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Ripper Serial Killer Kerala

07.08.2019
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Born
K P Jayanandan

1968 (age 50–51)
Other names'Ripper'
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
Victims7
Span of crimes
2003–2006
CountryIndia
State(s)Kerala
Karnataka
November 23, 2006

3 Atlanta Ripper. Between 1911 and 1912, an unidentified serial killer left the bodies of several black and mixed-race women dead in the streets of Atlanta. The Atlanta newspapers alternatively ignored the murders or sensationalized them, calling the killer “Jack the Ripper” after the infamous serial killer of 1888 London. Jack the Ripper, the notorious serial killer who terrorized the streets of London more than a century ago, may have finally been identified by forensic scientists in Great Britain. Genetic tests.

K P 'Ripper' Jayanandan (born 1968) is a serial killer from Trichur who is accused of seven murders committed during a span of 35 robberies, in and around ThrissurErnakulam border areas. For the seven murders committed by Jayanandan, including the double murder at Perinjanam in October 2004, Thrissur principal sessions judge sentenced him to death by hanging in June 2008. He was sent to Pujapura central Jail to await execution but escaped in June 2013. He was captured on 9 September 2013 near Trichur.[1]

Background[edit]

Jayanandan was born in Mala district of Thrissur.

Major thefts and murders[edit]

Jayanandan's first major offence was burgling the house of 45-year-old Jose in Mala police station limits in September 2003. During the robbery, he struck Jose, who was sleeping, with a crowbar and killed him and decamped with Rs 17,000 and a video cassette player.[2]

His second burglary was in March 2004, in which he forced his way into a house in Mala police station limits itself, killing 51-year-old Nabeesa who woke up hearing the noise and came out. Upon entering the house, he killed two more women, 23-year-old Fousiya and 28-year-old Noorjahan, and two children.

In a third burglary in October 2004, Jayanandan killed 64-year-old Kalapurackkal Sahadevan and his wife, 58-year-old Nirmala, in their house at Perinjanam, Thrissur district in Mathilakam police station limits, to steal 11.25 sovereigns of gold

His next attack was at a house in Kodungallur police station limits in Thrissur, in which he attacked Aravindaksha Panicker and wife Omana Panicker and caused grievous injuries to both, besides robbing 18-sovereign gold ornaments.

Jayanandan's next target was an outlet of Kerala State Beverages Corporation at North Paravoor in August 2005. When the security guard Subhashakan challenged him to rob the next house and take more money and 3 Video cassette player, Jayanandan struck him on the head with an iron rod and killed him.

Escape[edit]

The police suspect that the jailbreak occurred after midnight. The fugitives had cut through the cylindrical 'dead latch' of the padlocked cell's grilled door, possibly with a hacksaw blade, and scaled the relatively low wall of the block. (The wall had been fortified and topped with an electrified barbed wire fence in 2011 to house terror suspect Thadiyantavide Nazeer.) They proceeded to the prison's infirmary and stole bed sheets and clothes left out to dry on clothes lines.

The convicts hastily assembled a crude ladder from wooden poles to scale the wall. Once on top of the wall, they used a rope fashioned out of the knotted bed sheets and clothes to abseil down to the ground.

The escapees had made up their cots inside the cell with vessels and pillows to make it appear as if they were sleeping. The prison's extensive surveillance camera network was down at the time of the escape, purportedly due to a power outage.[3]

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Investigation[edit]

The escapade was a huge embarrassment for Kerala police as Jayanandan was a seasoned criminal and with multiple successful escape attempts made in past. The high security controls and technologies were breached by Jayanandan with very rudimentary measures.

Ripper Serial Killer Kerala

Capture[edit]

Jayanandan was arrested by the Kerala police in Nellayi, a few kilometres away from his native village in Thrissur on 9 September 2013. The police detained Jayanandan in the afternoon, while he was waiting to get his bicycle repaired at Nellayi junction.[4]

Kerala

Notes[edit]

  1. ^http://www.manoramaonline.com/cgi-bin/MMOnline.dll/portal/ep/malayalamContentView.do?contentId=14957956&programId=1073753760&tabId=11&contentType=EDITORIAL&BV_ID=@@@
  2. ^'Death Sentence for Jayanandan'. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  3. ^'Two convicts break out of Central Prison early Monday morning'. The Hindu. Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  4. ^'Court appearance'. TOI. Retrieved 20 April 2014.

References[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ripper_Jayanandan&oldid=894828499'

Daniel Harold Rolling, also known as the Gainesville Ripper, murdered five University of Florida students in the summer of 1990. The killings terrified residents of the otherwise sleepy Southern college town and became front-page news for days on end. After being apprehended, Rolling would be linked to three more deaths in Louisiana and would remain a figure of media curiosity until he was executed in 2006.

Early Life

Rolling was born on May 26, 1954, in Shreveport, La., to James and Claudia Rolling. It was an unhappy home life, Rolling would later say. His father, a Shreveport police officer, abused him from an early age, both verbally and physically. As a teen, Rolling was a poor student and worked only sporadically. He was also arrested several times for burglary.

Apart from these details, little is known of Rolling's early life before the murders. One incident, however, stands out. During a heated argument with his father in May of 1990, Rolling brandished a gun and shot the older man. Rolling fled. His father lost an eye and an ear but survived.

