane. She expected a lot from a boyfriend, and he tried to live up to
those expectations by dressing better and improving his conversational skills, but he couldn't handle
the pressure. Sometime in 1967, when Ted was 20 or 21, he was starting to question everything,
including his career goals. His grades took a nosedive and he was still overcome with unhealthy
sexual desires. Ted thought that having a loving girlfriend would stop him from fantasizing about
violence, but now he was afraid that those thoughts would never truly go away. Things only
got worse when Diane dumped Ted after about a year of dating. The breakup confirmed his
worse insecurities, and instead of proving them wrong, he gave it to them. The next year in
1968, Ted dropped out of college. He spent the next few months traveling aimlessly around the country,
not doing much of anything. But Ted hadn't completely given up on making something of himself.
So when an old friend suggested getting involved in politics, he gave it a chance. Just like his dream of
working for the State Department, being in politics would give Ted some of the authority and
control he was so desperate for by giving him something to be in charge of. He started out by
volunteering for Arthur Fletcher's campaign for Lieutenant Governor of Washington. Fletcher didn't
win, but Ted loved the experience anyways. It gave him the sense of purpose he'd been missing
ever since his breakup with Diane, so he decided to give a career in politics a real shot.
In 1969, when Ted was 22, he enrolled at Temple University in Philadelphia to pursue a degree in urban planning.
But even with his renewed sense of purpose, he still struggled with the darkness inside of him.
He went back to his old habit of peeping wearing a fake mustache and a wig while he stalked the campus at night.
By this point, his sexual fantasies had become even more disturbing.
Now, he wasn't just thinking about abducting the women he stalked.
He wanted to sexually abuse them and kill them too.
And at some point during his first semester in Philadelphia,
Ted decided to give in to those desires.
One night in 1969, the 23-year-old drove to Ocean City, New Jersey,
and tried to approach a young woman outside of a bar.
His plan was to kidnap her once her guard was down,
but apparently the conversation didn't go the way he planned.
Eventually, Ted tried to grab the woman, but she was thankfully able to escape.
Meanwhile, Ted rushed back home and managed not to get caught.
Tragically, the experience only made him more determined to try again.
After only a couple months at Temple University, Ted moved back to Washington with a new scheme.
By day, he would work hard to appear as normal as possible, to seem like he was above suspicion.
Once that image was in place, he could unleash his dark side at night, a persona he called the entity.
That was the real Ted Bundy,
the one he'd been struggling to contain all his life.
And now he was ready to embrace it.
The first step of Ted's plan was to find another steady girlfriend.
In September of 1969, he met a divorced single mother named Elizabeth Kletfer at a bar.
24-year-old Elizabeth was smart and mature.
She had to be to take care of her three-year-old daughter all on her own.
From the moment they started dating, Elizabeth was clear she was looking for something serious.
So if Ted expected to stay with her, he would need to get his act together.
That played right into Ted's hands.
He told Elizabeth he was planning to go back to college, then law school after he graduated.
And Elizabeth took him out his word.
She had so much faith in him, she even paid his tuition when he went back to the University of Washington in 1970.
Ted's twisted plan had finally given him the motivation he needed to succeed.
He became an honor student, got involved in local.
politics and was seen as a rising star in the community, which was exactly what Ted wanted
people to think. Nobody suspected that this clean-cut, respectable young man was going out at night,
watching young women in bars and following them home. Sometimes he went up to his targets
while they were still at the bar and took them out on dates if they were interested. He cheated on
Elizabeth constantly with multiple one-night stands. On top of that, he loved to steal from people
just for the thrill of it.
He robbed homes and shoplifted
from businesses taking things like clothes,
stereos, and even an eight-foot tree
from a local nursery.
Elizabeth never knew about the cheating,
although she did pick up on the rampant theft.
It bothered her, but she mostly dismissed it
as a small flaw in her otherwise perfect boyfriend.
It actually distracted her from prying into
what he got up to at night.
They didn't live together,
but whenever she noticed he was out late,
she assumed he was going around stealing rather than doing something much worse.
So for the next few years, Ted kept living his double life.
In 1972, he graduated from the University of Washington and was accepted to a couple of law schools.
At 26 years old, he finally felt like he was making something of himself.
But it still wasn't enough.
Ted's impulses were getting even darker, and it wouldn't be long before he unleashed them.
He'd later described the dark feeling inside of him as an intense pressure in his gut,
like a tension that kept winding tighter and tighter.
He was consumed with rage, and no amount of peeping, stealing, or fantasizing could make it go away.
