Monsters.
Speaker ADo they exist?
Speaker ASome may say they do, some may say they don't.
Speaker ASome say that they lurk in the dark.
Speaker AThis monster is real and did indeed lurk in the night.
Speaker AThis monster is known as the Night Stalker.
Speaker AIf you listen to my earlier episodes on the Cecil Hotel, then you know that in Part one, I briefly spoke of Richard Ramirez and his stay at the hotel.
Speaker AThis is the story of the satanic serial killer Richard Ramirez, who terrorized southern California from April 1984 to August 1985.
Speaker AHe was convicted of 43 charges.
Speaker AWarning this episode contains graphic topics including burglary, sexual abuse, drug abuse, violence, satanic topics, murder and mutilation.
Speaker AI use music, sound effects and recordings that could be terrifying and eerie.
Speaker AListener discretion is advised.
Speaker AI'm your host, Clay Jones, and you're listening to nocturnal Novels.
Speaker ARichard Ramirez, later known as the Night stalker, was born Feb. 29, 1960, in El Paso, Texas.
Speaker AHe was the youngest of five children in a family burdened by trauma, instability and violence.
Speaker AHis father, Julio Ramirez, was a former police officer who became a railway laborer and was an alcoholic whose rage shook the household.
Speaker AJulio often beat his children, both physically and emotionally.
Speaker AHe demanded obedience and frequently pushed even minor missteps with harsh, sometimes unpredictable violence.
Speaker AWitnesses later described Julio as controlling, volatile and intimidating, leaving Richard in a constant state of fear.
Speaker ARichard's mother, Mercedes Ramirez, worked in a boot factory and was exposed to harsh chemicals.
Speaker ADuring her pregnancy with Richard, Mercedes struggled with her own mental health and often turned a blind eye to her husband's abuse.
Speaker AShe could not protect her children, leaving young Richard exposed to fear, chaos and neglect.
Speaker AHe had older siblings, some of whom recall that Richard was often quiet, withdrawn and strangely fascinated by violent stories, while others noticed he had outbursts of rage and cruelty toward animals and smaller children.
Speaker AThis duality, shyness mixed with emerging aggression, would foreshadow the man he would become.
Speaker AAt the young age of 2, a dresser fell on Richard's head and he became unconscious for 15 minutes.
Speaker AHe had received 30 stitches.
Speaker AAt the age of five, he was hit in the head with a swing and was yet again knocked unconscious.
Speaker AWhen he was 10, he started having seizures and was diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy, which was likely caused by his head injuries.
Speaker AAlso, at around the age of 10, he would start sleeping in cemeteries to escape his father's rage.
Speaker APerhaps no influence was more pivotal than his cousin, Mike Ramirez, a Vietnam War veteran.
Speaker AMike returned home carrying stories of combat, death and brutality.
Speaker AHe showed Richard photographs of corpses, of women and bragged about how he sexually abused murdered dismembered and decapitated those women.
Speaker AIt is alleged that many of these photos depicted women being tied to trees or wooden posts both before and after they were sexually assaulted and killed by Mike.
Speaker ARamirez later stated while incarcerated that he was fascinated rather than repulsed by the images and stories his cousin shared with him.
Speaker AMike taught Ramirez some of his military skills, including stealth and kill tactics.
Speaker AAt the age of 15, Ramirez was present on May 4, 1975, when Mike fatally shot his second wife, Jesse, in the face with a handgun during a domestic argument.
Speaker ALike the graphic photos and stories of his cousin's war crimes in Vietnam, Ramirez later remarked similarly that witnessing the murder was not traumatic for him in any traditional sense, but rather a subject of fascination.
Speaker AAfter the shooting, Ramirez became stolen and withdrawn from his family and peers.
Speaker AMike was found not guilty of Jesse's murder by reason of insanity, with the shooting attributed to PTSD from his military service.
Speaker AFor young Richard, these stories were fascinating rather than horrifying.
Speaker AMike's tales normalized death, desensitized him to violence, and provided a template for fearlessness in the face of brutality.
Speaker APsychologists later cited Mike's influence as a critical factor in shaping Richard's morbid obsessions.
Speaker ADuring his early teenage years, Richard displayed an unusual fascination with death and decay.
Speaker AHe collected dead animals, visited cemeteries alone, and often spoke about corpses with a chilling curiosity.
Speaker AHe experimented with rituals, sometimes trying to recreate the violence he read about or witnessed and often blame others.
Speaker AWhen he was caught.
Speaker AThese behaviors had intensified, combined now with drug experimentation.
