The Wicked Crimes of Richard Speck

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Well, I Never

Well, I Never

Ай бұрын

Richard Speck's crimes shocked the nation in 1966 when he brutally murdered eight student nurses in their Chicago residence. The atrocity sparked widespread fear and outrage. His callous actions and subsequent capture and trial brought attention to issues of violence against women and mental health in the criminal justice system. The case remains a chilling reminder of the horrors individuals are capable of, leaving a lasting impact on society's perception of safety and the pursuit of justice.
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Пікірлер: 350
@WellINever
@WellINever Ай бұрын
Thank you for watching! The Ziporyn interview can be found here: studsterkel.wfmt.com/programs/authors-jack-altman-and-dr-marvin-ziporyn-discusses-their-book-born-raise-hell
@keip4568
@keip4568 Ай бұрын
Must be so nice to be these victims and always remembered positivity. Better than living a meangliess life. And if you did leave life or was ended no one would know or remember you like a homeless person. I'm not joking... Especially those who live unfortunate lives that the general public blame it is your own fault then they are a victim if neglect and abuse and have no one.
@emmajulian8716
@emmajulian8716 Ай бұрын
Thank you Mr brodie I enjoy your videos so much if possible could you consider doing a video about murders in Leicester as I know we have a few off interest ie the green bicycle murder off Bella Wright it was a bit of a mystery for a little while plus I can't remember his name but near Bosworth Leicestershire a man killed his wife and tried to murder his step daughter and was on the gibbet for many years thank you Emma
@kayevans2964
@kayevans2964 Ай бұрын
When you said it was, at times, frustrating, you weren't kidding were you 😲 On a par with Lord Longford campaigning for Myra Hindley's release I'd say. It just goes to show you that titles and degrees don't make you smart!
@milodemoray
@milodemoray Ай бұрын
One thing that amazed me more even than the existence of Speck, was "he spent a month in an oxygen tent, and therefore his brain did not get a chance to develop..." I thought psychiatrists had to have medical training too? Not enough oxygen in an oxygen tent? Dear lord! Worse, the muppet went on to continue that ridiculous tale.
@MsSlimFace
@MsSlimFace Ай бұрын
The link goes to a page with Speck's photo, but there is no audio file.
@adchoalulle387
@adchoalulle387 Ай бұрын
I respect the fact you talked so much about the victims, and mentioned every single one by name. Too many murderers are so much better known than their victims.
@indianastones6032
@indianastones6032 Ай бұрын
Someone how thinks the same as me!! The victims should be remembered not the monsters whom stole rheir lives!!
@theatheobhv
@theatheobhv Ай бұрын
I agree
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
True!
@tinameyer7080
@tinameyer7080 Ай бұрын
Although that would be nice- it'll never happen. Most people are only "significant" to a small group of family, friends, and co-workers. Most are neither extra-ordinary nor "memorable" in any historical way....These serial killers, on the other hand, make certain that their actions in the world are, albeit depraved, "memorable".
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
@tinameyer7080 Well - we can still remember and think of the victims! (Instead of the idiot murderer.)
@o.mcneely4424
@o.mcneely4424 Ай бұрын
Unsurprising that a woman named Corazon had a stronger heart than the authorities thought she might when it came to testifying. That photo of her walking to the courthouse says it all; he brutally tortured and killed her friends and colleagues, and she was going to make sure he paid for it. Good on you, Nurse Amurao.
@vladtheimpala5532
@vladtheimpala5532 Ай бұрын
Why is her name significant? She certainly was strong and courageous. We’ll never know how many women he would have killed if he had gotten away with his crimes but why is it more unsurprising than if she had been named Doris or Samantha or any other name? Do you believe the name Corazon is significant in some way which gave her more strength?
@sandrahunter5904
@sandrahunter5904 Ай бұрын
Corazon is Spanish for 'heart'.
@haplessasshole9615
@haplessasshole9615 Ай бұрын
@@vladtheimpala5532 Corazon is Spanish for "heart," honey. Most names have meanings -- they're not just arbitrary syllables strung together. "Vlad," for example, means "glorious ruler." The most famous Vlad, of course, was less than glorious, but be that as it may, many people select names which they hope will influence their children's futures for the better. Asian cultures are famous for it, which is why many fan sites for anime list name etymologies in character profiles. Incidentally, "Doris" is of Greek origin and means "gift of the sea," and "Samantha," obviously the female form for "Samuel," means "told by God," and is Hebrew.
