Richard Ramirez, who spent
24 years in prison after a spree of demonic murders in California, died Friday,
but not before turning a shocking shade of green. The serial killer, who left
satanic signs at murder scenes and mutilated victims' bodies during a reign of
terror in the 1980s, died reportedly after 'sitting up in his bed doing
stretches' just the day before at Marin County Hospital. Ramirez, 53, had been
taken from San Quentin's death row to a hospital where authorities said he died
of liver failure. This, according to a source
at the New York Post.
The source said the self-proclaimed Satanist exhibited the ghastly-hued skin
Thursday and was up and moving around his hospital bed. 'He was the color
green,' said the Post's source. 'He looked like a green highlighter pen.' He
had been housed on death row for decades and was awaiting execution, even
though it has been years since anyone has been put to death in California. He was
convicted in 1989 of 13 murders, five attempted murders, 11 sexual assaults and
14 burglaries, which terrorized Southern California in 1984 and 1985. His
charges included rape, sodomy and oral copulation.Though he died of liver
failure, the exact cause of the ailment has not been released due to federal
patient privacy laws. At his first court
appearance, Ramirez raised a hand with a pentagram drawn on it and yelled,
'Hail, Satan.' His marathon trial, which ended in 1989, was a horror show in
which jurors heard about one victim's eyes being gouged out and another's head
being nearly severed. Courtroom observers wept when survivors of some of the
attacks testified. Satanic symbols were left at murder scenes and some victims
were forced to 'swear to Satan' by the killer, who entered homes through
unlocked windows and doors. Ramirez was finally run down and beaten in 1985 by
residents of an East Los Angeles neighborhood while attempting a carjacking.
They recognized him because his picture had appeared that day in the news
media.
The trial of Ramirez took a
year, but the entire case which was bogged down in pretrial motions and appeals
lasted four years, one of the longest criminal cases in U.S. history. Because
of the notoriety of the case, more than 1600 prospective jurors were called. After
his conviction, Ramirez flashed a two-fingered 'devil sign' to photographers
and muttered a single word: 'Evil.'
On his way to a jail bus,
he sneered in reaction to the verdict, muttering: 'Big deal. Death always went
with the territory. See you in Disneyland.' The black-clad killer, unrepentant
to the end, made his comment in an underground garage after a jury recommended
the death penalty for his gruesome crimes. Inexplicably, Ramirez, a native of
El Paso, Texas, had a following of young women admirers who came to the
courtroom regularly and sent him love notes. Some visited him in prison, and in
1996 Ramirez was married to 41-year-old freelance magazine editor Doreen Lioy
in a visiting room at San Quentin prison. Relatives called Lioy a recluse who
lived in a fantasy world. In 2006, the California
Supreme Court upheld Ramirez's convictions and death sentence. The U.S. Supreme
Court refused in 2007 to review the convictions and sentence. Two years later,
San Francisco police said DNA linked Ramirez to the April 10, 1984, killing of
9-year-old Mei Leung. She was killed in the basement of a residential hotel in
San Francisco's Tenderloin neighborhood where she lived with her family. Ramirez
had been staying at nearby hotels. Ramirez previously was tied to killings in
Northern California. He was charged in the shooting deaths of Peter Pan, 66,
and his wife, Barbara, in 1985 just before his arrest in Los Angeles, but he
was never tried in that case.
No comments:
Post a Comment