What Was Behind the 1970s Serial Killer Epidemic? - 3 Quarks Daily
2 Articles
2 Articles
Three of the most notorious serial killers in the United States lived almost at the same place as children. Random? A new theory traces their perversion to environmental influences. Why there was a mass murder epidemic in the 1970s and what this has to do with the rise in the Lucifer curve.
What was behind the 1970s serial killer epidemic? - 3 Quarks Daily
Dorian Lynskey in The Guardian: “Everybody knows somebody who knows somebody who almost went out with Ted Bundy.” Bundy was one of at least half a dozen serial killers active in Washington in 1974. Within a few years, the state would produce the similarly prolific Randall Woodfield, known as the I-5 Killer, and Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Its murder rate rose by more than 30% in 1974 – almost six times the national average. In Tacoma, …
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