Gary M. Heidnik

Gary M. Heidnik
Born Gary Michael Heidnik
November 22, 1943
Eastlake, Ohio, U.S.
Died July 6, 1999 (aged 55)
Centre County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Cause of death
Lethal injection
Other names Brother Bishop
Criminal penalty
Death
Conviction(s) First-degree murder
Killings
Victims 6 kidnapped, 2 killed
Span of killings
November 26, 1986–March 19, 1987
Country United States
State(s) Pennsylvania
Date apprehended
March 24, 1987

Gary Michael Heidnik (November 22, 1943 July 6, 1999) was an American murderer who kidnapped, tortured, and raped six women, and held them prisoner in his basement in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Heidnik was sentenced to death and executed by lethal injection in July 1999.

Childhood

Heidnik was born to Michael and Ellen Heidnik, and was reared in the Eastlake suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. He had a younger brother, Terry. His parents divorced in 1946. The Heidnik children were then reared by their mother for four years before being placed in the care of Michael Heidnik and his new wife.[1] Heidnik would later claim that he was often emotionally abused by his father. Heidnik suffered a lifelong problem of bed wetting, and claimed his father would humiliate his son by forcing him to hang his stained sheets from his bedroom window, in full view of their neighbors. After his son's arrest, Michael Heidnik denied that he abused his son.[2]

At school, Heidnik did not interact with his fellow students, and refused to make eye contact. When a well-meaning new female student asked, "Did you get the homework done, Gary?", he yelled at her and told her she was not "worthy enough" to talk to him. Heidnik was also teased about his oddly shaped head, which he and Terry claimed was the result of a young Heidnik's falling out of a tree. Heidnik performed well academically and tested with an I.Q. of 130.[3][4] With the encouragement of his father, 14-year-old Heidnik enrolled at the since defunct Staunton Military Academy in Staunton, Virginia for two years, leaving before graduation. After another period in public high school, he dropped out and joined the United States Army when he was 17.[5]

Heidnik served in the Army for thirteen months. During basic training, Heidnik's drill sergeant graded him as "excellent". Following basic training, he applied for several specialist positions, including the military police, but was rejected. He was sent to San Antonio, Texas, to be trained as a medic and did well through medical training. However, Heidnik did not stay in San Antonio very long and was transferred to the 46th Army Surgical Hospital in Landstuhl, West Germany. Within weeks of his new posting in Germany, he earned his GED.[6]

In August 1962, Heidnik reported in sick, calling and complaining of severe headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, and nausea. A hospital neurologist diagnosed Heidnik with gastroenteritis, and noted that Heidnik also displayed symptoms of mental illness, for which he was prescribed trifluoperazine (Stelazine). In October 1962, Heidnik was transferred to a military hospital in Philadelphia, where he was diagnosed with schizoid personality disorder[7] and honorably discharged from military service.

Adulthood

Shortly after his discharge, Heidnik became a licensed practical nurse and enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, only to drop out after one semester. He worked as a psychiatric nurse at a Veterans Administration hospital in Coatesville, but was fired for poor attendance and rude behavior towards patients. From August 1962 until his arrest in March 1987, Heidnik spent time in and out of psychiatric hospitals, and had attempted suicide at least 13 times. In 1970, his mother Ellen, who had been diagnosed with bone cancer and was suffering the effects of alcoholism, committed suicide by drinking mercuric chloride.[8] His brother Terry also spent time in mental institutions and attempted suicide multiple times.[2]

In October 1971, Heidnik incorporated a church called the United Church of the Ministers of God, initially with only five followers. In 1975, Heidnik opened an account under the church's name with Merrill Lynch. The initial deposit was $1,500. Heidnik eventually amassed over $500,000 (US$ 1,075,743.78 in 2010). By 1986, the United Church of the Ministers of God was thriving and wealthy.