Speaker ARichard began smoking marijuana and then later started using cocaine, lsd, pcp, mushrooms, and peyote, in which some of those substances heightened aggression, impulsivity, and detachment from social norms.
Speaker ARichard's early criminal activity was a harbinger of his later violence.
Speaker AHe engaged in petty theft, stealing cars, money, and property, animal cruelty, torturing and killing small animals, vandalism and burglary, breaking into people's homes, assaults on peers, sometimes sexual and sometimes purely violent.
Speaker AWhile still in school, he took a job at a local Holiday Inn and used his master key to steal from sleeping patrons.
Speaker AOn at least one occasion, Richard sexually assaulted two children in an elevator at the hotel, but he was never reported or prosecuted for this act.
Speaker AHis employment ended abruptly after he attempted to sexually assault a woman in her hotel room and was caught in the act by the victim's husband.
Speaker AAlthough the husband beat Richard at the scene, criminal charges were dropped when the couple, who lived out of state, declined to return to Texas to testify against him.
Speaker AEach act reinforced a sense of power and control, a thrill he would later seek in his murders.
Speaker AEven in adolescence, he displayed fascination with Satanism, reading occult books, performing rituals and drawing pentagrams.
Speaker AHis family recalled that he would sometimes chant in the dark over a candlelit altar, delighting their unease.
Speaker AWhen he was 18, he went to San Francisco to meet Anton Lavey, the founder of the Church of Satan and the author of the Satanic Bible.
Speaker ABefore he turned to Satanism, he had an active upbringing in the Catholic Church.
Speaker AAs a young child at school, teachers described him as bright but disruptive, capable of charm whenever convenient, but prone to sudden outbursts of cruelty.
Speaker AHe had few friends, and those he did have often feared his temper and obsession with dark subjects.
Speaker AThis combination of neglect at home, fascination with violence, drug use, social isolation created fertile ground for the development of a psychopath.
Speaker ASomeone who could later kill without remorse, stalk without fear and revel in terror.
Speaker AAfter cousin Mike's murder of his wife, Jesse Richard dropped out of Jefferson High school in the ninth grade, shortly before the school year ended in 1975.
Speaker ABy the late 1970s, Richard Ramirez had become a teenager with all the pieces of a future predator.
Speaker AEarly exposure to violence and death.
Speaker AA home filled with fear and abuse, influence from a war torn cousin, drug abuse that fueled aggression, fascination with Satanism and the occult, social isolation and early criminality.
Speaker ALittle did the world know that the boy from El Paso would grow into a man who terrified Southern California, leaving behind a trail of murder, sexual assault and terror.
Speaker ARichard's spree escalated with terrifying speed.
Speaker AFrom April 1984 through August 1985, he stalked neighborhoods across Southern California.
Speaker AIt wasn't random.
Speaker AHe prowled late at night, sometimes walking entire blocks in silence, scanning windows, testing doors, slipping into homes where people felt safest.
Speaker AEach attack was unique.
Speaker AEach victim were different ages, backgrounds, neighborhoods.
Speaker AThat was a part of the terror.
Speaker AHe didn't fit a pattern that police could easily predict.
Speaker ATrigger WARNING this first crime of Richards contains abuse and murder to a young child.
Speaker AYou have been warned.
Speaker ARichard's first murder was on April 10, 1984.
Speaker ANow forgive me if I mispronounce this name.
Speaker AHe murdered Mei Leung, a nine year old girl in the basement of her apartment building in San Francisco.
Speaker AMay was with her 8 year old brother and looking for a lost $1 bill when Ramirez approached her and told her to follow him into the basement to find the dollar bill.
Speaker AWhen they made it to the basement, he beat her, strangled her and sexually abused her before stabbing her with a switchblade and hanging her partially naked body from a pipe by her clothing.
Speaker AThis crime was not linked to Richard until 2009, when his DNA was matched to a sample obtained at the crime scene.
Speaker AIn 2016, officials disclosed evidence of a second suspect identified through another DNA sample retrieved from the scene, who is believed to have been present during May's murder.
Speaker AAuthorities had not publicly identified the suspect, but described as being a juvenile at the time, have not brought any charges due to the lack of evidence.
Speaker AJune 28, 1984.
Speaker A79 year old Jeanne Vincow was found murdered in her apartment in Glassell Park, Los Angeles.
Speaker AShe had been stabbed repeatedly in the head, neck and chest while asleep in her bed and her throat slashed so deeply that she was nearly decapitated.
Speaker ARichard's fingerprint was found on a mesh screen he removed to gain access through an open window.