@Ilivedbih
@Ilivedbih Ай бұрын
​@@vladtheimpala5532 Yeah it's cus it means heart 😅
@vladtheimpala5532
@vladtheimpala5532 Ай бұрын
@@sandrahunter5904 Thanks
@merlapittman5034
@merlapittman5034 Ай бұрын
What a monster. Some people are just too twisted up inside and should be locked up permanently, whether in prison or a mental health facility. It doesn't matter if they've suffered such severe trauma that it's not their fault or they don't understand what they're doing; other people still need to be protected from them
@kdallas3966
@kdallas3966 Ай бұрын
It is not a "mental health " issue.
@merlapittman5034
@merlapittman5034 Ай бұрын
@kdallas3966 I didn't say it was, but I wasn't very clear. And I don't think it was in this case - it sounds like to me like he chose to do what he did because he wanted to. But even if a person is really not responsible for their actions, they still need to be in a secure location where other people are protected from them
@keiththorpe9571
@keiththorpe9571 Ай бұрын
I read an article about the doctors who reported their concerns about Corazon Amurao's mental stability, how they said they were worried she might lapse into some kind of psychosis under the pressure of testifying. In the article I read, it was stated that most of the doctors' concerns were based entirely on racist and misogynistic assumptions, saying how her being a woman of Asian descent made her more prone to mental fatigue and collapse than might be a white woman. What a load of crap! She hung in there like a champ!
@littlewoodimp
@littlewoodimp Ай бұрын
The men who came up with all that guff about the mental & emotional capacity of women had never spent time with women who'd survived all manner of traumas & griefs. For most women - not those of his class of course - life was literally about blood sweat & tears. Talk about 'takes a licking but keeps ticking'! Women definitely fit that.
@Lenn869
@Lenn869 Ай бұрын
if thats all a load of bull where are all the female asian navy seals?
@DravenGal
@DravenGal Ай бұрын
@@littlewoodimp I fully agree with you, though I might have used different wording. But that's what years of doing Rocky Horror Picture Show does to one's mind...😉
@KLGChaos
@KLGChaos Ай бұрын
Meanwhile, she and the others from the Phillipines wanted to get help, while the American nurses just did nothing.
@Dragonblaster1
@Dragonblaster1 Ай бұрын
She was quick-thinking and level-headed young woman. Without her, it is likely that we would never have heard of Richard Speck. He supposedly muttered "Must've been the LSD" when he was arrested. But I was a student a long time ago, and like almost all the other students in early 1980s UK, I've had some spectacular and some terrifying experiences on LSD, but I never even gave anyone a faint bruise apart from myself occasionally.
@hound3000
@hound3000 Ай бұрын
The killing of the bird showed that his medical condition had nothing to do with him being a monster.
@MikadoYuma
@MikadoYuma Ай бұрын
Drinking and doing drugs starting at 12 is likely what caused it, but I spare no sympathy for this disgusting excuse of a man. Those "head injuries" the psychiatrist wanted to defend him on grounds of were likely just inflicted by drunken antics too.
@jonnybarnard8578
@jonnybarnard8578 Ай бұрын
​@@MikadoYuma I was on heroin from 15 to 27. Also drank, took Xanax, LSD, just about every type of drug there is. Never killed anyone. That's not what caused it, he would've had some sort of anti social personality regardless.
@sylverscale
@sylverscale Ай бұрын
​@@jonnybarnard8578It's usually a combination of many things. If it was only the drugs, especially alcohol, so many more murders would happen. Fortunately, most people aren't so twisted that they'd do such horrible things, no matter if they become addicted or not.
@vashtic2036
@vashtic2036 Ай бұрын
@@jonnybarnard8578 Mental illness/antisocial personality traits are typically considered to be caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors, yes
@Ilivedbih
@Ilivedbih Ай бұрын
My heart dropped again after hearing that 😢. That poor bird and poor women.
@ekramer2478
@ekramer2478 Ай бұрын
Thank you for speaking so very much about the nurse who survived all of that. STRONG woman.
@lovablelady-
@lovablelady- Ай бұрын
As a girl I watched that video on national tv. It was disgusting. I didn’t previously know who he was but I hated him ever since. It was a debased debauchery on film, and he was disgusting. RIP to those eight ladies. Stay blessed Corazon Amurao.
@johncentamore1052
@johncentamore1052 Ай бұрын
Am I the only one who felt incomplete by not hearing, "Right then! Til next time...."
@Hach-cn4bo
@Hach-cn4bo Ай бұрын
No, it didn't seem right to say it this time.
@shirleydowning9383
@shirleydowning9383 Ай бұрын
In 1968 I did an oral report on amphetamines for my highschool health class. I included Richard Speck as part of the narrative. This monster only became MORE bizarre in prison. 😡
@phaedrapage4217
@phaedrapage4217 Ай бұрын
Yes, yes he did.
