Bundy Dahmer Downs o.a.

Although Ted wasn’t Molly’s father, he did have a close relationship with her. “We were like a family,” Molly, who also appears in the new Amazon series, says in the Falling for a Killer trailer.

She met Ted at a bar one night in Seattle.

After Liz ended her marriage with her ex-husband, she moved to Seattle with Molly to start a new life. On her first night out in her new city, she met Ted at the Sandpiper Tavern. This was 1969.

Things moved fast in the young couple’s relationship, and Liz has said she became “dependent” on Ted. At one point in their seven-year relationship, she even thought she might marry him. https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/life/a30719690/ted-bundy-girlfriend-liz-kendall/

Inside the Mind of Jeffrey Dahmer: Serial Killer’s Chilling Jailhouse Interview

Warning: This video contains graphic descriptions of violence. Twenty-four years ago, Jeffrey Dahmer was beaten to death in prison while serving 16 life sentences. In 1993, the man known as “the Milwaukee Cannibal” granted Inside Edition a jailhouse interview and was forthright about his crimes. During his reign of terror between 1978 and 1991, Dahmer killed 17 men and boys and kept some of their body parts in freezers inside his home. He was eventually arrested in 1991 when a victim escaped. #InsideEdition

Ted Bundy FULL final interview from 23rd January 1989 + Interview with Dr. James Dobson

I have found this video on the website “Veoh”, yet I was unable to find it on YouTube, so I have decided to download it from Veoh and upload it here, for a wider audience.

This video includes the full and uncut final interview of serial killer Theodore “Ted” Robert Bundy, made on 23rd January 1989, with Dr. James Dobson, right inside the Florida State Prison, situated in the city of Raiford, less than a day before his execution on the electric chair, which happened in the morning on 7:15 AM on the following day, with Ted Bundy being declared dead just one minute later, on 7:16 AM.

This video also includes an interview with Dr. James Dobson, at the beginning of the video and also at the end of the video, while the interview with Ted Bundy is to be found between these two sections. Again, I have searched a lot for the full interview with Ted Bundy on YouTube, yet I was unable to find any video on here, that includes the full, uncut interview and which also does not include any subtitles or any kind of audio delay. The video quality is the same video quality from the original video found on Veoh. I did also not cut or edit anything on it. The video is 55 minutes and 40 seconds long, yet after 55 minutes and 9 seconds, the last 31 seconds of the video only include an old-fashioned test screen, so there will be nothing more to see.

If you only want to see the interview with Ted Bundy and not the one with Dr. Dobson, the interview with Ted Bundy starts in the video at 11:50 and goes until 41:15.

I know there has been a huge controversial about the last interview of Ted Bundy. Especially about what he did said, if any of his statements were truthful and if there were any motives of Dr. Dobson and the Christian organization “Focus on the Family”, for which he was working for at the time. Still to this day, more than 31 years after the interview with Ted Bundy was taken, there are a lot of controversial discussions about the question, if pornography can have such a violent effect on other people and plenty of studies had been done since then, especially now, with internet pornography being just a few clicks away. Yet, I personally will not join any kind of discussion that may occur in the comment section of this video about these matters, or give my own, personal opinions about it, which I obviously have as well.

All I wanted to do was to give this video, which, again, was not uploaded by myself in the first place, to a wider audience on YouTube, since I was unable to find it here, and I do believe into the free thinking and the free forming of opinion, so I hope that you will enjoy watching this video and form your own opinion about what is being said by Dr. Dobson and especially by Ted Bundy, no matter what kind of opinion it may be. I know that this is a very sensitive topic, but I hope that any discussions, that may occur in the comment section, will be on a friendly and calm basis, without any insults among the people that join the discussion towards each other.

 

Ted Bundy’s former girlfriend on being with him, heaving concerns | Nightline

Elizabeth Kendall saw similarities between a sketch of a kidnapping suspect and the man she and her daughter loved. “I started to worry… Could this be true?” she said. WATCH NIGHTLINE EPISODES: https://abc.go.com/shows/nightline ALSO AVAILABLE ON HULU: https://hulu.tv/2wSmSrZ #Nightline #TedBundy #ElizabethKendall #SerialKiller #Crime

These Serial Killers Had America on Edge

A manhunt for Andrew Cunanan was launched after he killed Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace in front of his Miami mansion. Cunanan was later linked to the killings of four others whose murders spanned multiple states. Cunanan, like fellow serial killers Richard Ramirez, Jeffery Dahmer, and John Wayne Gacy, terrified Americans. Inside Edition met with the families of the victims of those killers and the police officers who put an end to the killings.

