Svetlograd 1 01 Serial Killer

Suffolk Co. Police Dept. 2014 mugshot
Born1 July 1966 (age 54)
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyTwo consecutive 25-years-to-life sentences
Details
Victims2 confirmed
Span of crimes
1993–1994
CountryUnited States
State(s)New York

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John Bittrolff (born July 1, 1966) is an American convicted murderer and a suspect in the Long Island serial killer case. In July 2014, he was charged with the murders of Rita Tangredi and Colleen McNamee. He is also a suspect in the murder of a third woman, Sandra Costilla.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Bittrolff became a suspect in the unsolved murders after his brother, Timothy Bittrolff, was partially matched to DNA found on the bodies in 2013. Timothy Bittrolff submitted the sample after violating an unrelated order of protection, in 2013.[7]

On July 5, 2017, Bittrolff was found guilty of Tangredi and McNamee's murders.[8] He was sentenced to two consecutive 25-years-to-life sentences on September 12, 2017. He is imprisoned at Clinton Correctional Facility. His Department Identification Number (DIN) is 17A3925.

Victims[edit]

Serial

Bittrolff was convicted of killing two women and is a suspect in the death of a third.

Rita Tangredi[edit]

Tangredi was found dead on November 2, 1993 in Suffolk County, New York. Tangredi lived in East Patchogue and was known by police to be a sex worker.[9]

Colleen McNamee[edit]

McNamee's body was found on January 30, 1994 in Shirley, New York, also in Suffolk County. Believed by authorities to be a sex worker, she was beaten, strangled to death and left naked in the woods, near the William Floyd Parkway.[10][11]

Sandra Costilla[edit]

Costilla's body was found on November 20, 1993 in North Sea, New York.[12]

Long Island serial killing suspect[edit]

After Bittrolff's sentence, the case's prosecutor announced that Bittrolff was also a suspect in at least one of the 10 murders attributed to the unidentified Long Island Serial Killer (LISK) in New York's Suffolk and Nassau counties. Suffolk County District Attorney's office prosecutor Robert Biancavilla released a statement noting that Bittrolff was likely responsible for the deaths of other women, and that, 'There are remains of the victims at Gilgo that may be attributed to the handiwork of Mr. Bittrolff, and that investigation is continuing'.[13][14]

Bittrolff was a carpenter who lived in Manorville, where the torsos of Jessica Taylor and Valerie Mack were recovered. The remains were discovered roughly three miles away from Bittrolff's home. He also reportedly once 'cut out the heart of a deer he had just shot and ate it raw in the woods.'[15][16]

A further link between Bittrolff and the Long Island Serial Killer case has been established: the adult daughter of one of Bittrolff's victims, Rita Tangredi, was reportedly 'best friends' with Melissa Barthelemy, one of the first LISK victims discovered at Gilgo Beach. Melissa Barthelemy's mother also reported that Melissa 'had a lot of calls to Manorville from her phone' at the time.[17][18]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Benjamin Mueller. 'Two Decades After Pair of Killings on Long Island, Authorities Make an Arrest'. The New York Times. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  2. ^Paul Farrell. 'John Bittrolff: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know - Heavy.com'. Heavy.com.
  3. ^'Man arrested in decades-old murder case'. New York Post.
  4. ^'Long Island Murder Suspect May Be Linked to Three Deaths, Say Officials'. NBC News.
  5. ^'Wood chips bolster murder charges against LI man: prosecutors'. NY Daily News.
  6. ^Nicole Allegrezza. 'DNA nails suspect'. The Long Island Advance.
  7. ^Frank Eltman. 'Prosecutor: Convicted killer may be tied to more NY slayings'. Newser. Archived from the original on 2017-09-13. Retrieved 2017-09-13.
  8. ^Frank Eltman. 'Man Is Convicted of 1990s Murders of 2 Prostitutes'. NBC New York.
  9. ^'Rita Tangredi's sister: 'I prayed every day' for 21 years that her killer would be found'. Newsday.
  10. ^'Brother's DNA led to arrest of LI 'family man' in 2 cold case murders'. New York's PIX11 / WPIX-TV.
  11. ^'Cops: Manorville man charged in two cold case murders'. Riverhead News-Review.
  12. ^'Arraignment Thursday for Manorville Man Accused of Murdering Two Prostitutes, Suspected in Third North Sea Case - The Sag Harbor Express'. The Sag Harbor Express. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  13. ^Frank Eltman. 'Prosecutor: Convicted killer may be tied to more NY slayings'. Newser.
  14. ^http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/convicted-killer-tied-gilgo-beach-murders-article-1.3490281
  15. ^Frank Eltman. 'Prosecutor: Convicted killer may be tied to more NY slayings'. Newser.
  16. ^http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/convicted-killer-tied-gilgo-beach-murders-article-1.3490281
  17. ^http://people.com/crime/prosecutor-says-john-bittrolff-long-island-serial-killer/
  18. ^http://pix11.com/2017/09/12/convicted-killer-may-be-tied-to-gilgo-beach-murders-prosecutor/
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Bittrolff&oldid=1023443030'
Born: December 18, 1948 in Burbank, California
Number of victims: 10
Date of murders: 1964 - 1973
Method of murder