Heidnik used a matrimonial service to meet his future wife, with whom he corresponded by mail for two years before proposing to her. Betty Disto arrived from the Philippines in September 1985, and married Heidnik in Maryland on October 3, 1985. The marriage rapidly deteriorated after she found Heidnik in bed with three other women. Throughout the course of their brief marriage, Heidnik forced his wife to watch while he had sex with other women.[9] Disto also accused him of repeatedly raping and assaulting her. With the help of the Filipino community in Philadelphia, she was able to leave Heidnik in January 1986.[10] Unknown to Heidnik until his ex-wife requested child support payments in 1987, he impregnated Betty during their short marriage. On September 15, 1986, Disto gave birth to a son, whom she named Jesse John Disto.[11]

Heidnik also had a child with Gail Lincow, a son named Gary, Jr.[12] The child was placed in foster care soon after his birth. Heidnik had a third child with another woman, Anjeanette Davidson, who was illiterate and mentally disabled.[13] Their daughter, Maxine Davidson, was born on March 16, 1978. The child was immediately placed in foster care. Shortly after Maxine's birth, Heidnik was arrested for the kidnapping and rape of Anjeanette's sister Alberta, who had been living in an institution for the mentally disabled in Penn Township.

Criminal career

1976: First legal charges

In 1976, Heidnik was charged with aggravated assault and carrying an unlicensed pistol after shooting the tenant of a house he offered for rent, grazing his face.

1978: First imprisonment

Heidnik signed his girlfriend Anjeanette Davidson's sister, Alberta, out of a mental institution on day leave, and kept her prisoner in a locked storage room in his basement in 1978. After she was found and returned to the hospital, examination revealed that she had been raped and sodomized and that she had contracted gonorrhea. Heidnik was arrested and charged with kidnapping, rape, unlawful restraint, false imprisonment, involuntary deviant sexual intercourse, and interfering with the custody of a committed person.

The original sentence was overturned on appeal, and Heidnik spent three years of his incarceration in mental institutions prior to being released in April 1983 under the supervision of a state-sanctioned mental health program. In 1980, Heidnik gave a note to a guard stating that Satan shoved a cookie down his throat that prevented him from talking. He was silent for the next two years and three months.

1986: Spousal rape

After his wife Betty left him in 1986, Heidnik was arrested yet again and charged with assault, indecent assault, spousal rape and involuntary deviant sexual intercourse.

1986-1987: Serial rape and murder

On November 25, 1986, Heidnik abducted his first victim, Josefina Rivera. By January 1987, he had five women held captive in the basement of his house at 3520 North Marshall Street in North Philadelphia.

The captives, who were all African-American women, were raped, beaten, and tortured.[14]

One of the women, Sandra Lindsay, died of a combination of starvation, torture, and an untreated fever. Heidnik dismembered her body but had a problem dealing with the arms and legs, so he put them in a freezer and marked them "dog food". He cooked her ribs in an oven and boiled her head in a pot on the stove. Police came to the house due to the complaints of a bad odor, but left the premises after Heidnik's explanation: “I’m cooking a roast. I fell asleep and it burnt.”[4][15]

Several sources state that he ground up the flesh of Lindsay, mixed it with dog food, and fed that to his other victims.[16][17] His defense attorney, Chuck Peruto, said that upon examination of a Cuisinart and other tools in his kitchen, they found no evidence of this. Peruto said that he made up the story to support the insanity defense.[18] The defense attorney said that he started the rumor of cannibalism in public and that in fact there was no evidence of anyone eating human flesh.[18]

Heidnik used electric shock as a form of torture. At one point, he forced three of his captives, bound in chains, into a pit. Heidnik ordered Josefina Rivera and another woman to fill the hole with water and then forced Rivera to help him apply electrical current from a stripped extension cord to the women's chains. Deborah Dudley was fatally electrocuted, and Heidnik disposed of her body in the New Jersey Pine Barrens.[15]

