Who Attacked Whitney Bennett?

By Venning

Sierra Madre, Los Angeles County. 5th July 1985. 16-year-old Whitney Bennett arrived home via the back door. She made sure it was locked before changing for bed. The light was still on, and the curtains were left open when she fell asleep. Bennett’s bedroom was at the front of the house.

Sometime between 2:45 and 3:45, Bennett woke face down on her bed. The light had been turned out; the curtains were now partially pulled across. There was blood all over her sheets and pain in her head and hands. Her underwear had been removed. Bennett was able to make her way to the hallway – where her pained moans woke her father – before collapsing.

Bennett was extremely lucky to survive such a brutal attack. She required multiple operations to treat a fractured skull and eye socket, a partially detached retina and many lacerations to her head and face. She also suffered a fractured finger. She also had ligature marks on her neck and her hands were swollen, possibly from ligatures.

Evidence at the scene

  • Window screen missing from the front of the house.
  • Bedroom ransacked.
  • A tyre iron on the floor, in a pool of blood.
  • Blood on the curtains, carpet and bed and a sash.
  • A gloved handprint on the windowsill.
  • Blood on the windowsill.
  • Severed telephone cord; phone placed on the windowsill.
  • Two partial shoe prints on her comforter.
  • A pubic hair.
  • Jewellery box was moved and two rings missing.

Did Any Evidence Tie Ramirez to the Bennett Crime Scene?

The blood on the curtain sash contained antigens that were not from Whitney Bennett, nor were they from Ramirez. This blood was Type A. Ramirez was Type O – the same as Whitney Bennett. It could be that, as the attacker was slashing Bennett, the slippery blood caused the knife to slice through his gloves, cutting his fingers. This blood could have been spread to the curtain as the suspect escaped via the window.

The blood evidence does not seem to have been discussed at length at trial, and Philip Carlo’s book revealed that the defence’s ‘special master’ was unable to obtain the samples for this case from the prosecution. The 2008 Habeas Corpus petition does not mention this, but if it is true that the prosecutor withheld blood samples, this is a clear Brady violation and the defence should have filed a Brady motion – but failed to do so. Blood that did not match Richard Ramirez was found at the home of another Night Stalker victim, Mary Cannon. The samples were tested by the same criminalist, Giselle LaVigne, but no further tests seem to have been carried out to determine whether the blood at both crime scenes matched.

The pubic hair was similar to Ramirez’s but there was nothing unique about it; it was a common type and without the benefit of modern testing, is inconclusive. The prosecution argued that bloody glove prints on the windowsill matched some gloves found in Ramirez’s locker at the Greyhound Bus Depot, but fabric is incapable of yielding identifiable prints, and is not usually admissible. Ramirez’s defence failed to raise an objection due to incompetence. If Ramirez’s own gloves were used at Bennett, they would surely have been blood-stained and torn.

The blood alone could have eliminated Ramirez as the suspect and the charge might have been dropped. But because of the presence of the ubiquitous Avia shoe prints, the prosecution pressed ahead with it, despite no proof that Ramirez wore such footwear.

Those Bloody Avia Prints – Literally

There were two partial shoe prints found on Whitney Bennett’s bed: one was a herringbone pattern and the other was from an Avia sole, that aside from its missing heel, was near-perfect, with no smudging or marks of wear, such as nicks or dents.

Because the herringbone pattern (chevrons or ‘zigzags’) is universal across brands, a second perpetrator in a different type of shoe cannot be ruled out. The defence failed to argue this and simply half-heartedly told the jury that Ramirez was not currently wearing Avias and had never been seen wearing them.

The prosecution argued that all shoeprints were made by a black Aerobics model 445B. The shoe forensics expert for the Habeas Corpus petition, Lisa DiMeo agreed that this print was made by an Avia but disagreed with prosecution expert witness, Gerald Burke, that it was a particular model. With Avias, the heel area must be visible to determine whether it is an Aerobics, Basketball or Coach/Referee type – and that was not present on the blanket.