First ever female serial killer: Aileen Wournos | 60 Minutes Australia

(1994) Over a 12 month period in the US state of Florida, Aileen Wournos killed seven men. She said it was self-defence yet at her trial asked to be executed. Unusual? Well everything about this case is unusual, not least Aileen Wournos herself, a woman the judge said was evil.

For forty years, 60 Minutes have been telling Australians the world’s greatest stories. Tales that changed history, our nation and our lives. Reporters Liz Hayes, Allison Langdon, Tara Brown, Charles Wooley, Liam Bartlett and Sarah Abo look past the headlines because there is always a bigger picture. Sundays are for 60 Minutes.

 

 

Why Diane Downs Says She Shot Her 3 Children

On May 19, 1983, Diane Downs drove herself and her three children to an emergency room in Springfield, Oregon, saying she had been shot by a “bushy-haired man” who had tried to steal her car on a desolate road. Yet, cops determined it was Downs who actually killed her daughter and tried to kill her other two children because she said her boyfriend hated them. In 1989, Inside Edition was granted permission to interview Downs about her crimes from inside her prison cell.

 

Why Did Ted Bundy Not Kill His Girlfriend, Elizabeth Kloepfer?

He did try once. – by 
Why Did Ted Bundy Not Kill His Girlfriend, Elizabeth Kloepfer?

Those who have watched Netflix’s Ted Bundy biopic, Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile, may have found they’ve been left with more questions than they have answers.

But one of the major question marks about the film, which was based on the memoirs of Bundy’s longtime girlfriend, Elizabeth Kloepfer, is how she managed to live with the serial killer for years without being murdered herself.

Kloepfer, who in the movie is referred to as Liz Kendall and is played by actress Lily Collins, makes it through the entire film unharmed (physically speaking, that is), while her domestic partner murders dozens of women right under her nose.

Aside from one very creepy scene involving a torch under the sheets, the Netflix version of Bundy doesn’t make any attempt to take Kloepfer’s life. However, the real-life version is another story entirely.

Ted Bundy Elizabeth Kloepfer

Did Ted Bundy try to kill Elizabeth Kloepfer?

In her 1981 memoir, The Phantom Prince: My Life With Ted Bundy, Kloepfer recalled asking Bundy whether he’d ever tried to kill her in a phone call following his 1978 arrest.

Following a long silence, Bundy admitted he had felt the urge to end her life “coming on” one night.

“I closed the damper so the smoke couldn’t go up the chimney,” Bundy apparently told her. “And then I left and put a towel in the crack under the door so the smoke would stay in the apartment.”

Bundy also threatened Kloepfer when she questioned him about women’s underwear she had found in their home.

“She said ‘what is this?’ And he said to her, ‘if you ever tell anyone this I’ll break your effing head’,” Kloepfer’s close friend, Marylynne Chino, told media.

Zac Efron Ted Bundy

How did Elizabeth Klopefer survive?

It was likely sheer luck that led to Kloepfer’s survival. In her book, she said she remembers the night Bundy tried to kill her.

She said she woke up in a panic after a night of drinking and was unable to breathe, so ran to the windows to open them as the apartment filled with smoke.

Did she believe bim?

In her book, Kloepfer wrote that she didn’t exactly buy Bundy’s claim that he only tried to kill her once, and somewhat halfheartedly.

“I almost didn’t believe him,” she wrote. “It didn’t fit in with the murders. I thought that maybe he wasn’t willing to talk about any more serious attempts to kill me.”

Ted Bundy Zac Efron

Why didn’t he try again?

There are plenty of theories as to why Bundy didn’t make Kloepfer one of his 30 victims (and that’s just the number of murders he confessed to).

From Kloepfer’s perspective, she believed he may have used her as his one link to normalcy in between his killings.

In his post-arrest phone call, Kloepfer asked her ex-boyfriend whether he used her to “touch base with reality” given he often spoke or reached out to her before or after killing someone.

“Yeah, that’s a pretty good guess,” he responded, according to her book. “I don’t have a split personality. I don’t have blackouts. I remember everything I’ve done… The force would just consume me. Like one night, I was walking by the campus and I followed the sorority girl. I didn’t want to follow her… I’d try not to, but I’d do it anyway.”

Ted Bundy

Some believe Bundy used Kloepfer as his cover in order to maintain his image of regular, non-dangerous suburban guy. Plus, if she was found dead he would automatically become a prime suspect, placing him at risk of being discovered for his other killings.

Finally, it’s believed Bundy genuinely loved Kloepfer and this made her distinct from his other anonymous victims. By Bundy’s own admission, he loved Kloepfer to the point of imbalance.

