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Saturday, November 14, 2009 - 12:23 PM
ennifer Furio devised a project of writing letters to serial killers
to see how they would respond, and Robin Gecht and Eric Spreitzer both
sent letters that she printed in her book, The Serial Killer Letters. Spreitzer
came first. Furio says that he had turned himself in when the case
was initially investigated (although he did not). He told her that he
felt badly about his involvement in the crimes, and had even passed out
at the sight of all the blood, but insisted that he'd done it because
he'd been afraid of Gecht and his shotgun. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire "I never did bad things
alone," he claimed. She excuses him as being weak, vulnerable,
directionless, illiterate, and an easy target, thanks to a bad home
life and substance abuse. Gecht had offered him a job when he was down
on his luck and made some empty promises. According to Spreitzer,
Gecht then blackmailed him with obscene photographs that he said he
would send to the police. Furio's assessment is that he was sweet and
gentle, and failed to come across as a murderer. What he hoped for,
during the time he had left before execution (these letters were
published prior to the commutation of his sentence), was the love of a
good woman, preferably someone who would marry him. He insisted
that the murders were not planned; instead, they were random attacks.
He had driven the van and Robin would order him to stop whenever he
saw a woman who appealed to him—and he was always on the lookout for
one with sizable breasts. Spreitzer believed that the Kokoraleis
brothers were also forced to do these things, but he did not really
know them well. And like many offenders who have little thought for
the victims and feel sorrier for themselves, he believed he was too
young to die.  Robin Gecht Furio
was curious about Gecht's obsession with women's breasts. He told her
it was "a thing with my entire family." He said that from his
great-grandfather onward, each male member of his family had married a
woman with large breasts. He expressed great satisfaction with his
former wife, whom he said was a size 39D. He insisted that he was
not a serial killer and had had no part in the crimes. He had never
murdered anyone. He also said that the things printed about him in
newspapers and books were the result of Kokoraleis's stupid joke, which
got repeated again and again until people believed it. He claimed that
the primary book on the subject had been based on police bias. He also
informed her that two of the charges had been dropped and that he would
be released from prison sooner than expected. However, his persistent
bid for DNA testing was stymied over and over again. The
Mansonesque type of killer is rare—the person who can persuade others
to kill or harm others for him. According to three confessions, Gecht
was exactly that type of person. While Manson's brood was larger, the
three men who followed Gecht were just as deadly, and it's quite
unusual to have four people involved in such an extensive string of
sexually sadistic murder.  Serial Murders and Their Victims Eric W. Hickey, a criminologist who published a study involving over three hundred serial killers, offered a line in Serial Murderers and Their Victims that
seems appropriate for this crew: "For some multiple killers, murder
must be simultaneously a participation and a spectator endeavor; power
can be experienced by observing a fellow conspirator destroy human
life, Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire possibly as much as by performing the killing. The pathology of
the relationship operates symbiotically." The killers each add
something to the other's excitement. Perhaps what they could not do alone, they could do within the chemistry of the dangerous association. Robin Gecht as teenager According
to the study, 74% of team killers are white; female killers participate
with males around one-third of the time; and the majority of cases
involve only two offenders working together. Of serial murder
victims, some 15% were murdered by team killers and, in the majority of
cases, the victims were strangers. Sometimes the team leader or
dominant partner sends the others out to do what he wants, and
sometimes he participates. One person always maintains psychological
control.
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