@jujubees5855
@jujubees5855 Ай бұрын
My late mother in law's cousins used to play with Speck when they were kids and his family lived in the Dallas area in Texas. He was a creepy boy to the girls, even back then. He made her skin crawl and she'd run back in the house and read instead of playing outside. Bullying and getting handsy with girls.
@smorgasbroad1132
@smorgasbroad1132 Ай бұрын
Wow. She was a wise girl. A natural profiler. 👍🏻
@shadowpitched4401
@shadowpitched4401 Ай бұрын
@@smorgasbroad1132 No, she listened to her instincts. Ignoring them is what most people do, and then they find out they should have listened.
@RRRRRaa
@RRRRRaa Ай бұрын
As usual the legal system makes itself look utterly foolish when confronted with total psychopaths.
@spicencens7725
@spicencens7725 Ай бұрын
Looking good Paul! She is truly a pillar of strength! As evil as he was, she countered his evil by far! Rest in peace ladies💔
@thebooknitter
@thebooknitter Ай бұрын
How corazon saved herself is incredible. How truly terrible this was. Thank you Paul for the great work
@izmckenna
@izmckenna Ай бұрын
this video hit so very close to home. literally and figuratively. i cannot think about this case without crying. eight bright young women with so much potential, so much love to give, so much life left to live, lost forever. families and friends who carried that grief for the rest of their lives. chicago will never forget. Valentina, Merlita, Mary Ann, Suzanne, Pamela, Patricia, Nina, and Gloria will never be forgotten.
@margaretwhittaker2291
@margaretwhittaker2291 Ай бұрын
R.I.P. beautiful ladies
@manalanvanki
@manalanvanki Ай бұрын
The audacity of that scum to have said in the interview, that had one of the nurses not spat on him, they'd be alive. The audacity to put the weight and blame on that innocent woman Thank you for bringing this tragedy to light, may these women's names be remembered
@MightyMezzo
@MightyMezzo Ай бұрын
I recall how “Weekend Update” on Saturday Night Live reported on Richard Speck’s death: “Speck died despite the efforts of a student nurse to revive him with a toilet plunger.”
@billfletcher9118
@billfletcher9118 Ай бұрын
I wonder where she applied the plunger.
@MightyMezzo
@MightyMezzo Ай бұрын
@@billfletcher9118 Left to the imagination… 😉
@brendamckinley3036
@brendamckinley3036 Ай бұрын
I am devastated that I didn’t see that episode
@debbyparker5431
@debbyparker5431 Ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@jonnybarnard8578
@jonnybarnard8578 Ай бұрын
Yea, speck is a real jerk!
@markstothard630
@markstothard630 Ай бұрын
Geezus, he looks like the third Kray triplet!
@danaMccabe-dagmarK
@danaMccabe-dagmarK Ай бұрын
He sure does. Yikes!
@kimberlyrogers9953
@kimberlyrogers9953 Ай бұрын
You’re right ! Geeez
@beverleybradford9613
@beverleybradford9613 Ай бұрын
I thought that to
@UnicornSpoonie
@UnicornSpoonie Ай бұрын
I saw your comment before I saw his picture and holy s**t you weren’t kidding!! When it did pop up I was so surprised at how right you are! 👍
@NoahSpurrier
@NoahSpurrier Ай бұрын
Looks more like Tom Hardy.
@elizabethfarias9104
@elizabethfarias9104 Ай бұрын
This is one of the few cases that truly terrifies me to my core.
@dalepointer9414
@dalepointer9414 Ай бұрын
Madness has been with us since day one mankind walked the earth. During 1966, it was a year of madness. Vietnam war, crime, and mass murder. Whitman on the Texas tower, Speck in Chicago, and another in Arizona, Smith, who murdered four women and a baby at a hair parlor, shooting each in the head. He said: " I want to be famous like Speck!" He's still in prison. He was 18 at the time of the murderers.
@smorgasbroad1132
@smorgasbroad1132 Ай бұрын
King Solomon in Ecclesiastes states: "Nothing is new under the sun." 😞
@ExiledStardust
@ExiledStardust Ай бұрын
Speck wasn't crazy. He was just a human-shaped pile of shit.
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
Wasted his life, then!
@raquellofstedt9713
@raquellofstedt9713 Ай бұрын
I first hard of this case fromSimon and Garfunkel´s "Silent Night"which was sung against a back ground of the evening news broadcast of Christmas night, 1968. After all these years, the crimes and the wars have changed their names, but the song is, really the same.😞
@HB-iq6bl
@HB-iq6bl Ай бұрын
T.V. spread the news . Notoriety overtook heroism as a news report subject. . 90% of Americans had a TV by the 1960s
@laceneil4570
@laceneil4570 Ай бұрын
This case serves as a tragic example of why you should never co-operate with someone who has taken you captive, even if they claim to not wish you harm.