“I loved her so much it was destabilising,” Bundy once told journalist Stephen G. Michaud. “I felt such a strong love for her but we didn’t have a lot of interests in common like politics or something, I don’t think we had much in common.” https://www.marieclaire.com.au/ted-bundy-elizabeth-kloepfer

 

Serial killer Ted Bundy’s former girlfriend, her daughter wonder why he spared them

“I sometimes can’t believe this has really been my life,” Elizabeth Kendall said

Elizabeth Kendall said it feels “strange” to flip back through old photos of her former boyfriend, to see him smiling at the camera next to a younger version of herself, to see him playing with her daughter who was a child at the time, to see him being silly.It’s because that man was Ted Bundy, one of the most prolific serial killers in American history.“I sometimes can’t believe this has really been my life,” Kendall told “20/20.” “I kept those photos of us when we were happier, before we knew what he was capable of.”Speaking out for the first time in 40 years, Elizabeth Kendall and her daughter Molly Kendall sat down exclusively for Amazon Original’s five-part docuseries, “Ted Bundy: Falling for a Killer,” which will be available Friday on Amazon Prime Video. They then also sat down with ABC News’ Amy Robach for a two-hour “20/20” report on ABC.

“I really felt we needed to hear their stories so we could reframe this finally once and for all from the perspective of the women,” Trish Wood, the director and producer of the series, told “20/20.” “And that was important to me also because I think we need to call this what it is. It’s misogyny, it’s hatred of women. We don’t need… to figure out what the diagnosis was for Ted Bundy. Simply, he killed women because he hated them. He obliterated them. So I thought it was important to reframe it.”

Even after all these years later, Elizabeth Kendall has kept photos from her and her daughter’s life together with Bundy. There’s one showing him holding Molly as she rode his bike and another showing him laughing in the grass. These photos are published in an updated and expanded edition of her book, “The Phantom Prince: My Life with Ted Bundy,” published by Abrams Press.

“That’s my childhood,” Molly Kendall said. “Unfortunately, the memories that are attached to those pictures have lost their original emotional content and become something different.”

Bundy mercilessly and viciously kidnapped, raped and killed dozens of innocent women across the United States in the 1970s in a trail of terror that took him from the Pacific Northwest to Florida.

Days before his 1989 death by electrocution, Bundy confessed to killing 30 women in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Colorado and Florida between 1973 and 1978, but authorities believe it’s possible that there were many more.

“I still have a sense of disbelief that this man that I loved and that seemed to be a great guy could go out and do such horrific things,” Elizabeth Kendall said. “It’s just so hard to accept.”

Elizabeth Kendall said she and Bundy dated for about five years, from 1969 to 1974, which overlapped with some of his gruesome crimes. She and her daughter said that at the time, they had no idea the man they spent so much time with was a serial killer.

“I always felt loved,” Elizabeth Kendall said of the man she once planned to marry. “But with Ted, it’s impossible to tell. It could’ve been love, it could’ve been just another manipulation.”

She once thought Bundy was the man she was going to marry, she said, and she has wondered why he spared her and Molly.

“I hate to even say this because it makes him sound normal, but I do think he loved us,” Elizabeth Kendall said.

“I heard a story told by one of his attorneys he had. He said Ted told him that he would play games with these animals, I don’t remember if they were mice or something else,” her daughter Molly Kendall added. “And he would let some of them live and some of them die, and to me, that’s us, we’re just these mice that were allowed to live.”

Elizabeth Kendall said she met Bundy in at a bar in Seattle. A single mother who had just moved to town from Utah at the time, Kendall said she was “pretty smitten” when she saw Bundy, who had grown up in Tacoma, Washington.

“I saw him sitting at a table. I went over and talked to him because I told him he looked lonely,” she said.

When they were dating, Bundy was earning a degree in psychology at the University of Washington. He drove a Volkswagen Beetle, worked on political campaigns and had aspirations of going to law school. To Kendall, he appeared to be a smart and doting boyfriend.

“[He] put a lot of energy into making us happy, doing fun things… he always seemed to embrace us as a family unit,” Elizabeth Kendall said. “I loved going to places with him. He was never at a loss for words, whereas I was on the shy side.”

While they were together, Kendall recalled some oddities about Bundy’s behavior. She said one day he showed up at her apartment with a pair of ski boots he had stolen from the university’s student union.

“And he said, ‘If I hadn’t stolen them, somebody else would’ve, so I just took them,’” Kendall said.

Authorities later learned that Bundy’s crimes had started with animal mutilation and petty theft, then evolved into peering into people’s windows and then brutal killings.