Ted wanted to up the Annie even more, but he'd learned from his first attempt to kidnap a woman
that things might not go the way he planned.
Ted was a planner, and as always, he wanted to be prepared for every possibility,
To make sure he didn't get caught, he decided to learn everything he could about how the police operated.
So Ted deferred his law school admission and used his political connections to get a job with the Seattle Crime Prevention Advisory Commission.
Working there gave Ted access to all kinds of data on violent crime.
He learned about the investigative techniques detectives commonly used,
and that communication between different jurisdictions was limited.
After about a year, 26-year-old Ted felt like he'd learned what he needed.
He left the Crime Commission and enrolled at a local law school in the fall of 1973.
But his concentration was starting to waver.
His desire to dominate and destroy was overwhelming him.
And in early 1974, Ted took it to another level.
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On the night of January 4th, 1974, Ted drove to the University District in Seattle,
a neighborhood that was popular with students.
Ted liked to peep on young women there, and that night, he decided to prey on 18-year-old Karen Sparks,
a freshman political science major who lived in the basement of a house she shared with some friends.
Karen was pretty brunette and had her hair parted down the middle.
From far away, she looked a lot like Ted's ex-girlfriend, Diane Edwards.
Whether that was Ted's reason for choosing Karen, he was dangerously fixated on her.
He followed Karen home, blending in with all of the other students who were out that night.
He hung back as Karen went inside and got ready for bed, then watched her sleep through a small window.
It wasn't long before he was overwhelmed by rage and desire.
He slipped through an unlocked door on the opposite side of the house, then made his way to Karen's room.
It would have only taken one creaky floorboard or someone heading to the kitchen for a late-night snack to stop him,
but the place was quiet as Ted crept down to the basement, completely undetected.
For a moment, Ted just watched Karen's sleep.
He'd pushed his obsession with peeping to its limit, but it wasn't enough for him.
All of the sudden, he ripped off a piece of her bedframe and swung it into Karen's skull.
Before she could even take a look at her attacker, Karen went limp, blood seeping into her mattress.
Ted sexually assaulted her, beat her even more than left her for dead.
Once he finished, he sneaked back out as quietly as he'd entered.
For hours, none of Karen's housemates realized something was wrong.
It wasn't until 2.30 the following afternoon that someone noticed that she hadn't come out of her room.
One of the young men who lived with her peeked inside and saw Karen bundled up in bed.
covered by a pile of blankets.
He figured she was sleeping and left her alone.
But five hours later, so this would be around 7.30 p.m., she was still there.
At that point, someone went back into check on Karen.
When she didn't answer, they pulled back her blankets and realized what had happened to her.
Miraculously, Karen was still alive, although she'd fallen into a coma.
She was rushed to the hospital as news spread around campus that a young woman had been attacked.
The police launched an investigation, but there wasn't much to go on.
Ted hadn't left anything behind at the scene, and these were the days before DNA profiling.
Although Ted certainly hadn't planned for Karen to survive the attack,
his horrific plan had otherwise gone just as he'd wanted.
Even after Karen woke up from her coma 10 days later, she wasn't able to identify him.
So after less than a month, he decided it was time to strike again.
After midnight on February 1st, 1974, Ted went back to the same neighborhood where he'd nearly killed Karen Sparks.
He ended up only a couple minutes away from her house outside another basement apartment.
This one belonged to 21-year-old Linda Ann Healy, a senior at Washington University.
Linda had gone out with some friends to a popular college bar called Dantes.
After some drinks and dancing, she called it an early night.
She watched TV with her roommate, then chatted by her.
with her boyfriend on the phone for about an hour before falling asleep.
Linda had no idea that the whole time Ted Bundy had been stalking her, and he was desperate
for another victim.
That night, Linda and her housemates had left their front door unlocked, and Ted was able
to enter without anybody noticing.
He made his way to Linda's room and beat her until she was unconscious.
But he'd learned from his experience with Karen Sparks.
Instead of continuing his assault in Linda's room, he dressed her in a blouse and a blouse and
jeans and cleaned up the evidence as best he could, including making her bed.
Then he dragged her out into the night.
Ted managed to get Linda in his car and drove to a secluded spot where he knew nobody would
find them.
There he sexually assaulted and murdered her.
Afterwards, he dismembered her body, scattering the remains off to the side of the road
on Taylor Mountain, about 18 miles from Seattle.