@elaineforan4751
@elaineforan4751 Ай бұрын
Nothing could have predicted what would happen to them. If he had intended to rob and leave, they did the right thing. Your comment is a little too close to victim blaming. Remember this was the 60s, long before the high profile serial killers that were discovered later. The case is famous because it is exceptional, in most other circumstances it would have passed off as a robbery.
@VincentGroenewold
@VincentGroenewold Ай бұрын
No it doesn't, always remember that people are individuals and unique. They have common treats, but that doesn't mean you can predict much. He apparently was calm at first and this strengthened the women's idea that cooperating worked.
@michaeldoherty78
@michaeldoherty78 Ай бұрын
This is not entirely true and every situation is different
@Catlady07
@Catlady07 Ай бұрын
Not always. Lisa Mcvey was a 17 year old kidnapped by serial killer Bobby Joe Long. She complied - offering to be his secret girlfriend - and he actually let her go. She is an amazing, brave lady who went on to have a successful career in law enforcement.
@murder13love
@murder13love Ай бұрын
Actually the best thing to do is cooperate. Literally the statistics show thats the best you can do to avoid harm.
@drumdad54sdl47
@drumdad54sdl47 Ай бұрын
A true reject of society. Absolute evil.
@megan9097
@megan9097 Ай бұрын
just before these horrible murders, my aunt's roommate briefly dated him. when he was identified but on the lam, they both had to go into hiding in case he came looking for them bc they were also student nurses 😱 auntie said he was just as ugly and creepy in person as you'd think he'd be.
@paulasmall5113
@paulasmall5113 Ай бұрын
I was 10yrs old living in Chicago. I was to young for adults to discuss this in front of children. Ive always wondered how he did this evil, how the one surviving nurse got away, and to be sure he couldnt do this again. I dont think i will ever forget this. The first murder on this scale iv ever heard. Thanks for the story, i knew you could find the information.
@Frosty_tha_Snowman
@Frosty_tha_Snowman Ай бұрын
Learned about Speck from Mindhunter... it's absolutely criminal that show didn't get finished.
@toniremer1594
@toniremer1594 Ай бұрын
My ex-boyfriend’s friend’s mother was the teacher of those nursing students. She rarely spoke about the crime, and she continued to have very fond memories of those student nurses. My mom, and her (this happened on July 4th of 1996) had a very lengthy conversation about the crime, and the student nurses; whatever she had told my mom, my mom would not tell my ex, or myself what was said. Rest In Paradise to all those nurses!
@editorblip9658
@editorblip9658 Ай бұрын
What a horrid being. Those poor women
@DevilZrain
@DevilZrain Ай бұрын
I have heard this story before but you added much more details than other sites/channels. This was well done and respectful to the victims.
@bunnymad5049
@bunnymad5049 Ай бұрын
Oh, I remember this. Horrific. Unbelievable. That one survived was a complete miracle. Poor girl.
@auntieclara1811
@auntieclara1811 Ай бұрын
Wow, great video and great comments. I grew up 1/2 a block away and passed the townhouse every day. It changed me forever, I was 10 years old. The beautiful neighborhood of Jeffrey Manor was never the same after that. I became a psychiatric social worker and think this crime led me in that direction. Very excellent presentation.
@joanhoffman3702
@joanhoffman3702 Ай бұрын
Some people are beyond redemption. RIP those 8 young women.
@jeanroe3428
@jeanroe3428 Ай бұрын
I read a true crime book about this guy a long time ago. I'm glad gave his surviving victim so much recognition. So many victims are forgotten. Nicely done!!
@davem8836
@davem8836 Ай бұрын
I was 13 when this happened and still remember the headline in the LA Times "8 Student Nurses Murdered." How the hell do human beings get wired so differently from one another? I mean does a dolphin suddenly decide to murder a bunch of other dolphins?
@bangitybangbabang
@bangitybangbabang Ай бұрын
I wouldn't be surprised if they did, dolphins are violent
@melissapinol7279
@melissapinol7279 Ай бұрын
Actually, I read that male dolphins sometimes kill calves. No one knows why.
@grannym2880
@grannym2880 Ай бұрын
Maybe not a bunch but yes, dolphins have been known to kill other dolphins.
@ashalon8729
@ashalon8729 Ай бұрын
His face is a crime!