This means at least thirteen different models of Avia could be in the frame. DiMeo could only conclusively eliminate Coach model 552R. While the distinctions between Avia shoe models may seem technical, they are crucial to understanding the evidentiary flaws in this case.

“Found at the scene was a partial shoeprint – ball area – in apparent blood on a fabric comforter. This was consistent with an Avia athletic right shoe that exhibited similar class characteristics to the Aerobics model. Only the Avia Referee /coach model 552R can be eliminated as the source of the print based upon the break between the dam element and flex joint. A second partial print on the comforter in apparent blood exhibited herringbone elements, but no further description could be determined.”

– Declaration of Lisa DiMeo, Document 7.19.

In her supplemental declaration, DiMeo was critical of Gerald Burke’s testing methods.

“The receiving medium is a plush fabric comforter. The comforter is a yielding surface, and caution should be used when comparing and interpreting a transferred impression. There is no evidence that Mr. Burke created test transfer impressions on a similar yielding surface before concluding that the impression was an Avia Aerobic size 11-12.

– Supplementary Declaration of Lisa DiMeo, Document 7.20.

Furthermore, DiMeo stated that Burke’s measuring techniques were not of the standard used by forensic examiners. Burke determined that the print on Whitney Bennett’s comforter was an Aerobics model in size 11½ because there were ten chevrons below the parallel lines (called a flex-join). Basketball models only had nine chevrons. However, he contradicted himself by admitting that sizes 12 and 13 also have ten chevrons – 13s have a partial eleventh chevron. This meant that a number of shoes could have caused the print pictured above.

Burke made this assessment without bothering to check sole sizes 5-9½ to see if his ‘ten chevrons on Aerobics’ models was truly correct. There are also many variations of the same sole design released in the early 1980s, but detectives insist Avias were brand new and therefore rare shoes.

“A qualified analyst would not state an absolute without collecting all the available data.”

– Supplementary Declaration of Lisa DiMeo, Document 7.19.

DiMeo’s opinion was that if a shoe’s print submitted as evidence and associated with a known shoe, jurors will be more likely to believe the analyst’s testimony that it is indeed that particular shoe. Had the jury known thousands of shoes may have created this print and they were not unique like the police claimed, the evidence might not have been so compelling.

This is why counterevidence from a professional shoe forensics expert was imperative, but Ramirez’s lawyers failed to retain experts, because they had no money. This was because they lacked the necessary qualifications to enable them to be funded by the court.

Curiously, the Avia prints were not initially discovered when the police first entered the crime scene. The blanket was bundled in the corner of the room and was later unfurled by Giselle LaVigne who called the detectives to look. This was the point when Sergeant Salerno began to believe Detective Carrillo’s serial killer theory. They are keen to emphasise that they remained outside Bennett’s bedroom when LaVigne found the Avia impression.

The pink comforter can be seen bottom left

Why Was Ramirez Convicted of the Bennett Attack?

Another reason was that Whitney Bennett was a sympathetic survivor, who was just sixteen at the time of her attempted murder. She had been asked to testify at the trial, despite the fact she was unable to remember anything and did not see the attacker. While likely distressing for Bennett, her testimony added little evidentiary value, as she could not identify her attacker. Its inclusion may have risked inflaming juror emotion rather than aiding deliberation.

The prosecution attempted to link the Bennett Incident to Mary Cannon’s murder on the basis of its proximity, as well as Bell and Lang. All three were close to the same hills and canyons (3.5 miles by road, but just a mile as the crow flies). This is a fair argument – the modus operandi is also similar – but the forensic inconsistencies raise serious doubt that Richard Ramirez was the perpetrator in any of these cases, and the defence should have argued this.

These three attacks, and possibly the Nelson Incident – although that was much further away – might have been carried out by the same perpetrator. However, this does not mean all of the ‘Night Stalker’ attacks were connected, regardless of whether Avia prints were found – their models were inconclusive. This is why the Night Stalker cases should have been divided into categories and separate trials. However, the court denied the defence’s motion. A joinder between the crimes caused a lengthy trial, and combined with the constant false reiteration that Ramirez had owned Avias, it had a cumulative effect on the jury.