By the summer of 1974, Elizabeth Kendall said her relationship with Bundy had started to sour.

“He would start walking home late at night, rather than spending the night at my house. Just subtle changes where I felt like maybe I was losing him or maybe he was seeing somebody else,” she said.

“Never in my dreams did I think he was out stalking women and then eventually … abducting and murdering women. There was no context for that,” she added.

Years later when he was on death row in Florida, Bundy confessed to FBI Special Agent Bill Hagmaier that by the summer of 1974, he had been abducting and killing women for months.

“When he was with Liz, he said he really enjoyed being a family man,” Hagmaier told “20/20” in a previous interview. “I mean, he said the things that I would expect my brother to say about his family.”

One of his victims that summer was 18-year-old Georgeann Hawkins, who Bundy strangled to death in June 1974. On July 14, 1974, Bundy abducted and killed both Janice Anne Ott, 23, and Denise Naslund, 19, at the popular Lake Sammamish State Park.

Kendall said she had seen Bundy that July morning, and he had asked her what she was going to do that day.

“I said I was going to go to a park and lay in the sun. Molly was in Utah. And he asked me which park,” Kendall said. “And I think he was just wanting to know, if [I was] going to Lake Sammamish, then he wouldn’t be going that way. He’d go to another park.”

She said Bundy then called her hours later that same day, around 5:30 p.m. She said she later learned it was right after Nasland had gone missing, but Bundy gave no indication that he had spent the day committing two brutal crimes.

“We went out to eat,” Elizabeth Kendall said. “Just so hard to believe that’s what he was doing.”

“It’s heartbreaking,” Molly Kendall added.

Looking back now, Elizabeth Kendall said there were some red flags that her boyfriend at the time could be the suspected abductor police were looking for in those cases, but she said she kept “talking herself out of it.”

Kendall said a co-worker gave her a newspaper article that had a composite drawing of the suspect because that person thought it looked “similar” to Bundy. She said police had identified the suspect’s car as a Volkswagen Beetle but the color they noted didn’t quite match Bundy’s car.

Even a report about the Lake Sammamish disappearances that noted witnesses told police the suspect was a handsome young man who called himself “Ted” struck her as odd, Kendall said, but she still tried to talk herself out of believing this could be the Ted she knew.

“It wasn’t something that I looked at and thought, ‘Oh my God.’ It was like, ’Oh, that’s weird,’” she said. “Even the idea that this man went up and introduced himself by ‘Ted,’ I think, ‘Oh, you know, if you’re going to abduct somebody, you’d never say your real name.’”

One month before the Lake Sammamish abductions, Georgann Hawkins, a University of Washington student, had gone missing. Kendall said she had read that witnesses reported seeing a man on crutches near the sorority house where Hawkins had been heading. When she spotted a pair of crutches in Bundy’s room, she asked him about it.

“He said that his landlord had hurt himself and was on crutches, but he was going to take the crutches back to the rental place. So that made sense to me,” she said.

Elizabeth Kendall said she even read some of these newspaper reports out loud to Bundy while they were together, but he brushed them off.

Listening to these conversations, Molly Kendall said at one point she had teased Bundy about the similarities between him and the man police were looking for.

“When they had a profile of him, I brought up the similarities to him,” Molly Kendall said. “I said, ‘This guy’s name’s Ted. Your name’s Ted. This guy has a Volkswagen. You drive a Volkswagen. You know it’s you,’ and he just laughed. [He said], ‘No, Monkey, of course, I would never do anything like that.’”

In September 1974, a grouse hunter discovered the remains of Ott, Naslund and Hawkins one mile east of an old railroad trestle outside of Issaquah, Washington.

“Once I started to worry, like, ‘Could this be true?’ I didn’t feel safe bringing it up,” Elizabeth Kendall added. “I didn’t want him to know what I was thinking.”

By the fall of 1974, she said Bundy was attending law school in Utah and called her regularly.

“I loved talking with him or being with him because he was just Ted. He was just the Ted I knew. Nothing was amiss,” Kendall said. “And then I’d hang up and think, ‘What was I thinking that this could possibly be true?’”

Eventually, Elizabeth Kendall said she began talking with authorities. All the while, Bundy was continuing his vicious spree of abducting, raping and murdering young women. In a matter of weeks, Bundy had murdered four women in Utah that fall.

In November 1974, at a mall in Murray, Utah, Bundy approached 18-year-old Carol DaRonch and identified himself as a police officer. He said someone had tried to break into her car and he wanted her to come down to the police station. Once DaRonch was in Bundy’s car, he attempted to attack her, but DaRonch managed to get out of the car and run for help. It was the first and only known instance of someone’s escaping a Bundy abduction, and she later became a key witness for the prosecution’s case against Bundy.

