Satan Loves Some Metal.

“We’re on a Highway to Hell!”

*Please note: there is use of swear words and sexual references in parts of this post.*

Summer 1985, picture the scene: a young addict, a stolen car, cruising through Los Angeles in the darkest hours of the night.

Cocaine surging through his veins, adrenaline pumping, he slams a cassette tape into the car stereo and disappears into the night, in search of women to rape, people to kill. Music pounding, he feels invincible, he knows Satan is on his side, protecting him.  Because, fuck yeah, AC/DC!


Lyrics from Highway to Hell by AC/DC, They say never let the truth get in the way of a good story, however, I am going to, because the famous rock anthem was inspired by a stretch of road in Australia called the Canning Highway, not the Prince of Darkness. Sorry.

That’s the often-told tale, part of the myth surrounding this case, that Richard Ramirez, self-confessed Satanist, committed his heinous and diabolical crimes due to the influence of heavy rock.

“Satanic Panic!” – a very brief over view

In the 1980’s USA, the phenomenon, that came to be known as the “Satanic Panic” came to a head, the frenzy, fuelled (as ever) by the media, led citizens to believe that Satan was lurking around every corner.  He was coming for your children, poisoning their minds through heavy metal/rock music, Dungeons and Dragons; and they were also being ritually abused or slain by a vast network of Satanists, hiding in plain sight throughout the country.

This “moral panic” had been teetering on the edge since the late 60s and into the 70s, with the founding of the Church of Satan in 1966, the release of film The Exorcist, the Manson case and the plethora of Serial Killers throughout the 70s, and their supposed links to the occult, in particular The Zodiac Killer and David Berkowitz, aka The Son of Sam. It spilled over in the 80s with the release of the (now debunked) book Michelle Remembers and the highly publicised McMartin Preschool case in Los Angeles.

Satanic Panic persisted late into the decade, with TV personalities like Geraldo and Oprah dedicating hours of time to the subject. Geraldo claimed there were over one million Satanists hiding in neighbourhoods, and this fear did not begin to disperse until after the McMartin case had also been debunked and parents turned their fears in another direction.


Lyrics from Night Prowler by AC/DC

“The Filthy Fifteen”

Ahh, yes, Satan’s favourite, some good old rock music.

Bands such as Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Twisted Sister, and of course, AC/DC, were in the firing line, coming in for hatred and blame, accused of hiding “Satanic messages” within their lyrics, with the suggestion that if you played your vinyl records backwards, demonic sounds were heard.  That’s just stupid, yes, you got warped sounds — because it pushed the needle backwards.  It just ruined the record, so you went out and replaced it! Genius marketing.

(I know this, because I tried it with my sister’s Led Zeppelin IV album, not because I believed in subliminal messages, but I wanted to hear if it was true, none the less. I wrecked both the album and the turntable stylus, both of which I had to replace. I still have the replacement album, sadly not the turntable)

Music, in particular, rock or metal, was thought to be influencing the young, to encourage them in the participation of drinking, sex, drugs and devil worship.

This eventually led to the birth of the Parents Music Resource Center, in 1985, and the “Filthy Fifteen”, a list of what was deemed the most disgusting songs and the requirement of parental advisory stickers on albums.  Most were about sex and drugs, but a couple on the list were because of the “Occult”.  AC/DC made the list, but not for Highway to Hell, Hell’s Bells or Night Prowler.

What a load of basket cases.


The Filthy Fifteen. Sheena Easton, is that you?

Ride like the Devil..

Just when you think things couldn’t couldn’t possibly get any crazier, along comes a couple of evangelists to prove us wrong.

‘Southern Ohio evangelist Jim Brown claims that he and cohort Greg Hudson have discovered that the theme song to the old ”Mr. Ed” television show contains a satanic message when played backward’.

Chicago Tribune, May 1986

Here’s the article in full for you.

Oh, and a video from YouTube.

Es tu, Mr Ed?


Stranger Danger!

With the Reagan administration came a new panic, this time in the shape of stranger danger. The theme of social chaos and disorder permeated the air, and with family values and law and order at the heart of the Reagan campaign, the combination of the two “panics” came at the perfect time.

In 1982 CBS News informed a horrified nation that 50,000 children were abducted by strangers every year, although these figures had been wildly inflated, it served to create further uproar. A stranger was coming for your child!   

THIS article, which went to print the day after the arrest of Richard Ramirez, again debunks the exaggerated numbers.  Whether this article had much impact on either the city or wider county of Los Angeles is hard to say, after all, they had been terrorised for weeks and months over the so-called Night Stalker killing spree. 


The caption dated September 1,1985, a quote by the woman in the photograph, identified as Debbie, reads:
“I don’t know why the Night Stalker started to bother me. Nothing like this has ever happened before, but it did. So, when my husband went on call the other night, I started cleaning and oiling my gun. I’m taking shooting practice this week.”  Photographer Anne Knudsen from the Herald Examiner Collection.

Los Angeles was a hot-bed of crime before, during and after the Night Stalker crimes, the only difference was public perception and media attention.

Richard

Into this maelstrom, out of nowhere, they dropped Richard Ramirez.  Here at last, was the perfect example of everything they had been warning about for years.  The drug addicted, rock music-loving, Devil worshipping, thief, rapist and murderer: the stranger in your perfect world, the “drifter”, as he was called in many news articles.

The media went wild and so began the circus, the show trial and the railroading of Ramirez.

Photographer Mike Sergieff, from Herald Examiner Collection.

Photograph caption dated September 1, 1985 reads:

“Police hold back crowd that gathered at the LAPD’s Hollenbeck station.”