Speaker AThis, his second known murder, established his pattern of committing particularly vicious murders and frequently burglizing his victims either before or after killing them, which was mainly to support his drug addiction and pay his rent.
Speaker AMarch 17, 1985.
Speaker ARichard attacked 22 year old Maria Hernandez outside her home in Rosemead, shooting her in the face with a.22 caliber handgun after she pulled it into her garage.
Speaker AShe survived when the bullet ricocheted off the keys she held in her hands as she lifted them up to protect herself.
Speaker AMaria played dead until Ramirez left the scene.
Speaker AInside the house, her roommate, 34 year old Dale Yoshi Okazaki, heard the gunshot and ducked behind a counter when she saw Richard enter the kitchen.
Speaker AWhen she raised her head to get a look at what had happened, Richard, who was waiting for Okazaki to peek over the counter, shot her once in the forehead, killing her instantly.
Speaker AThe serial killer who became known as the Night Stalker was identified in court by a witness to one of the attacks.
Speaker BAccused night stalker Richard Ramirez sat calmly while a witness today pointed him out as the man who tried to kill her in March 1985.
Speaker ADo you see in the courtroom today the man that you saw that night that shot you?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AWould you point him out for the jury?
Speaker BThe man on the end, what's he wearing?
Speaker BDark suit, dark glasses.
Speaker BThe defendant, Richard Ramirez.
Speaker BFor the record, by court order, Maria Hernandez could not be photographed.
Speaker BIn a steady voice, she told the jury how Ramirez approached her at gunpoint in her condominium security garage and fired one shot at her face before killing her roommate.
Speaker BThe bullet pierced her right hand, which she raised as a shield.
Speaker BShe said she was able to run out of the garage before seeing the defendant again, this time leaving through her apartment's front door.
Speaker BI said something like, please don't shoot me again.
Speaker BShortly after I finished speaking, he lowered the gun and he ran away.
Speaker BOn cross examination, defense attorney Daniel Hernandez questioned whether the witness could be so sure Ramirez was the man now five years after the attack.
Speaker ASo in your memory today, you can't really point at Mr. Ramirez and say that's the person.
Speaker BNot truthfully.
Speaker BDeputy District Attorney Phil Halpin reminded the jury that the victim identified Ramirez in a lineup shortly after he was captured.
Speaker BBut despite media coverage, prosecutors believe that other victims testimony will convince the jury that Richard Ramirez and the Night Stalker are one and the same.
Speaker AWithin an hour of the Rosemead attack, Richard pulled 30 year old Cy Leon Yu, also known as Veronica, out of her car in Monterey park, shot her twice with a.22 caliber handgun and fled.
Speaker AShe was pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital.
Speaker AThe two murders and an attempted third in a single day attracted extensive coverage from news media who initially dubbed the attacker described as curly haired with bulging eyes and wide spaced rotting teeth.
Speaker AThe Walk in Killer and the Valley Intruder.
Speaker AOne week later, at approximately 2am on March 27, 1985, Richard entered the home that he had burglarized a year earlier just outside whittier and killed 64 year old Vincent Charles Zazara in his sleep with a gunshot to his head.
Speaker ACesar's wife, 44 year old Maxine Lavina Zazara, was awakened by the gunshot.
Speaker ARamirez beat her and bound her hands while demanding to know where her valuables were.
Speaker AWhile he ransacked the room, Maxine escaped her bonds and retrieved a shotgun from under the bed which she was unaware was not loaded.
Speaker AShe pulled the trigger just after he turned around and saw her.
Speaker AThe infuriated Richard shot her three times with his handgun, killing her, then fetched a large carving knife from the kitchen.
Speaker AHe mutilated her body by cutting an inverted cross into her chest, then removed her eyes and placed them in a jewelry box.
Speaker AHe attempted to have sex with her body but found himself so shaken by her attempting to shoot him that he was unable to achieve an erection.
Speaker AHe took the jewelry box containing her eyes and kept it at his apartment as a souvenir until his arrest.
Speaker ARichard left footprints from a pair of Avia sneakers in the flower beds which the police photographed and cast.
Speaker ABullets found at the scene were matched to those found at previous attacks and the police determined that a serial killer was at large.
Speaker AMay 14, 1985, Monterey Park.
Speaker AWilliam and Lillian Doy were asleep in their quiet home.
Speaker AWilliam, who was known as Bill for short, was a 66 year old disabled man who relied on an Oxygen tank.
Speaker ARichard broke in through a window, found William in bed and shot him in the face.
