Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Born at Salinas, California, in April 1947, Mullin was the son of
Catholic parents, reared by his devout mother in an atmosphere that his
own father regarded as oppressively religious. Still, Herbert seemed
normal through his teens, participating in high school athletics and
winning the class vote of confidence as "most likely to succeed." The
June 1965 death of Mullin's best friend, in a car crash, appeared to
change everything, producing a sudden and startling shift in Herb's
personality. His bedroom was transformed into a shrine, with furniture 
arranged around the dead boy's photograph, and Mullin warned his
girlfriend that he might be turning gay.

By February 1969, Mullin seemed obsessed with Eastern religions, his
family noting that he had become "more and more unrealistic" in daily
behavior. A month later, they persuaded him to enter a mental
institution, but he refused to cooperate with psychiatrists and was
released after six weeks. October found him in the depths of full-blown
paranoid schizophrenia, exacerbated by continuing use of marijuana and
LSD. Mullin heard "voices," commanding him to shave his head or burn his
penis with a cigarette, and he obeyed their every order. Briefly
returned to the hospital, he began writing letters to dozens of total
strangers, signing them, "a human sacrifice, Herb Mullin." An       
ill-advised visit to Hawaii, in June 1970, resulted in Mullin's
cmmitment to a mental institution there. Back in Santa Cruz, his odd
behavior led to conflicts with police, and his problems were not erased
by fifteen months of hiding out in cheap San Francisco hotels. By the
time he came home again, in September 1972, the disembodied voices were
commanding him to kill.

On October 13, 1972, while driving aimlessly through the Santa Cruz    
mountains, Mullin spotted elderly transient Lawrence White. Pulling his
car to the side of the road, Mullin asked White to help him with some
"engine trouble," then beat the old man to death with a baseball bat and
left his body where it lay. Eleven days later, he picked up co-ed Mary
Guilfoyle, stabbed her in the heart, then disemboweled her, scattering
her organs on the shoulder of a lonely road, where skeletal remains were
found in February 1973. On November 2, Mullin spoke too freely in the
confessional at St. Mary's Church, fatally stabbing Father Henry Tomei
in a bid to protect himself from exposure.

Mullin's crimes coincidentally overlapped with those of serial slayer
Edmund Kemper, earning Santa Cruz an unwelcome reputation as
"Murderville, USA." By November 1972, Herbert was hearing brand- new
voices, emanating from prospective victims, begging him to kill them. He
bought a pistol in December and resumed the hunt.

On January 25, 1973, Mullin went looking for Jim Gianera, the man who
had "turned him on" to marijuana years earlier. Herb now regarded that
act as part of a plot to destroy his mind, and he meant to avenge
himself. Calling at Gianera's old address, he received new directions
from 29-year-old Kathy Francis. Moving on, he found Gianera at home,
shot the man to death, then knifed and shot Gianera's wife for good
measure. From there, Mullin doubled back to kill Kathy Francis and her
two small sons, shooting all three as they lay in bed.

On February 6, Mullin was hiking in a nearby state park, when he met
four teenage campers. Approaching the boys with casual conversation, he
whipped out his gun and killed all four in a burst of rapid fire, before
they could react or flee. A week later, driving through Santa Cruz,
Mullin pulled to the curb and fatally shot Fred Perez, while the old man
was working in his garden. This time, neighbors saw his license plate,
and Mullin was arrested by patrolmen moments later.

In custody, Mullin confessed to his crimes, maintaining that the
homicides were necessary to prevent catastrophic earthquakes from
destroying California. Charged and convicted in ten of the murders
(omitting White, Guilfoyle, and Tomei), Mullin was sentenced to life
imprisonment. He will be eligible for parole in the year 2020 A.D.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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