His killing spree continued the following year, when he kidnapped and killed 23-year-old Caryn Campbell in Colorado and several others.

Then by chance, on Aug. 16, 1975, Bundy was arrested in Granger, Utah, after he was spotted parked outside a house where two young women lived.

A Utah Highway Patrol officer came across Bundy in his Volkswagen Beetle loitering outside the house that morning at 3 a.m. When the officer approached, Bundy drove off. After a brief chase, the officer stopped and then searched Bundy’s car and found a ski mask, pantyhose with eyes cut out, gloves, rope, a crowbar and handcuffs. He was arrested under suspicion of evading a police officer but was released the next day on bail.

By then, Elizabeth Kendall’s relationship with Bundy had ended, but she said they kept in touch. She said she found out about the car search incident from Bundy’s Washington state landlord, who told her detectives had been by his apartment there.

“It was just very frightening to see it all laid out together, and I was devastated,” Kendall said. “Eventually, I ask him about it after I told him that I’d gone to the police, and he tried to just brush it off. ‘Oh, for God sakes, Liz,’ he said … ‘I need the crowbar for if I get in a wreck and need to pry cars apart. I need the ski mask for when I’m shoveling snow. Sometimes I wear a pantyhose mask under that just for warmth.’”

After Bundy’s 1975 arrest, police linked him to the attempted abduction of Carol DaRonch, who had identified him in a lineup. Bundy went on trial for aggravated kidnapping and was convicted in March 1976. He was sentenced to a minimum of one to a maximum of 15 years in a Utah state prison.

He was later extradited to Colorado where he was charged with Campbell’s murder. But in 1977, he escaped from police custody in Colorado twice, then made his way to Florida, where he continued his murderous spree.

On Jan. 15, 1978, Bundy brutally attacked four young women at the Chi Omega sorority house near Florida State University. Two women, Margaret Bowman and Lisa Levy, died of their severe injuries. That same night, Bundy also brutally attacked Cheryl Thomas, whose house was just blocks away from the sorority house. She survived.

About three weeks later, on Feb. 9, 1978, Bundy kidnapped and murdered 12-year-old Kimberly Leach. She was one of Bundy’s youngest victims and his last murder.

Bundy was arrested again on Feb. 15, 1978, after a police officer saw him driving very slowly in the early hours of the morning. Running his car’s license plate, the officer realized the car had been reported stolen. Bundy refused to give his real name at first, but then told police he would identify himself if they let him make a phone call, which police granted.

The person Bundy called was Elizabeth Kendall, who had already seen news reports about the Florida murders when the phone rang.

“He said, ‘I’ve been arrested,’ and I said, ‘Where are you?’ And he said, ‘Florida,’” Kendall said. “Oh, my heart just dropped. And I said, ‘Oh, I was afraid that you were going to be in Florida.’”

On a later jailhouse phone call, Kendall said Bundy confided in her that he felt he was “sick.”

“It took him telling me himself that he had something wrong with him,” Kendall said. “It was awful, and yet it took me so long to really fully accept that he did those things. Even after he told me that, I still was spending endless hours trying to figure out how this could be, how this man that I thought I knew could do these things. It was really a struggle.”

In 1979, Bundy was found guilty of murdering Levy and Bowman and the attempted murder of three other women. The following year, he was found guilty of kidnapping and murdering Kimberly Leach. He was sentenced to death for the murder convictions.

Molly Kendall was particularly shaken by the Leach case. They both would have been the same age if Leach were alive today.

“It’s hard to find words for how devastating it is, the loss of this girl, and the things that he did to her,” Molly Kendall said. “It’s been a lifelong source of agony, thinking about her parents, her friends, and… just the loss of personal relationship that we thought we had to this person.”

Looking back on her relationship with Bundy, Elizabeth Kendall said she still carries a lot of guilt with her.

“Guilt about … causing this in my daughter’s life, guilt about what he had done, guilt that I had loved this man that was so gruesome.”

She said she worked hard to rebuild her and her daughter’s lives, and she hopes that sharing their story now will serve as an inspiration for others trying to overcome hardships.

“I hope [others] will see that it’s possible to have terrible, traumatic experiences and it’s possible to rebuild your life,” Elizabeth Kendall said. https://abcnews.go.com/US/serial-killer-ted-bundys-girlfriend-daughter-spared/story?id=68591141

In the dark: Elizabeth Kendall with Bundy in the 1970s

 

 

 

 

 

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