Speaker ADespite the grievous wound, William survived long enough to call out for help.
Speaker ABut Richard bound his 56 year old wife Lillian with thumb cuffs and sexually assaulted her and then ransacked their home for valuables.
Speaker AWilliam later died in the hospital.
Speaker AThis scene was brutal and it showed Richard's emerging pattern.
Speaker ANot just to kill, but to terrify, to dominate, and to make survivors live with memories worse than death.
Speaker AMay 29, 1985 in Monrovia.
Speaker AA couple weeks later, with a stolen car, Richard arrived at the home of two elderly sisters.
Speaker AMabel Bale, who was 83 and disabled, 81 year old Florence Lang.
Speaker AHe bludgeoned and bound Lang in her bedroom, then bound and bludgeoned Bell before using an electrical cord to shock the woman.
Speaker AAfter sexually assaulting Lang, he used Belle's lipstick to draw a satanic pentagram symbol on her thigh as well as on the walls of both bedrooms.
Speaker AThey were found two days later, alive but comatose and critically injured.
Speaker ABell died in the hospital from her injuries on July 15 and Laing was left with permanent brain damage and later died in August.
Speaker ANow, before Richard would leave the scene of his crimes, he would go into the victim's kitchen and help himself to whatever snack he wanted.
Speaker AOnce he was finished with his snack, he would leave the scene of the crime like it was nothing at all.
Speaker ALike it was no big deal.
Speaker ALike he had no care in the world.
Speaker AThe next day, Richard drove the same stolen car to Burbank and snuck into the home of 42 year old Carol Kyle.
Speaker AAt gunpoint, he bound her and her 11 year old son with handcuffs.
Speaker ABefore ransacking the house.
Speaker AHe released Ms. Kyle to direct him to where the family's valuables were.
Speaker AHe then sexually assaulted her repeatedly.
Speaker ARichard repeatedly ordered her not to look at him, telling her at one point he would cut her eyes out.
Speaker AHe fled the scene after retrieving the child from the closet and binding the two together again with handcuffs.
Speaker AOn the night of June 27, 1985, 32 year old Patty Higgins was murdered in her Arcadia home.
Speaker AThe crime was not discovered until July 2nd when she failed to show up for work.
Speaker AHer attacker had sodomized her, strangled her and slashed her throat.
Speaker ARichard was charged with murder and burglary in relation to her death.
Speaker AHowever, these charges were eventually dropped due to the lack of concrete physical evidence linking Higgins to the other murders.
Speaker ABased on a statement Ramirez made to an investigator, he is also a suspect in the San Francisco double murder of 58 year old Christina Caldwell and 70 year old Mary Caldwell.
Speaker AThe sisters were found stabbed to death in their Telegraph hill apartment on February 20, 1985.
Speaker AWhile incarcerated, Richard openly bragged to a prison officer and other inmates about having killed more than 20 people.
Speaker AOn the night of July 2, 1985, Richard drove a stolen car to Arcadia and randomly selected the house of a 75 year old lady named Mary Cannon, a widowed grandmother.
Speaker AAfter quietly entering Cannon's home, he found her asleep in her bedroom.
Speaker AHe bludgeoned her into unconsciousness with a lamp and stabbed her to death using using a 10 inch butcher knife from her kitchen.
Speaker ARichard repeatedly stabbed Cannon's body after she was already dead.
Speaker AOkay, so I'm going to end part one here.
Speaker AStay tuned for Part two.
Speaker AIn Part two I'll tell you more about Richard's gruesome murders.
Speaker AI'll tell you about his footprint he left behind at his crime scenes and other evidence.
Speaker AI will tell you about how he was captured and the trial which basically made him into a celebrity.
Speaker ADue to the extensive coverage from the media, you will hear from his surviving victims, his wife and Richard himself.
Speaker AI will also tell you about how he was a character in Ryan Murphy's anthology series American Horror Story.
Speaker AThis was part one of the Night Stalker case.
Speaker AIf you've enjoyed the show so far, go ahead and follow if you haven't already so you get notified when a new episode is available.
Speaker AAlso, I have a merch store available with T shirts and other items.
Speaker AI also have some new Halloween themed merch available as well.
Speaker AJust Google Search Nocturnal Novels Merch Printify and it'll be the first link that pops up.
Speaker ADon't forget to tell your friends and family about the podcast and for updates and more info, follow the podcasts on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.
Speaker AThe Night Stalker Part 2 coming late September I'm Clay Jones and you've just listened to Nocturnal Novels Sam Sa.