@malina1239
@malina1239 Ай бұрын
Looks just like my narcissist ex😢 I’m so ashamed of being trapped in such a relationship..
@tamibennett8683
@tamibennett8683 Ай бұрын
​@malina1239 . Please don't be ashamed. You did end up leaving, though. That's all that matters. I left my ex after 3 months of marriage. I struggled with my decision to leave vs. being ashamed of such a short marriage. I decided that I would rather be free & alive.
@malina1239
@malina1239 Ай бұрын
@@tamibennett8683 thank you❤️
@katesims2346
@katesims2346 Ай бұрын
​@@malina1239 narc set traps for their victims. The shame should be on them. I speak from experience in the process of getting out.
@margaretwhittaker2291
@margaretwhittaker2291 Ай бұрын
@@tamibennett8683 we have something in common! I left my unstable abusive husband after 3 months. I met him at church!! I have never looked back. We both did the right thing and Malina too. Take care
@BillTyrrell2345
@BillTyrrell2345 Ай бұрын
Mr Paul reminds me some much of my grandfather. I just loved listening to him tell me stories. Makes me miss my grandfather.
@MaurauderGirl
@MaurauderGirl Ай бұрын
I know a woman who was a junior in the nursing program at that time and lived next door to the house. Hearing her talk about it is very sobering.
@nikkicat254
@nikkicat254 Ай бұрын
Thank you for actually telling us what happened to the survivor and talked about each of his victims, many channels only mention a survivor once, never says what happened to them long after, just what happened to the murderer! They focused on Speck on the Netflix series Mindhunter, and did a pretty good job with the actor they had playing him, they showed the part where he killed the bird!
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
Crazy bloke!! Hmm I don't think I've seen that series yet!
@Ms.HarmonyJ
@Ms.HarmonyJ Ай бұрын
Paul, I know I can rely on you and your team to consistently do a fantastic job and make my day great.
@donnariahi2975
@donnariahi2975 Ай бұрын
Wow I remember this crime. It was horrible. Thank you for handling of this.
@tomsparks6099
@tomsparks6099 Ай бұрын
A case so shocking it lives in infamy. I still always wonder, however, how eight women against one drunk man were not able to overcome him despite him having a knife only.
@nicolad8822
@nicolad8822 Ай бұрын
I just commented similarly. You could jump from those upstairs windows?
@fairyqueengee
@fairyqueengee Ай бұрын
I thought he had a gun
@alibenkahn5092
@alibenkahn5092 Ай бұрын
However it just goes to show that women MUST learn how to defend themselves. Being helpless is never a good idea.
@ticketyboo2456
@ticketyboo2456 Ай бұрын
​@@alibenkahn5092 it's offensive and misogynist to blame the victims.
@tricivenola8164
@tricivenola8164 Ай бұрын
@donnariahi2975 Well, perhaps the gods will give you an opportunity to find out.
@izmckenna
@izmckenna Ай бұрын
a very close family friend, Judy Dykton, was friends with the girls and actually saw the crime scene. she never spoke about it, we knew not to ask. she never mentioned anything about college or her time living there. she was haunted for the rest of her life. i hope she found some peace. we miss you Judy, you can finally rest.
@izmckenna
@izmckenna Ай бұрын
she is pictured at 7:28. second from the left, in white
@Mephibosheth52
@Mephibosheth52 Ай бұрын
I lived in Chicago when that happened. I was 15. Horrible
@ceecee1951
@ceecee1951 Ай бұрын
I dated a fellow whose police brother was on scene not long after the nurses were found. The stories he told were horrific. Officers don't get paid enough to ever have to face what he did.
@katherine8900
@katherine8900 Ай бұрын
I lived less than a mile from this apartment, it was terrifying.
@madmattdigs9518
@madmattdigs9518 Ай бұрын
I live in a town in the western suburbs of Chicago called Carol Stream. There’s a road that runs through the town called Schmale road. Not many people know it’s named after one of the student nurses who was killed by Richard Speck that horrible night. It’s her family’s home town. I drive on the road almost every day, and since I m familiar with the story, I think about it a lot.
@izmckenna
@izmckenna Ай бұрын
i read years ago, she had an old Schmale Rd sign hung up in that townhouse
@Flamsterette
@Flamsterette Ай бұрын
Thanks for the upload, Paul. I remember hearing about this case.
@megalopolis2015
@megalopolis2015 Ай бұрын
Thank you for speaking more about the victims, especially Corazon, who was a survivor and so brave, to tell the court the stories of her friends who couldn't speak anymore. It sounds like she has a good Life, despite the horror.
