When a member of his family is harshly taken by a sadistic killer, the pain never goes away. Rob Bayt, 15, John Wayne Gasi 33 – the final victim – but if his friend Kim did not have more innocent victims, he lost their lives
It was a brittle and cold evening in December in 1978, when 17 -year -old Kim appeared to turn in her local chemical on the outskirts of Illinois, Chicago.
She trembled because she forgot her jacket and the temperature was about zero degrees Celsius, smiling gratily when her loyal boy and folding bowed to lend it in the Blue Burgistic Park Park.
This type of non -selfish gesture will be forever in Kim's memory, because it was the last time her friend saw her alive.
Now, about 47 years old, Courtney (37 years old), 47, is participating in the story of her courageous mother. “My mother lost her friend Rob Bayst on the night of December 11, 1978, and the pain and sadness are not really disappeared,” she reveals in an exclusive conversation with the pluscinemaz.comfrom her home in Los Angeles. “I participated in the seizure of one of the most famous serial killers, John Wayne Ghassi, which is part of our family's history. I was shocked when I discovered this for the first time and wanted to tell my mother's side because I was through it, I saw the traces of his crimes.”
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One of the most famous serial killers in the world – John Wayne Ghassi – torture, rape, killing and killing 33 young men and children in the 1970s. 29 fragile bodies were hidden in space between the floors of his house during his killing, which spanned 1972 to 1978 – The remains of his four other victims were discovered later in the mysterious waters of the nearby Les Plaines River.
But if this is not for Kim, her pictures appeared in developing her receipt in a robe jacket, the killing of John Wayne Grass will not be stopped. She has no idea why she saved the receipt and put it in a jacket pocket – perhaps her subconscious mind told her to leave an idea? “The rescue of the receipt helped her to lead the authorities to Jaci because they found the receipt in his home, and this was the main evidence that led to his arrest,” says Courtney.
The police also found a Safiya episode of John SZYC, who disappeared in January 1977, at the age of 19, and handcuffs and killing in Gacy. As Kim's older daughter, Courtney always had a close relationship with her mother and remembered how she started learning for the first time about her mother's brush with a serial killer when she was in the elementary school. While the loss of her boyfriend is still raw and painful to her mother, Courtney says she is in awe of her amazing courage, which led to the arrest of Ghassi. “When she was seventeen -year -old, she had a belief that although this was a terrible thing, she would have played her role to make sure that a head could not harm anyone again.
“My mother felt exhausted – she was a little girl looking to go to college, and her life ended in several ways when she became an eyewitness. She was a college student, and she had to return in 1980 to trial. It was a lot to deal with her, but she dealt with a lot of grace, and I was always proud of how to copy it with everything.”
Despite Kim's courage, it took some time for the police to listen to it. “The authorities tried to close them,” says Courtney. “She was seventeen years old and treated as if she did not know what she was talking about – so I help her restore her voice.” The random act of the receipt mode in the Rob jacket, which was later found in a Ghassi's house, means that her mother was the main witnesses in a series of fatal, serial trial that caused the world to hold. When the body of Rob was found floating along the DS Blanes River months later in April 1979, she witnessed that her boyfriend was that Ghassi was the last of what was seen with him.
In 2017, nearly four decades of Rob killing, Kim visited a Ghassi house with her daughter, as many victims were unintentionally seduced until their death. “My mother said that she felt creeping outside the house and that she was suffering from the cry of terror,” Courtney recalls. “I remember I am sad, afraid. But it was important to imagine some of these innocent children – and their amazing families -.”
On Monday evening, who was killed – December 11, 1978 – Rob Bayt, 15, left the pharmacy where he worked with Kim to speak to Ghassi about a possible job. This was the last time that he was alive, and when the officers later visited a Jaci house, a police officer noticed a scent of rotting bodies after Flashing Jaisce. Ghassi later admitted that he had taken his victims by force, under the claim that he was a policeman, or was attracting them to his home with a promise of a job or an offer of money for sex.
He won the title of “deadly clown” because he was wearing makeup and clown clothes for donations in the name of “Pogo” or “Clown spots”. He used his clown work to deceive his victims to become handcuffed, as Ghassi told them that he would show them a magic trick. Once the hands are shackled, the victims will soon realize that they are real and that Gacy will overwhelm them, or use chloroform, before stripping them and silencing them.
Then the young men were tortured and raped, or they were brief or strangled by their masks. Then the victims' gossip was buried in the crawling area of his home, using lime to accelerate the decomposition. It was very horrific that the murders were that the Prosecutor Terry Sullivan stopped taking over the murder cases after the John Wayne Ghassi case, and Kurtney told that he could no longer deal with it. “I feel destroyed for the families who lost children and youth,” Cortney adds. “He sings me, he frustrates me – it is painful to think about it.”
Now, Courtney wrote a book telling the story of the families of the victims and survivors, without glorifying the sadistic Gacy crimes. “The book puts victims and survivors first – what matters is not John and where is the heavie, but the victims and the people who loved the victims. He tells the story of how a young woman helped stop a serial killer and how she changed her family and society.
GACY was executed on May 10, 1994, at the Stateville Correctional Center at Crest Hill, Illinois, by the deadly injection of killings committed between 1972 and 1978. His recent words before his execution showed that the cold, devastating killer had no remorse, as he simply left the world: “Baladi Kiss **.” But if Courtney can have one desire, the world will remember the victims, not the killer. She is frustrated that the acts of horrific killers often glorify them and say it is important that the mothers of the victims have a voice. Meanwhile, my mother, Kim, says that she is still thinking about Umm Rob and the pain she is going through.
“The mother's love is not measured,” she says. “I think a lot about Elizabeth Bayst. I did everything in her power as a mother, and Rob was a great child. This family was full of love. You never wanted anyone who loves to feel the same pain, stress or violence.” She says that the threat of someone takes your child unexpectedly without any warning has become more realistic for her when she became a mother. “I had to get bedrooms on the second floor,” Courtney said in an interview previously published in Harper Bazar. “The property that was completely closed. The madness of the small border bone.”
“For me, my friend has lost his life in those property. It is still raw after 40 years. How can someone become, for any reason, a monster and steal my friend's life in an arduous and terrible way? Our culture needs to turn. We must pay respect for the victims.”
After death by Courtney Lund O'Neill (Mirror Books, 9.99 pounds sterling) on May 22, but you can order in advance on Amazon now.
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