Svetlograd 1 01 Serial Killer

: Shooting / Bludgeoning / Stabbing
Location: Santa Cruz County, California
When Ed Kemper was 15, he murdered his grandparents, because he later said, he “wanted to see what it felt like to kill Grandma.” That saw him committed to Atascadero State Hospital where he underwent a barrage of psychiatric tests that diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and also found him to have a near-genius IQ.
Kemper remained at the hospital for six years until, in 1969, doctors deemed it safe to release him. Now 21 years old, the hulking 6-foot-9, 300 pound, young man was placed in the care of his mother, in Santa Cruz, California. His juvenile record was also sealed.
After working a series of odd jobs, Kemper found employment with the Department of Public Works Highways Department (these days known as Caltrans). Thereafter, he began cruising the highways and picking up hitchhikers.
At first, Kemper did not harm the women he offered rides to. Instead, he used these runs to develop a placid, non-threatening persona, offsetting his massive size, which naturally intimidated people.
Murder, however, was never far from Ed Kemper’s mind. On May 5, 1972, he picked up college students, Mary Anne Pisce and Anita Luchese, drove them to an isolated spot, then stabbed and strangled them to death. Unsure of what to do with the bodies, he drove around with them in his car, then took them back to his mother’s house where he dissected them. He later dumped the body parts in a ravine, although he held onto the heads until they rotten and had to be disposed of.
Over the next eight months, Kemper murdered four more female students, bringing their bodies back to his home to mutilate and have sex with. He would usually cut off the victim’s head, depersonalizing her, before raping the headless corpse. The bodies would later be discarded in ravines or open fields, although he buried one victim’s head in his back yard.
SerialIn April 1973, Kemper’s love/hate relationship finally boiled over and he battered her to death with a hammer while she slept. Thereafter, he decapitated her and raped her headless corpse. Later, he used her head as a dartboard and also cut out her vocal cords and pushed them into the garbage disposal. His murderous urges still not satiated, Kemper then phoned his mother's best friend and invited her over for dinner. When the woman arrived, he killed her too.
Kemper must have realized that he would be the number one suspect in the murders, so he got into his car and fled east. However, after hearing a news bulletin about his crimes on the radio, he stopped the car at a Colorado gas station, called the police and confessed. He was still waiting when they arrived to arrest him.
Once is custody, Kemper had no hesitation in admitting to murder, providing a sickening confession that included admissions of necrophilia and cannibalism. At his trial he entered an insanity plea, but was found guilty on eight counts of murder and sentenced to life in prison (the death penalty was suspended at that time). He remains incarcerated at Vacaville State Prison in California.

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Svetlograd 1 01 Serial Killers

Read the full, horrifying story of necrophile killer Ed Kemper, plus 11 more gruesome serial killer cases in American Monsters Volume 5. Available now on Amazon.