On March 23, 1987, Heidnik and Rivera abducted Agnes Adams. The next day, Rivera convinced Heidnik to let her go, temporarily, in order to visit her family. He drove her to a gas station and said he would wait for her there. She walked a block away and called 911. She told the police the story and they were somewhat unconvinced at first. The police made her repeat the story and she told it exactly the same way again. The responding officers, more convinced after they looked at her leg and noted the chafing from the chains, went to the gas station and arrested Heidnik. His purported best friend, Cyril ("Tony") Brown, was also arrested. Brown was released on $50,000 bail and an agreement that he would testify against Heidnik. In part, Brown admitted to seeing Sandra Lindsay's death in the basement while in chains and Heidnik dismembering her.[19]

Shortly after his arrest, Heidnik attempted to hang himself in his jail cell in April 1987.[20]

Trial and Appeals

At Heidnik's arraignment, he claimed that the women were already in the house when he moved in.[21] At trial, Heidnik was defended by A. Charles Peruto, Jr., who attempted to prove that Heidnik was legally insane.[22] Heidnik's insanity was successfully rebutted by the prosecution, led by Charles F. Gallagher, III. The fact that he had amassed approximately $550,000 in his bank and brokerage accounts was used to argue that he was not insane. Testimony from his Merrill Lynch financial advisor, Robert Kirkpatrick, was also used to prove competence. Kirkpatrick called Heidnik "an astute investor who knew exactly what he was doing."[6][23] Convicted of two counts of first-degree murder on July 1, 1988, Heidnik was sentenced to death and incarcerated at the State Correctional Institution at Pittsburgh.[24] In January 1989, he attempted suicide with an overdose of prescribed thorazine.[25]

In 1997, Heidnik's daughter, Maxine Davidson White, and his ex-wife, Betty Heidnik, filed suit in federal court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania seeking a stay of execution on the basis that Heidnik was not in fact competent to be executed, despite the fact that only two days prior, the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas had found that Heidnik was competent for execution. That ruling from the Court of Common Pleas contained 38 findings of fact attesting to Heidnik's competence. While Heidnik's daughter and ex-wife had filed the suit, Gary Heidnik himself was not a party to the action, and he had repeatedly asked courts to forego further delays and proceedings in his case that would needlessly prolong the period of time until his sentence could be carried out. In his ruling[26] Judge Franklin Van Antwerpen cited the state court's ruling on Heidnik's competency and section 2254(e) of Title 28 of the United States Code (28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)), which provides that findings of state courts are to be presumed correct unless there is clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. Since the state court had established that Heidnik was competent only two days earlier and since there was no reason to think Heidnik was suddenly incompetent, disabled, or otherwise unable to act on his own behalf, Van Antwerpen ruled that neither Heidnik's daughter nor his ex-wife had standing in the case. With no party with standing before the court, Van Antwerpen ruled that the court had no jurisdiction in the matter.[26] The district court's ruling was immediately appealed, and the very next day, April 17, 1997, attorneys for White and Betty Heidnik argued their case before a three judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. The Third Circuit's decision, issued on April 18, 1997, vacated the district court's order with instructions to order the stay of execution.[27] While the Appeals Court's order for a stay of execution ultimately allowed legal proceedings to continue for another two years, on July 3, 1999, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania issued its final ruling in the case, denying White's application for a further stay of execution, dismissing White's final petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, and denying certificate of appealability.[28] The Governor of Pennsylvania had already signed Heidnik's execution warrant, and scheduled the execution for July 6, 1999. This final ruling from the district court effectively ended any recourse to the federal courts by Heidnik or on his behalf.

Execution

Gary Heidnik was executed by lethal injection on July 6, 1999, at State Correctional Institution – Rockview in Centre County, Pennsylvania.[29] His body was later cremated.[30] As of 2014, he is the last person to be executed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[31]

