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We have a few stock images that spring to mind when we think of
serial killers. Maybe we see, when we’re inclined to think
of such things, a Jeffrey Dahmer-type character—quietly savage, a
misfit loner who practices his unspeakable avocation under
society’s radar. Or maybe Ted Bundy is our archetype—a
conscienceless charmer who leaves mutilated bodies as his peculiar
calling card. We probably do not, however, associate married
couples with our notions of serial killing.
But the fact is that couples do commit serial murders, and quite
efficiently indeed. Though such murders have not been common
enough to entrench themselves in the public psyche, they have
occurred with some regularity over at least the past thirty years.
Probably the most lurid of these cases is that of Paul and Karla
Bernardo, an attractive young Canadian couple who, in the early
nineties, gleefully kidnapped, drugged, raped and/or killed a number
of women and carefully captured many of their perverse exploits on
video tape. The furor over the Bernardo arrests and Paul
Bernardo’s subsequent trial coincided roughly with shocking
revelations coming out of Gloucester, England regarding Fred and
Rosemary West. Over many years the Wests murdered several
women and girls, including some of their own children, and buried
the bodies in various locations in their house, garage and garden.
Also in England, Ian Brady and Myra
Hindley worked as a serial
killer team preying upon children.
A strictly American couple was the Sunset Strip Killer Doug
Clark and his girlfriend Carol Bundy, a Los Angeles strain of the
same psychopathic syndrome. And even before the sensational cases of
the nineties, killer couples were at work. Alvin and Judith
Ann Neelley of Georgia, had they not been quite so inept, probably
would have taken a greater toll than the thirteen-year-old girl and
the woman they kidnapped, raped and killed in late 1982.
At least as high a toll as that exacted by Gerald and Charlene
Gallego. In the late seventies, the Sacramento, California
couple kidnapped and killed ten people. Most of their victims
were teenage girls, lured and captured in well-planned schemes, the
ultimate goal of which was to provide a steady procession of
disposable “love slaves.” Depending on whose story you
believe, Charlene Gallego was either a reluctant facilitator of, or
a willing participant in her husband Gerald’s tragic extended
binge. After the couple’s apprehension, Charlene claimed
that Gerald had beaten and intimidated her into helping him, but
Gerald, for his part, insisted that she had taken part in the
assaults and killings. “We had this sexual fantasy see, so
we just carried it out,” Charlene later recounted chillingly.
“I mean, like it was easy and fun and we really enjoyed it, so why
shouldn’t we do it?”
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