4th December 2022

Petition sources can be found here.

72 responses to “Who Attacked Whitney Bennett?”

  1. Why isn’t this crime a bigger deal? I know the defence messed up but this should be a massive deal.

    Two scenes close to each other that had different blood samples to Richard Ramirez and no one is making a big deal? Until you guys of course. If I was a juror, I’d vote not guilty.

    Liked by 5 people

    1. This incident frustrates the hell out of me. The presence of the Type A blood indicates that someone else other than Ramirez was at that scene. He was Type O, as was Whitney Bennett, and to me it’s shocking that this was overlooked.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. I still can’t figure how the hell Philip Carlo got away with writing about how Richard saw a ‘blue haze’ leaving Whitney’s body after seeing sparks come from the telephone cord, which spooked him so much that he ran. I have no idea where he pulled that stupid idea from because as far as I know Richard didn’t talk about the crimes (because he probably didn’t commit them). The book is complete and utter (pardon my french) sh*t. It kind of makes me sick how he tried to makes both the traumatic life history of Richard and his family as well as the crimes more ‘entertaining’ by adding in details that probably were not even presented in court or don’t even exist. I bet Richard and his family were lied to that they would receive some sort compensation for basically ‘selling’ their pain and suffering. Richard probably thought that it was the only way to help them and in the end it doesn’t seem like anything came out of it and his reputation will forever be tainted by the lies in Carlo’s awful book.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Carlo’s book reads like a work of fiction, he’s added in details that can’t be verified and he probably made them up, with the help of people who have a vested interested in keeping these dumb-arse theories alive.
      There is not one shred of evidence that he was ever at Whitney’s house, but there’s evidence that someone else was.
      The only part of Carlo’s book worth anything is the trial part. Everything else might as well be a fictional crime novel.
      Richard thought this book would help his family, of course it did not.

      Liked by 2 people

    2. I’ve always wondered about that too. That he was scared that it was god intervening or something, which doesn’t make sense because he wasn’t a believer. It’s a stupid fictional narrative to explain her survival when really it was just a miracle that she lived.

      If asked to make a bet, I’d say he got it from Carrillo because he loves to tell confession stories. He claims Richard also apologized to Whitney 🙄 but there’s no proof.

      There’s so much embellishment in his book, like how Richard stood spying on Joyce Nelson’s house from the corner the day before the murder and how Mrs Zazzara shot at him with a shotgun and how he made sure to kill them better next time. No shotgun is mentioned in court documents. It’s all fictionalised!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Seeing as they know all these details about the crimes that Richard didn’t seem to even know seems to me like they may be involved somehow (joking obviously) or lying out of their butts. Or both. I mean they probably had to witness the crime to know all these ‘accurate’ details. Like Carrillo and Carlo are/were acting as if they sat in the corner of these crime scenes taking detailed notes as the crime unfolded. Anything to satiate obsessive true crime fans and make an extra buck on those useless podcasts.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. And to get fan points for having ‘inside insight’ from their ‘friendship’ with him.

        Liked by 2 people

  3. Yet another person who took advantage of a family that was struggling financially, mentally, physically, and emotionally. Money really is the root of all evil.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Richard and this case is still a source of income for some.

      Liked by 2 people

  4. I hear that Carrillo is planning on making and releasing a documentary on the NS in the near future. Another desperate cash grab.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh God, spare us any more of this shit! Richard Ramirez is his pension fund.

      Liked by 4 people

    2. Oh, just what the world needs. Where did you hear this? There was also a threat of a book.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Not forgetting that NBC are doing a two-part documentary about him as well. I imagine it will be the same regurgitated bullshit as all the others.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Oh, the ghosters!

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Yes. So expect more “Sex and Satan” from them.

        Liked by 2 people

      4. Honestly I can’t even remember I read about it a while ago. I heard that it was only a rumor but I wouldn’t put it past him.