@williamgorden6390
@williamgorden6390 Ай бұрын
I was visiting my aunt in Chicago the night of this crime; I was ten years old. News of this took over the local television channels for days. I remember trying to sleep while the sounds of the city night, sirens, traffic etc kept me buzzed with terror. Remember, this was before it became common. The awful enormity of Speck's crime was the worst thing anyone ever heard of. It was huge!😮
@gigiwilson9124
@gigiwilson9124 Ай бұрын
Thanks again Paul for another fascinating video it's really very appreciated
@smorgasbroad1132
@smorgasbroad1132 Ай бұрын
In the late 70's I had a job at Lake & Peoria in Chgo just blocks away from the Star Hotel. I was 11 when Speck did this horrific crime but it was all over the news for weeks on end, so when I saw the Star Hotel in that area years later, I knew right away who had stayed there after his massacre of the 8 nurses. This crime stuck in my mind even after 12+ yrs later. And then even further on, I did in fact see the Bill Kurtis mini-documentary with that film footage of Speck and his buddy inmates getting high and etc. And was disgusted that he had been allowed to live and even have fun in prison. To the bleeding hearts out there that think there shouldn't be a death penalty; shame on you all, for keeping such a monster alive to mock those women he slaughtered. 😠
@phaedrapage4217
@phaedrapage4217 Ай бұрын
Prison didn't look like it was much of a punishment for him at all. He was having a grand old time.
@smorgasbroad1132
@smorgasbroad1132 Ай бұрын
@@phaedrapage4217 And that Stateville prison allowed it! 😠
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
The death penalty has never been shown to be a deterrent to murder.
@sharicamonet9675
@sharicamonet9675 Ай бұрын
@Smorgasboard I’m not sure how much you researched about the video of him or his time in prison,But don’t think for one moment Speck didn’t get some justice in prison! I take solace in the fact that Speck was crying like a baby in fear when he got to prison. Almost immediately he was attacked and gRAPED often, until he agreed to become a “prison wife” to convicts for protection. He was pimped out and forced to take illegal hormones to grow breasts, as to be more appealing to the convicts that had him. Specifically in that video he was made to wear black womens underwear and show the camera before being ordered to get on his knees give an inmate oral. You may think that his laughter and sick responses in that video meant that he seemed to have gotten off easy. But just know, Speck had come to accept his fate, but was not happy. All his family that he had depended on had long abandoned him. He was nothing more than what he had viewed women to be when he was out on the streets and probably worse. Had he not coward and surrendered to being tossed around prison bunks, surely he would have been massacred long before his death. But hey, maybe death would have been more just than years of torment and humiliation.
@sylverscale
@sylverscale Ай бұрын
Being locked up for life is more of a punishment if you ask, and it is less of a punishment for the sometimes completely innocent families of these killers who might still love them. It also prevents the many innocent people from being killed unjustly. Bad enough that some are locked up for decades. Don't care if you call me bleeding heart or get mad. We don't have to agree.
@tinaroberts5858
@tinaroberts5858 Ай бұрын
I couldn't watch the whole video. God rest their souls 😢
@izmckenna
@izmckenna Ай бұрын
it was hard for me to get through. too many feelings brought up
@shereesmazik5030
@shereesmazik5030 Ай бұрын
The rage we felt at the time is still there . I hate it that he got medical care at Silver Cross hospital from nurses and had a good time at Statesville . This is also part of the pro criminal movement using any excuse from the side effects of drug use to vague childhood incidents dredged up . What ticked me off was psychiatry was used as a aid. It’s a movement away from normalcy as the expectation. He can rot in hell .
@Angels-Angels
@Angels-Angels Ай бұрын
Your narrative skills are perfect. Your voice is soothing, yet, dramatic at just the right junctions. I learn so much more with your charming (although the subjects are horrible and true) delivery than any others I have watched. You are not fake in any way which is very refreshing. I sincerely thank you for your time and efforts.
@JamieAsareZiegler
@JamieAsareZiegler Ай бұрын
Sometimes I feel like I'm "programmed" for compassion and empathy; I can't imagine what would have to happen-psychologically, developmentally, or otherwise-to take it out of me. But then I consider stories like this of people who just don't seem to have an ounce of it and I wonder if maybe it wouldn't take so much as I think. The bird anecdote upset me, especially. I think it's because, in it, Speck displayed the capacity to nurture and care for something delicate-and had no qualms about throwing it away without an ounce of emotion when it no longer suited him.
@Corsina
@Corsina Ай бұрын
I saw this story on a tv true crime show. Don't recall which one. I love the way this is handled here. No tv scripting and such. Wonderful job. Thank you for treating those ladies like people and not just his victims.