Photograph snipe dated August 31, 1985 reads:

“Nite [sic] Stalker vigil at LAPD’s Hollenbeck. Crowd on St. Louis St. being pushed back by LAPD officers to across the street and onto First St. for crowd control by the police station where the night stalker suspect was moved from.” Additional photograph caption reads, “After the capture, crowds surged around Hollenbeck station in East Los Angeles to catch a glimpse of the Night Stalker.”  


“Hail Satan”

Richard’s chances of a fair trial were slim to zero, right from the beginning, as we have shown many times. 

A review of the L.A. Times showed extremely prejudicial and inflammatory language used to describe and characterise Ramirez and the “Night Stalker” crimes:

  • “Satanic Overtones”
  • “Devil Worshipper” (Ex. 76, L.A. Times Articles Reviewed by Dr. Bronson)
  • “Diabolical”
  • “Satan Worship”
  • “Satanic rituals”
  • “At House hearing regarding alleged pornography in rock music, panel was told by an expert about AC/DC ‘one of their fans, I’m sure you know, is the accused Night Stalker,’ referring to serial murder suspect, Richard Ramirez’” (this is a reference to the Filthy Fifteen)

You get the picture, and there were hundreds of these articles.

Every fourth article, or one-quarter of the actual amount of L.A. Times
articles ,was devoted to the Night Stalker, and this information was drip-fed to a non-sequestered jury.

“People knew my lifestyle, and the connection was made by them – and eventually the police – that because of my beliefs, I was the perfect candidate for being the Night Stalker”

Richard Ramirez, from a 1993 interview with Hustler.

For Richard, his love of rock music, coupled with an interest in the occult, and his criminal activities, of both stealing and dealing, created the perfect storm, one in which he remains embroiled forever.

“I’m an angry motherfucker and I just hope all those that are deserving get what they got coming. I’ll leave it at that.”

Richard Ramirez

~ Jay ~

12 responses to “Satan Loves Some Metal.”

  1. I loooove that you brought up McMartin Preschool because it’s one of my favorite conspiracies! It’s another case with iffy police officers, a biased media, and a circus of a trial.

    LA was such a weird place in the 80s

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I could have written SO much about that, but I had to keep it simple, even though it is completely relevant to the times. It’s one of my favourites, too. I gave a link, just in case anyone wants to learn more. Thank you, as ever, for reading and commenting. We really appreciate it.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I must say, I hope everyone that did Richard wrong gets what they deserve also. I am an 80’s teen, and I liked some of the same music that Richard listened to. I remember the hype around metal/rock music and how absurd it was. I think a lot of people don’t realize that Richard, although he claimed to be a satanist, didn’t seem to know much about the practice. And the majority of people don’t realize that Satanism has absolutely nothing to do with devil worship-they are, in fact, atheists. Of course, there are ” satanic” cults, but they are completely different from Satanists.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Same here. I saw AC/DC twice in the late 80s. They were a bunch of sweethearts.

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  3. It’s fiction, but this is basically what happened to Eddie in Stranger Things. Because he did drugs, loved metal, and played D&D, his entire group was called a satanist cult.

    This satanist thing continued in the 90s and early 00s, I remember the stigma pushed on kids who would listen to Marilyn Manson, and my own mom (who was a young woman in the 80s) would refer to rock in general as music for drug addicts and satanists.

    The problem is that even if you want to follow this narrative, if you say there’s a Satanist Panic you’ve got all the more reason to think this isn’t the work of one serial killer. Several people discovered satanism and the occult and got involved in extremist cults.

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    1. It’s probably no coincidence that the McMartin trial was going on at the same time as Richard’s.

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    2. I found another story where a boy killed his dad, I think, and he played D&D and so it was somehow linked to his father’s murder in the media which is absurd. I too remember the big drama over Marilyn Manson! My friend listened to him and had to hide the CDs from her mother.

      You’re right there, the Church of Satan HQ was in San Francisco, so it is impossible that ONLY Richard Ramirez would be a member; that only he could possibly draw a pentagram. Even Falzon admitted in his book that Pan was not the first time he’d seen occult symbols at crime scenes.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I don’t know if you guys followed the whole Maury Terry thing with the Son of Sam, but it does provide us with some context. Maury had gathered clues and information to the point of obsession, just because to his knowledge this whole Satanism/Occultism thing was so nationally widespread that there were many incidents traced to David Berkowitz that were actually not his doing.

        And this was in the late 70s into the 80s.

        Unsurprisingly, the least collaborative PD turned out the be LA guys (not that the others were listening that much, but they weren’t as dismissive).

        I don’t buy into each one of Maury’s theories but it certainly has me thinking, and unless someone can prove that Richard was an active member of the Church of Satan or the Progress or whatever those sects called themselves, I’d definitely look into what those members were doing before pointing fingers at a serial killer who is actually series-less.

        However, even though Maury had endless lists of information that proved you needed to look at a bigger group of people or at least at two or three suspects, the NYPD did the Carrillo and they forever stuck to the theory that Berkowitz acted alone. Even in those instances where he’d been spotted in an entire different street.

        The Son of Sam case is interesting in that regard, the media and the public express doubts on Berkowitz acting alone but the police and the DAs do. Not. Budge. Insane.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Yes, I followed the Maury Terry thing.

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  4. radiant2de5a9b9d6 Avatar
    radiant2de5a9b9d6

    I remember the D&D thing, too. Ozzy Osbourne was also labled as a ghoul that embedded backwards Satanic messages on his records. Behold Tipper Gore!

    The 80s were a really odd time.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m really interested in the perspective of young people at that time. We also had one commenter on here talking about how, as a 19-year-old, she really thought the L.A. police were saints for ‘saving the city’. And that the Satanic fear was genuine for some people.

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      1. Yeah, it wasn’t crazy in the UK, nowhere near.

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