        Like

      5. I bet everywhere he goes, he says ‘Do you know who I am? I’m the man who caught the Night Stalker.’ The other day I was looking for his videos to get a quote and found a video on USA’s Memorial Day about fallen veterans from his school and half of it was him talking about Richard Ramirez. Weirdly, the blog had loads of traffic that day!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. He came across rather pompous and full of himself in the Netflix documentary as well. It really turned me off honestly. I knew there was something about him that I didn’t like. Instead of moving on and trying to get about his life like other law enforcement officers that were involved in cases similar to these he keeps trying to profit and gain fame off of a dead man and the suffering of innocent people.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Definitely. The way he referred to himself as “too-cool Carrillo” and something like (not a direct quote) “people know something was going on when Gil and Frank showed up”. He was a non-entity at the time. Referred to in newspaper articles as a nameless detective. Even in the 1989 Manhunt film, he’s the sidekick to Salerno. I think by the time it got to 1995 and the Carlo book, the narrative switched to him being the hero of the whole thing.

      Liked by 3 people

      1. When the LA Times did the “Who’s who” article just before Richard was sentenced, Carrillo wasn’t even mentioned.

        Liked by 1 person

    2. Yeah, you’re right about that, he releases (or takes part in) *something* to do with Richard nearly every week, or so it seems. It’s borderline obsession.

      Liked by 2 people

  6. LMAO him not even being mentioned makes me cackle inside. Knock him down a peg or two. Do you know if Salerno has done any interviews, podcasts, and such in regards to this case?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve never seen them if he has. Just 100 of Carrillo saying the same things over and over

      Liked by 1 person

    2. I included the article in a post I did because it made me laugh. Salerno doesn’t seem to have hung on to this quite so tightly.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. He’s smart cause every time Carrillo opens his mouth the prosecution’s case starts falling apart. Probably thinks it’s better to not get involved and let things be.

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    1. Yep, Carrillo has made some shocking statements, like saying they knew the ballistics were faulty, but it didn’t matter because they recovered the guns. The ballistics WERE faulty, he’s right about that, but they did not recover the weapons. And strangely, he only said the ballistics were faulty after someone went running to him about something we’d said.

      Liked by 2 people

    2. Even Salerno has made claims that can’t be verified. Like Jesse Perez saying Richard admitted to murder. Perez never said that in court, only in newspapers afterwards.

      I often wonder if Salerno knows Carrillo embellishes stuff. Carrillo makes post-conviction confession claims all over the place but on a documentary with only Salerno, he said Richard didn’t admit to anything after the trial.

      Liked by 3 people

      1. He must do. He can’t have missed all the “celebrity” appearances he does, and I believe they were together at one event.

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      2. He seems to have made up so many things that even he can’t keep track of his lies. I wish that people questioned these claims on the podcasts and interviews he goes on instead constantly sucking up to him. If they could do this Richard what’s gonna stop the government and law enforcement from doing it to someone else. They should be held accountable for what they say and pushed back on because it’s simply just not moral to constantly be embellishing things like this.

        Liked by 2 people

      3. When I was digging around for the book, I found that he was saying there was a serial killer months before the summer murder spree started. He knew they’d be connected before they’d happened based on theories that don’t make sense. Remarkable.

        Liked by 2 people

      4. I couldn’t agree with you more, absolutely this shouldn’t happen, especially when used for entertainment purposes. No podcaster/interviewer pulls him up on anything, even when he is contradicting something he said previously. We’ve tried calling it out but they remove our comments. We don’t bother now, the blog and book must speak for us.

        Liked by 3 people

      5. I want to add as well that there is a big problem with the judicial system, but most people still have utter faith that justice is being served and cannot conceive the notion that it’s rotten. If a case a massive as this is fatally flawed at the core, and people were aware of it, it would cause problems. Far better to keep up the pretence that there was nothing wrong with the Night Stalker case, and how better to do that than to have everyone’s favourite “teddy bear” cop *everywhere* pushing out the same stories, with added embellishments and salacious gossip.

        It’s very hard to call it out, even today I saw some bullshit YouTube post showing the stolen items recovered from Felipe Solano, with the same old lies saying it was ALL recovered from Ramirez. All of it. And the idiots suck it up, rather than checking the court papers, which would tell them the truth of where it all came from. It fries my brain!