List of captives

Trivia

In film and literature

In music

References

  1. Englade, Ken (1992). Cellar of Horror. Macmillan. pp. 18–19. ISBN 0-312-92929-3.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Englade 1992, p. 19
  3. Englade 1992, p. 234
  4. 4.0 4.1 Fiorillo, Victor (2007-07-07). "Inside the House of Heidnik". Philadelphia Magazine. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  5. Gruson, Lindsey."Strange Portrait of Torture Suspect." The New York Times. March 3, 1987. Retrieved on February 9, 2007.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Bellamy, Patrick. "Gary Heidnik: To Hell and Back." TruTV Crime Library.
  7. Downward spiral
  8. Englade 1992, p. 29
  9. Newton, Michael (2006). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers (2 ed.). Infobase Publishing. p. 114. ISBN 0-816-06987-5.
  10. "House Of Horrors." Time. April 6, 1987. Retrieved on February 11, 2007.
  11. Englade 1992, p. 75
  12. "Man who helped Heidnik is set free: Judge cautions him to be careful choosing his associates". Philadelphia Daily News. July 16, 1988.
  13. Englade 1992, pp. 50, 185
  14. "Black Women Report of Sex, Torture, Murder At Hands of White Philadelphia 'Bishop'". Jet (Johnson Publishing Company) 72 (3): 9–7. April 13, 1987. ISSN 0021-5996.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Episode Detail: 'Cellar of Terror" - Escaped. TVguide.com. Retrieved July 3, 2011. Escaped episode, "Cellar of Terror", first aired on Investigation Discovery on April 13, 2009
  16. "House Of Horrors: Serial Murder in Philadelphia". TIME.com. 6 April 1987. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  17. "serial killer true crime library * serial killer news * list of serial killers * serial murder * female serial killers * crime scene investigation * tueur en serie * omicidi seriali *". crimezzz.net. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  18. 18.0 18.1 http://www.phillymag.com/articles/inside-the-house-of-heidnik/
  19. "Gettysburg Times - Google News Archive Search". google.com. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  20. "Heidnik tries suicide". The Telegraph-Herald. April 3, 1987. p. 2A. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  21. Hickey, Brian. "Return to the House of Horrors." Philadelphia Weekly. March 13, 2002.
  22. Fiorillo, Victor (2007-07-07). "Inside the House of Heidnik". Philadelphia Magazine: 14–15. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  23. Bowman, David. "Profiler" Interview with John E. Douglas. Salon.com. July 8, 1999.
  24. "Convicted Murderer Gets Death Sentence". The Press-Courier. July 2, 1988. p. 4. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  25. "Torture-Murderer Heidnik Remains In Serious Condition". The News and Courier. January 4, 1989. p. 9A. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  26. 26.0 26.1 Heidnik v. Horn, 960 F.Supp 74 (E.D. Pa. 1997) (“We find that they [Maxine Davidson White & Betty Heidnik] do not have standing before this court. […] We conclude that we are without jurisdiction in this matter.”).
  27. White v. Horn, 112 F.3d 105 (3d Cir. 1997).
  28. White v. Horn, 54 F.Supp.2d 457 (E.D. Pa. 1999).
  29. Adamson, April; Smith, Jim (July 7, 1999). "Horrors' Killer Gets His Wish Victims' Kin Watch As Gary Heidnik Gets Lethal Injection". philly.com. p. 1. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  30. Adamson, April; Smith, Jim (July 7, 1999). "Horrors' Killer Gets His Wish Victims' Kin Watch As Gary Heidnik Gets Lethal Injection". philly.com. p. 2. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  31. "Governor signs 2 more death warrants". goerie.com. November 25, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  32. "Blind Faith (1989)". imdb.com.
  33. Fiorillo, Victor (2007-07-07). "Inside the House of Heidnik". Philadelphia Magazine: 13. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  34. Wells, Dan (2010), Mr. Monster, Tor
  35. Englade, Ken. Cellar of Horror. New York: St. Martin's, 1989. Print.
  36. "Philebrity.com » Blog Archive » Submitted For Your Approval: Serial Killers, “Heidnik’s House Of Horrors” b/w “20th Century Cannibal”". Philebrity.com. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  37. "Strangle & Mutilate (2008)". discogs.comm.
  38. "Strangle & Mutilate (2008)". lololyrics.com.
  • A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers by Harold Schechter and David Everitt, Pocket, 1997, softcover, 368 pages, ISBN 0-671-02074-9

Further reading

External links