@chachadodds5860
@chachadodds5860 Ай бұрын
I was eleven that summer in Chicago. My aunt was a nursing student in the downtown area at the time. I'll never forget being absolutely terrified for her safety. Those young nursing students had such a bright future ahead. RIP bright angels.
@ydcee3123
@ydcee3123 Ай бұрын
Not only did Corazon point Speck out in the courtroom, she got up from the witness stand, walked up to him and pointed. "This is the man". What a woman. The book to read is The Crime of the Century: Richard Speck and the Murders. Very interesting and detailed.
@TheLadyT23
@TheLadyT23 Ай бұрын
I'm staggered that one of the nine victims in one apartment couldn't get away from that monster.
@ImperialistRunningDo
@ImperialistRunningDo Ай бұрын
"In Chicago Richard Speck, accused murderer of nine student nurses, was brought before a grand jury today for indictment. The nurses were found stabbed an strangled in their Chicago apartment." Silent Night/ Seven O'clock News Simon and Garfunkle
@mmcleod8148
@mmcleod8148 Ай бұрын
I was 11 and this was the first time I became aware of mass murder and I’ve never forgotten the horror I felt.
@marilynfoster1233
@marilynfoster1233 Ай бұрын
I was the same age, do you remember that horrible headline with all the pictures of them in a row? That whole situation terrified me, and I remember being afraid for years that something like that would happen to me. It was certainly a rude awakening to what the real world could be like.
@faydflourite3249
@faydflourite3249 Ай бұрын
May Corazon live out her days happy, loved, and safe.
@AxtionMag
@AxtionMag Ай бұрын
Great breakdown and delivery, Paul. Done both tastefully and thoroughly. Thank you for bringing us the content that you do.
@patriciaalexander1061
@patriciaalexander1061 Ай бұрын
I remember this - I was 16. Horrible. By the way Paul, I absolutely love your channel and YOU
@dianawatton7570
@dianawatton7570 Ай бұрын
❤I am 86 and I love your channel and you!😊
@michelebreen1735
@michelebreen1735 Ай бұрын
Your writing is superb!
@deniseleplatt1616
@deniseleplatt1616 Ай бұрын
Thanks Paul for the video
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff Ай бұрын
Thank you.
@erraticonteuse
@erraticonteuse Ай бұрын
I remember the episode of Mad Men that vaguely orbited this event. It happened around the same time as some race riots in many places including NYC, and on the show it was used to illustrate how black and white Americans kind of lived in different worlds: the white New York women were worried about a single mass murderer hundreds of miles away, while the black New York women were worried about violence in their actual neighborhood.
@oneoflokis
@oneoflokis Ай бұрын
But the victims weren't "white", were they? They were mostly Filipino.
@erraticonteuse
@erraticonteuse Ай бұрын
@@oneoflokis Yeah, but on the show it was like, all of these white women in New York were obsessing over these murders that happened in Chicago, while their black co-worker decides to sleep at the office because she's afraid to go home because of violence that was happening in her neighborhood, in NYC, that the white people barely acknowledged, because it wasn't happening in their own neighborhoods.
@Charlotte66666
@Charlotte66666 Ай бұрын
Awful case, thank you Paul 😊
@shirleybezuidenhout2724
@shirleybezuidenhout2724 Ай бұрын
Oh my gosh 😮 what a horrible man. How he tortured those poor nurses goes bejond my imagination, absolutely disgusting to say the least. Why is it that people with psychology problems aren't treated before they go on to commit heinious crimes. Only once they commit these crimes do they jump to get them help. Thanks for sharing 👍👍
@imlistening1137
@imlistening1137 Ай бұрын
Years ago, my supervisor (a nurse) told me about this incident. You see, she was one of the nurses in the dorm next door. The discussion came up when I asked her if she would teach me how to pray the rosary. She ended up giving me a rosary, the very one she had under her pillow all while attending nursing school, and the night of the murder of her fellow nursing students. It was a rosary her mother had given her when she went on a pilgrimage to Medjugorje, where the miracle of the Virgin Mary happened, and it (the rosary) was blessed there.
@fay-amieaspen6046
@fay-amieaspen6046 Ай бұрын
Thanks Paul, another brilliant video XXXX
@karinac.3378
@karinac.3378 Ай бұрын
Good morning from the other side of the world! always looking forward to a new video. Thank you and take care 😊
@donnaveitpolanski4154
@donnaveitpolanski4154 Ай бұрын
I was 11 years old when this happened. It was the first horrific crime I ever heard of and it haunts me to this day. I realized there really are monsters and they take human form.
@marilynfoster1233
@marilynfoster1233 Ай бұрын
Exactly the same here. 11 years old and affected by it for many years.