        Liked by 2 people

  8. I recently saw a comment on YouTube someone said “if I were asked” “whom do you consider to be the greatest living American?” “I would respond without hesitation” “Gil Carrillo”. Ha this is so funny.

    Liked by 4 people

    1. Oh my God! Who on earth said that? Ha ha!!

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Embarrassing for them! I’ve seen people say they love him because he’s honest!
      Hmm okay, is it honest to claim they found guns in the case when they didn’t? Is it honest to peddle the rare shoe myth? Or the claim that every police statement mentions a dishevelled and smelly man?

      Liked by 4 people

  9. csmutny06cae8b36d Avatar
    csmutny06cae8b36d

    Does anyone recall when Philip Carlo said that Richard had killed hundreds(not sure what number he used) of people, and he is sick and tired of people saying he didn’t. Also, Arturo saying it wasn’t his “first rodeo”. Hmm, thoughts anyone? I call BS.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Yes! I just finished writing this stuff in the book. Carlo said he killed 40 and Arturo H repeated it! But Carrillo already nosed through El Paso open cases and found they didn’t have any unsolved murders. They were desperate to pin more on him. Carrillo claims he murdered someone in Arizona too.

      Liked by 3 people

      1. Arturo was probably desperate to absolve himself of any accountability after his appalling showing at trial. The guy is a loser.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. I agree with Jay that Arturo is a loser. He is a classic example of a money hungry ‘lawyer’ (if you can even call him that. Daniel and him are a disgrace to the profession. I read the declarations of a few former clients that they represented from the Writ of Habeas Corpus and they all had similar complaints and concerns about them not showing up to court and not even trying to make any form of valid arguments against the prosecution and the evidence they present. Most of these clients are from poor and uneducated backgrounds and can’t afford to pay large amounts for their defense. Their entire life hangs in the balance and is solely dependent on having a good and competent lawyer. They know that these people don’t have money yet they still agree to take them on as clients. If Arturo was properly licensed he would have probably been provided funds by the state to hire experts to examine the evidence and what not. But it seems as if he’s not the type of person who has the drive and passion to put actual energy into things. He probably became a lawyer because he thought he’d be making globs of money like most people think they will.

        Liked by 2 people

      3. Yes, it’s a disgrace that they weren’t disbarred! I can’t remember which one off the top of my head but one man had exculpatory blood evidence that they didn’t order from the prosecutor’s office. The same as Richard yet people think this is impossible.

        I bet he was drawn to the fantasy of being a criminal lawyer but he just ends up bumming around in the courthouse canteen or…holidaying in Europe like he claimed in the 80s.

        The actual nerve of him going on that documentary and pretending he was a decent lawyer!

        Liked by 3 people

      4. That was Carlos Ortiz. He filed a Marsden Motion to get rid of them, but it was denied. I cover the Ortiz and Headley fuck ups in this post.

        And Justice for All

        Liked by 2 people

      5. The lawyer angle of this case makes me so angry! I wrote four posts on it because I found it hard to believe just HOW badly they screwed this up case,

        Liked by 2 people

  10. csmutny06cae8b36d Avatar
    csmutny06cae8b36d

    Does anyone recall Philip Carlo saying Richard killed hundreds (not sure of the exact number) of people, and he is sick and tired of people saying he didn’t. Also, Arturo saying it wasn’t his “first rodeo”. Hmm, thoughts? I call BS.

    Liked by 1 person

  11. csmutny06cae8b36d Avatar
    csmutny06cae8b36d

    I laughed out loud at that comment! 🤣

    Liked by 1 person

  12. It’s probably a hard pill for people to swallow that the system that is supposed to be providing justice is corrupt and probably contributing to further injustice. But if people were willing to open their eyes and dig a little deeper like you guys did it would make it so that the injustices that occurred in this case is less likely to happen. It’s an uncomfortable process but one that is greatly needed because this kind of stuff is still going on albeit at a smaller scale than this.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. It feels like every aspect of every other miscarriage of justice is rolled into the Night Stalker trial.