Death in Gainesville

The first murder took place on Aug. 24, 1990. Rolling broke into the apartment of college students Sonja Larson, 18, and Christina Powell, 17. Both girls were asleep. He attacked Sonja first, who was asleep in her upstairs bedroom. First, he stabbed her chest, then taped her mouth, then as she struggled for her life, he stabbed her to death.

He then went back downstairs and taped Christina's mouth and bound her wrists behind her back. He then cut off her clothing, raped her and stabbed her multiple times in the back, causing her death. Deciding that he wanted to leave some kind signature, he then mutilated the bodies and posed them in sexually suggestive positions and left.

The next night Rolling broke into the apartment of Christa Hoyt, 18, but she was not at home. He decided to wait for her and made himself at home. When she arrived mid-morning, he crept up behind her, startling her, then attacked her, placing her in a choke-hold. After that, he taped her mouth, bound her wrists and forced her into her bedroom, where he removed her clothing, raped her, then stabbed her in the back multiple times causing her death.

Then, as a way to make the scene more horrific, he sliced open her body, cut off her head and removed her nipples. When authorities arrived, they found Christa's head on a bookshelf, her torso bent at the waist, on the bed and the nipples placed next to the torso.

On Aug. 27, Rolling broke into the apartment of Tracy Paules and Manny Taboada, both 23. Powerfully built, Taboada was asleep in his bedroom when Rolling attacked and killed him. Hearing a struggle, Paules hurried to her roommate's room. Seeing Rolling, she bolted back to her room, but he pursued her. Like his other victims, Rolling bound Paules, removed her clothing, raped her, then stabbed her in the back multiple times.

Sometime later, the apartment complex's maintenance man showed up for an appointment. When no one answered at Paules' and Taboada's unit, he let himself in. The sight that greeted him was so horrible that he turned and left immediately, then rushed to call the police. He later described to the police that he saw Tracy's bloodied body on a towel in the hallway, with a black bag placed near the body. When police arrived five minutes later, the door was found unlocked and the bag was gone.

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The news media was quick to cover the murders, dubbing the killer 'The Gainesville Ripper.' It was the beginning of the semester and thousands of students left Gainseville out fear. By Sept. 7, when Rolling was arrested in nearby Ocala on an unrelated supermarket robbery charge, the Ripper was on the front page of every newspaper.

Rolling's whereabouts between the time of the last murders and his arrest are only partially known. During a subsequent search of a wooded Gainesville encampment where Rolling had been living, police found evidence tying him to a recent bank robbery. They also found evidence that later would be linked to the Gainesville killings.

The Wrong Suspect

The investigation into murders of the five college students led to one of seven main suspects. Edward Humphrey was 18 years old and diagnosed with bipolar disorder. During the same time that the students were murdered, Humphrey was suffering from a bipolar flareup after skipping his medication which resulted in aggressive behavior and violent outbursts.

Humphrey had been living in the same apartment complex as Tracy and Manny, but he was asked to leave by the apartment manager after fighting with his roommates. He also harassed people living in the apartment complex across the street. Other similar incidents of Humphrey's combative nature surfaced and investigators decided to put a surveillance team on him.

On Oct. 30, 1990, he had an argument with his grandmother that grew into a physical altercation with him striking her one time. This was a gift to the police. They arrested Humphrey and had his bail set at $1 million, even though his grandmother had dropped all charges the same day and it was his first offense.

At trial, Humphrey was found guilty of assault and was sentenced to 22 months in Chattahoochee State Hospital, where he would remain until Sept. 18, 1991, when he was released. There was never any evidence found that Humphrey had anything to do with the murder. The investigation was back to square one.

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Confession, Trial, and Execution

Rolling stood trial in early 1991 for the Ocala robbery and was convicted. He was later convicted of three burglaries committed in Tampa shortly after the Gainesville killings had occurred. Facing life in prison, Rolling confessed to the string of murders, later corroborated by DNA evidence. In June of 1992, he was officially charged.

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While awaiting trial, Rolling began exhibiting odd behavior that would eventually lead to a diagnosis of mental illness. Using a fellow inmate as an intermediary, Rolling told authorities that he had multiple personalities, which he blamed for the Gainesville killings. Rolling also alluded to the unsolved 1989 murders in Shreveport of William Grissom, 55, his daughter Julie, 24, and his 8-year-old grandson Sean.

On Feb. 15, 1994, just weeks before Rolling's trial for the Gainesville murders was set to begin, he told his lawyer that he wanted to plead guilty. His lawyer warned against it, but Rolling was determined, saying he did not want to sit there while the pictures of the crime scene were shown to the jury. Rolling was sentenced to death in March and executed on Oct. 25, 2006.

Sources

  • Cochrane, Emily, and McPherson, Jordan. 'All is Well: Gainesville Murder Victims Remembered After 25 Years.' Alligator.org. 28 August 2015.
  • Dean, Michelle. 'The True Story Behind the Horrific Murder Spree That Inspired 'Scream'.' Complex.com. 20 December 2016.
  • Goodnough, Abby. 'Killer of 5 Florida Students Is Executed.' NYTimes.com. 26 October 2006.
  • Schweers, Jeff. 'Gainesville Student Murders: 25 Years Later.' Gainesville.com. 24 August 2017.