He raced back home to his girlfriend Elizabeth and climbed into bed like nothing.
was wrong. Linda and Healy was officially Ted Bundy's first confirmed murder victim, but she
wouldn't be his last. For this show, we're going to be doing a Q&A at the end of each episode,
so if you have any questions or comments, make sure to let us know on social so we can talk about
them at the end. In cases like these, you have to ask yourself, what would have happened if Ted Bundy
was raised in a loving, supportive household? What do you think he would have been like? To preface this,
forensic psychologist, but I do love forensic psychology. And the hard thing with Ted Bundy's story is that
there are a lot of conflicting accounts, as I said earlier. Ted claims that his childhood was completely
normal, that he had no abuse and that nothing in his childhood affected the crimes he did later in his
life. There are, however, other accounts from family members and biographers that his grandfather
was abusive. So we have that conflicting thing, but when it comes to serial killers,
we see a lot of abuse earlier in life.
But the other hand, there's a lot of people who have had
and experienced much more severe abuse
that haven't turned out to be serial killers.
It's terrifying to see how calculated Ted was,
how everything he did was for the sole purpose
of getting away with being a serial killer.
How do you think he managed to appear so normal externally
for as long as he did?
Most psychologists say that Ted Bundy showed strong signs of psychopathy.
And one thing that's interesting is that researchers are now suggesting that traits of psychopathy actually have biological components, particularly in how the brain is wired.
So on one hand, we have people who have been severely abused in childhood who have not become serial killers or even violent.
And on the other side, we do have psychopaths who have grown up in seemingly normal houses and have become serial killers.
So I believe that upbringing doesn't determine everything, but it can shape how traits unfold,
like abuse, attachment disruption, identity confusion, and abandonment can all impact development
in meaningful ways.
So could a loving, stable household have changed his path, possibly, but the short and
somewhat unsatisfying answer is that we'll never know.
So going back to psychopathy, many psychopass actually have an unmasal.
unsettling ability to blend in. So as children, a lot of them are looked at as weird or don't fit in,
but over time, they're able to observe how people have interpersonal relationships,
and they can actually model that very well. So even though they may not feel emotions deeply,
they can perform them very convincingly. And a lot of them aren't just good at blending in.
they are actually very charismatic, charming, and even magnetic.
So I think that's part of the reason Ted Bundy's story fascinated people so much.
Because before cases like this, many people imagine serial killers as monsters or some like
obvious weirdos, but Bundy didn't fit that image.
Like he was educated.
He fit in socially.
He had relationships and was even described as charming or even attractive, which I
do not agree with, but that's what some people thought.
Regarding the fact that a lot of his actions seemed very calculated in not getting caught,
we do see most serial killers creating kind of personas to hide their crimes,
but Bundy did take it further.
He tended to gravitate towards positions of authority.
He wanted to get into politics.
He studied law.
He volunteered with the Seattle Police Department.
These all gave him credibility in the sense of power.
But in my opinion, it's not supported by any facts.
But I believe that he did get kind of a thrill of being in these positions of authority,
but also getting away with his crimes, like right under their noses.
His choice of victim does seem to be clear, how he went after women who were stand-ins for
his girlfriend, or maybe his mom, women he felt like had wronged him,
and how he wanted to ultimately have control over them.
It makes you wonder again about the psychology behind killers with this mindset.
set. And if things could have been different, if he'd gotten the help he clearly needed, what do you think?
As we kind of discussed earlier in the episode, a lot of his victims did resemble his ex-girlfriend.
And one thing that I didn't know before I did this deep dive for this episode is that he actually
won back that girlfriend that originally broke up with him. And he won her back, proposed to her,
and then completely ghosted to her with no explanation. And
given his psychopathy and his narcissistic traits, that doesn't surprise me at all.
Many psychologists interpret that as an attempt to reclaim power and control.
So it's not about love.
It's kind of about winning and punishment.
So although he never said he chose victims that reminded him of his ex,
I think that there were something inside of him that did want to punish her.
And that's why he chose some victims.
that resembled her. Unfortunately, traditional therapy hasn't been very successful with psychopaths.
However, there are studies on early intervention, especially focused on parenting, social skills,
and emotional regulation that have shown promising results. So again, we never know whether early
interventions would have actually helped or not, but there is some promising research that maybe
in the future we can help lead kids with these traits in a better direction.
Okay, we're about to go over the time limit, but I will be breaking down some more of my thoughts
or your guys' questions in the next episodes, as well as some of my top safety tips as a self-defense
instructor.
Thanks so much for joining me for this episode.
If you're watching on YouTube, make sure to subscribe.
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Come back tomorrow for episode.
Episode 2 on Ted Bundy.
Thank you for listening to hear parts two and three of this story.
Follow America's most infamous crimes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
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