@SS501Fan101
@SS501Fan101 Ай бұрын
No way one of the women actually managed to hide and survive, I'm glad she thought on her toes!
@lunastar7599
@lunastar7599 Ай бұрын
Thank you!❤
@nancyvillines4552
@nancyvillines4552 Ай бұрын
I've read everything I could about this. Evil lives 😢
@alih429
@alih429 Ай бұрын
I'm familiar with this story but the fact that you mentioned his background and childhood really made it more interesting. Thank you for your great narration.
@mikki3961
@mikki3961 Ай бұрын
I just couldn't watch it, they were so young . I respect the way you narrate with respect and decency, however, I just could not continue.
@steveakersdrums
@steveakersdrums Ай бұрын
Top Shelf as always Paul... Thanks for such informative stories and your delivery is top grade..
@vampirememe
@vampirememe Ай бұрын
Ah why have I only just found this channel?! I love the way you describe everything and the manner in which you speak, It helps my ADHD brain retain information so my better. Thank you for the interesting cases :)
@jamesbest9038
@jamesbest9038 Ай бұрын
I understand that it couldn’t have been easy for a single mom in the 1950s, and I don’t want to judge someone else’s choices, butI have to ask, how does someone look at a hard drinker with a lengthy criminal record and think “I must marry him!”
@minilea144
@minilea144 Ай бұрын
people still do that now. time hasnt changed much.
@kevinhensley4643
@kevinhensley4643 Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing it was very well done!!
@cherryrotella3714
@cherryrotella3714 Ай бұрын
Smashing channel. Thankyou 😊
@cindysmith6612
@cindysmith6612 Ай бұрын
Thank you ❤
@williamemerson1799
@williamemerson1799 Ай бұрын
400-1200 years! That'ill learn'im. Another stellar performance by law enforcement and the judicial system.
@mandyscraftscorner5266
@mandyscraftscorner5266 Ай бұрын
I love this channel ❤
@user-tm9qb2jk4o
@user-tm9qb2jk4o Ай бұрын
I was 8 when the murders happened. I remember reading the headline in our local paper ‘They’re all dead!’ It scared me. Years later I saw Speck being interviewed and saying how much he enjoyed homosexual sex in prison. It disgusted me.
@douglasmclaughlin4173
@douglasmclaughlin4173 Ай бұрын
Mr Brodie, thank you for this. Very interesting. I also listened to the interview link and transcript, something I don't usually do, but your recommendation piqued my interest. I enjoy your page very much. Thanks, again
@donnadunlop7853
@donnadunlop7853 Ай бұрын
Thankyou Paul 🖤 🖤
@orazha
@orazha Ай бұрын
Thank you for telling this horrible story. I was 13 YO when this happened but, though I know Richard Speck did some horrible things, I wasn't aware of what.
@freedomspromise8519
@freedomspromise8519 Ай бұрын
How horrifying. Those poor women didn’t stand a chance.
@nannettefreeman7331
@nannettefreeman7331 Ай бұрын
“The Ballad of TV Violence,” Cheap Trick
@julesleg
@julesleg Ай бұрын
I remember that happening.
@deborahwatson2432
@deborahwatson2432 Ай бұрын
What a monster!
@mariannedelwo9842
@mariannedelwo9842 Ай бұрын
It bugs me when I hear that the death penalty is unconstitutional. He killed 8 women. Where are their rights, plus he went on to live a life of debauchery in prison.
@DanaTheInsane
@DanaTheInsane Ай бұрын
In the case like this no trouble at all the trouble is when people get executed on flimsy evidence and they find out years later they were innocent. Quite a few people have been cleared after their executions in Texas.
@tmorton922
@tmorton922 Ай бұрын
Why is it better to let these monsters live and perpetuate further evil whether jailed or not ?
@RevLeigh55
@RevLeigh55 Ай бұрын
I remember this case. It was sensational news back in 1966. I was 11 years old and read about it in Life Magazine.
@chrislong3938
@chrislong3938 19 күн бұрын
I saw that video of him in prison shortly after it came out. Talk about 'messed up'!!!
@francesfarmer736
@francesfarmer736 20 күн бұрын
I was only 11 but I heard about this in N.California on the news …….
@reddrockingeezer
@reddrockingeezer Ай бұрын
The trial had to be moved out of Chicago due to the overwhelming amount of reporting in all the various newspapers. The trial was moved to Peoria, mid-state, to attempt an impartial jury. I was a sophomore in high school when my mother was called as a prospective juror. She wasn't selected for Speck's trial, which lasted for weeks. Mom was on a much simpler trial and was home after 3 days.
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