      Some people have asked why we focus on Richard Ramirez instead of other famous cases. Well it’s the scale of it that makes it compelling. And other famous cases have been written about. Although it has been mentioned by others, no one has written about Richard from this angle ever before. It really is mind-blowing

      Liked by 3 people

      1. A manipulation of minds, and it’s been going on for years, and it’s still going on. Pull at the loose threads covering the gaping holes in this case and it all starts to unravel. The whole point was NOT to go on about innocence or guilt, it was to show how massively screwed up this case was, how badly handled, how disgustingly engineered by the media, encouraged by what law enforcement was telling them, to form a less-than truthful overview of what happened. If the Mayor of LA, the four-times elected Tom Bradley, is telling his citizens that Ramirez is DEFINITELY guilty and they don’t need a trial, it’s no wonder that everyone decided he was guilty before he even set foot inside a court house.
        The evidence, when ripped apart, really doesn’t stack up.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. It’s shocking at how quickly it unravels. It’s substance-less. Especially once you read that Solano was possibly coerced into blaming Richard.

        Liked by 3 people

      3. Possibly punched into doing it, like Armando. Police brutality cannot be discounted, thanks to Hotchkiss.

        Liked by 2 people

      4. Eva Castillo disappearing and the prosecutor conveniently allowing her parole officer to change his testimony is suspicious too.

        Liked by 3 people

      5. Yes, this! What the hell happened to Eva? How convenient for them that she vanished.

        Liked by 2 people

      6. And he hoped she could help prove he only transported stolen goods.

        Liked by 3 people

    2. Yes, absolutely! I think I mentioned elsewhere on here that Venning and I became heavily invested in the Ivan Cantu case. He was tragically executed in February in a massive miscarriage of justice. There is a fabulous podcast called Cousins By Blood that goes into his case.

      Liked by 1 person

  13. And worse, it’s the “official” biography. One can assume Ramirez knew he’d been stitched up, and that’s why he called him a “weasel”.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Carlo knew that Richard’s family had no means to fight any false claims he made in the book for entertainment value. Any person with at least a single brain cell can read it and realize that it reads more like a fictional true crime novel than a biography. It wasn’t even that well written in that it transitions through different subjects in a rushed manner at several points in the book and goes into detail on certain parts and doesn’t in others. It was kind of exhausting to read at some points because I had to reread several times. I know I keep saying that the book is bad but I just can’t wrap my mind around how people read it and believe every word in it.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. I think it’s because they know Carlo interviewed Richard and assume the “dirty deeds” part comes from him. That is very, very unlikely. Ramirez had appeals going through, and we know, at one point, when Carlo wanted nitty gritty details, Richard walked out. It’s thanks to Carlo that people have a vision of Richard casually exiting the Kneiding residence, machete in hand, dripping blood as he went and freaking out over electrical charges.
        That said, Carlo DID leave a little trail of breadcrumbs and doubt, for those with a critical mind. He did talk about the lost blood evidence and highlights the fact that the new ‘fancy computer’ wasn’t entirely responsible for fingerprint matching. He also neatly shows Dickman’s totally unreliable testimony. I wonder, did Carlo have some doubts? Beyond that, there’s nothing redeeming about it.

        Carlo had money to make, and if he wasn’t getting gory details from Richard, one can assume he took ‘poetic license’. Richard’s naive “You’re not gonna make me look bad, are ya?”, is both sad and mind blowing. Yes, Richard, of COURSE he’s going to make you look terrible, you’ve been convicted of being the Night Stalker. It’s also sexualised, of course, even down to the photo chosen for the cover; Ramirez, wide eyed, mouth slightly parted, staring through a red haze. Carlo knew exactly what he was doing.

        Richard wanted the tapes destroyed, obviously they weren’t, and have been used on both Netflix and numerous YouTube videos, but only the same old bits. I think, if he’d been describing in minute detail every single murder and rape, they’d have used that on the documentary.
        So far, it’s only been the questionable side of the proceedings that’s been kept under wraps, not the damning.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. I reckon he had doubts but was contracted to write about a killer and that’s what he did. Plus he’d won the privilege of getting to meet Ramirez. It’s funny that the one book that is used as the ultimate killer fetish biography actually mentions things that would sow seeds of doubt in any critical thinker’s mind.

        Liked by 3 people

      3. I understand that it was written to entertain the masses and not as a courtroom non-fiction, but it irritated me in the trial parts (which is the only decent bit in my opinion). Because one minute it would be discussing the bad evidence and poor witnesses. Then it would just flip to ‘Doreen glared at Cindy and Gil and Frank exchanged glances’. It took the seriousness away from it and made it about jealous women and gossip.

        I know I wrote a post about Cindy myself – she is relevant insofar as she distracted him and ruined a relationship with a good attorney – but that whole ‘women fighting’ narrative got on my nerves. And it’s all some people care about.

        I hate how people take everything they read about Richard as gospel. Including fake footage in the Netflix documentary, every newspaper article and most of Carlo!

        Liked by 3 people

      4. Cupcake Cindy is definitely relevant, for the reasons you mention.

        Liked by 2 people

      5. And because she had the power to help with his case in the appeals but didn’t – she made it worse. I guess she was upset over what went down in their ‘relationship’ but the man was on death row.

        Liked by 2 people

      6. Her stupid, vapid TV appearances made it worse.

        Liked by 2 people

    2. Hi yes totally agree …I stopped in the middle ..and than ….After a Pause of ca.3 Weeks I began to read the chapter with the trial. I ve seen Lots of comments at U Tube and many people write thats the best book about Serialkillers as it describes acuratly and relentlessly how they ‘work ‘ and especially how cold and brutal Richard was when he commited the crimes . I think its really nessesary to make a relevant critic of this book . Because it is NOT a biography of Richard Ramirez at all….Readers should know this .
      and

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Let’s hope ours can be a little antidote. Ha ha!

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Also, I don’t even agree he goes in depth about the mind of the killer. Cos Richard’s interview at the back of some copies wasn’t really revealing. He only discussed killers in a general sense, not about himself!

        Liked by 2 people

  14. I read somewhere that the cops were hiding some organized crimes, idk if that’s true but that’s what I read. Gil makes up his theories believing them to be super true and conclusive cuz I mean people will for sure believe a cop, so why need any proof or evidence. And seriously another book?! As Jay told me how come only Richard’s case has its start cop?!

    Like

    1. At this point, nothing would surprise me. My friend came up with an organised crime theory after reading stuff about the informants. For the Zazzara case, that’s definitely a possibility. It makes me curious about why some of those who knew Ramirez never came to court and why some of them went missing, like Alejandro Espinoza and Eva Castillo. And Julio… where is he?!

      Liked by 1 person

  15. People love to twist Richard’s statements into confessions. Especially the 1993 interview. He’s not making much sense in parts of it and in my opinion, he’s in a psychotic state. Therefore he’s not reliably talking about himself and it should not be interpreted as a confession.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. also with that 1993 interview you can tell he was about to have a panic attack the way he was breathing, that Mike Watkiss was forcing him into a confession it seems.

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      1. Yeah he seemed like he wasn’t breathing properly at all.

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  16. Holy shit! There was blood there that wasn’t his? Type A and he was was type 0? That’s a huge discrepancy. I don’t know why his lawyers didn’t bring this up because this is a very important piece of evidence. His lawyers really were useless and Whitney Bennett didn’t really see anything so there isn’t much to tie him with the crime only the typical Avia shoe prints that were never found and proven to be his. I also read the Maria Hernandez article and I had no idea about half of that stuff. It seems Maria Hernandez really didn’t know who attacked her however she did recall someone with a mustache and her writing “that could be him” seems like she was unsure

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, you read it correctly. Type A blood was discovered in Whitney’s bedroom. It wasn’t hers, nor was it Richard’s and it sure looks like whoever was holding that knife slipped and cut himself.
      It’s appalling.

      Maria Hernandez never seemed sure, and after we looked at the case files in LA, we saw why. Maria said she only saw the killer for two seconds, not eight.

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Yes! Mismatching blood was also found at the Cannon crime scene too. There was no evidence it was him.

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