Morbid - Episode 555: Ed Gein: The Butcher of Plainfield (Part 3)
Episode Date: April 15, 2024What drove the mild-mannered farmer to commit such hideous and depraved acts in America’s heartland, and why do people from around the world continue to find him so infamous?Thank you to th...e magical Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research!ReferencesAssociated Press. 1968. "Gein prosecution winds up murder testimony." Capital Times, November 9: 9.—. 1968. "Gein ruled fit to stand trial." Green Bay Press-Gazette, January 16: 1.Capital Times. 1958. "Bar Gein house admission fees." Capital Times, March 12: 4.—. 1957. "Claims ten skulls came from graves ." Capital Times, November 18: 1.—. 1958. "Gein insane, psychiatrist tells court." Capital Times, January 6: 3.—. 1957. "Nearly wed gein, woman reveals." Capital Times, November 20: 1.—. 1957. "Plan to open at least two." Capital Times, November 23: 1.—. 1957. "Weeping Gein joins minister in prayer." Capital Times, November 22: 1.—. 1957. "'Won't believe' graves robbed ." Capital Times, November 19: 1.Daily Tribune. 1954. "Believe Bancroft tavernkeeper was slain." Daily Tribune, December 9: 1.—. 1944. "Rites today for the man who died in Roche-a-Cri fire." Daily Tribune, May 19: 1.Engel, Dave. 2005. "Whatever happened to Mary Hogan?" Daily Tribune, December 5: 6.La Crosse Tribune. 1957. "State pushes murder charges against ." La Crosse Tribune, November 22: 1.Portage Daily Register. 1957. "New rifle in shop used in slaying storekeeper." Portage Daily Register, November 19: 1.Schechter, Harold. 1998. Deviant: The Shocking True Story of Ed Gein, the Original Psycho. New York, NY: Gallery Books.Stevens Point Journal. 1958. "Ed Gein's real estate sold for under $4,000." Stevens Point Journal, March 31: 1.—. 1958. "Gein farmhouse leveled by early morning blaze." Stevens Point Journal, March 20: 1.—. 1958. "Open house at Gein farm draws crowds." Stevens Point Journal, March 24: 1.—. 1957. "Results of lie test announced." Stevens Point Journal, November 20: 1.—. 1954. "Woman's disappearance hints slaying at Pine Grove tavern." Stevens Point Journal, December 9: 1.United Press. 1957. "Hospital gets ready for Gein." Capital Times, November 23: 2.United Press International. 1968. "Ed Gein found guilty of 1957 murder in Plainfield." Capital Times, November 14: 2.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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A bloodbath tonight in the rural town of Chinook.
Everyone here is hiding a secret.
Four Morbiddoms found scattered.
Some worse than others.
I came as fast as I could.
I'm deputy Ruth Vogel.
And soon, my quiet life will never be the same. Hey weirdos, I'm Alaina.
I'm Ash. What if I just responded to everything you said today with, aww.
That would be, I don't know if that would be encouraging or if it would be
I feel like probably not.
lightly frightening later.
We should pause because your mail truck just got here and your dog's gonna go fucking nuts.
I think I like this little love.
I love doing that to Drew just randomly because he fucking hates it.
I also hate that.
I think it's so funny.
I do love seeing people do it to their dogs though.
Have you seen that?
It's like people are just like, ah, thank god the dog's like, what the fuck?
I will fight you.
No, Drew will just be like saying something that we have to do and I'll be like, okay.
I think I like this little life.
Oh god, that would horrify me.
He hates it so much. He's like, stop!
I hate that as well. I'm with Drew.
Sometimes I'll just go up under his ear and do it.
Oh, that's terrible.
I'm a terrorist.
Look at him, he's like assault. Assault and battery. It's a lot to live a terrorist. He's like assault.
Assault and battery.
It's a lot to live with me, but he chose it.
He did. He chose this little life.
Full Cirque. Full Cirque.
So so hey, guess what?
I there's a sequel to The Butcher and the Wren called The Butcher Game.
Rode it. Wrote it!
Wrote it!
I read some of it.
She's ready to go.
She's coming out September 17th.
Mark your fucking calendars.
You can pre-order it now.
And pre-orders are awesome.
They help me out a lot.
So if you wanna do it, that's great.
If you can't, you wanna wait until September,
that's fine too.
Do what you wanna do, okay?
But pre-orders are great.
And Barnes & Noble has a 25% off on the butcher game if you use the code butcher game
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I love coupons.
Butcher game two five and it goes through September.
So if you want to wait a little while to pre-order, that's cool too, man.
You can still use that 25% off at Barnes and Noble or get it anywhere else you want to
get a book.
Wow.
Okay.
This is deeply exciting because one, I love books, two, I love you.
Oh my God.
Three, I love coupons.
Did I say that already?
Coups, coups and discounts.
I don't know.
I'm just really excited about this all.
I'm also excited.
I think I like this little life.
I think I like this little life. I think I like this little life.
But you guys have been awesome and also like, you're just really great and you are really
being kind and supportive and I appreciate you.
And if you're not, I'll come and find you.
But like everybody-
Just kidding.
And but you've like, I put out like that little video and I was like, I'm actually getting
like kind of emotional.
I'm not even kidding.
And she doesn't do that you guys.
You guys made me emotional. You've been so kind, so supportive, so wonderful and I was like I'm actually getting like kind of emotional. I'm not even kidding.
You've been so kind, so supportive, so wonderful, and I appreciate you. And it's because of you that this gets to keep happening. So thanks a lot. I appreciate it. And
go pre-order if you want to. It's long and it's gnarly. So it's everything you could ever want,
you know? Party. Party! But you know what is not everything that you could ever want? I know
exactly what is not everything I could ever want. Ed Gein. Yeah. Ed Gein is really nothing you could
ever want or need or can or conceive of. Yeah, exactly. And I know these episodes are pretty
gnarly. So if you need a palate cleanser, you can also go over to the rewatcher.
We've been having a lot of fun over there.
I love that.
We literally laughed so hard that we get that like scratchy throat.
Oh my God.
That happens last week's episode.
I think it's last week's at this point.
I think in the darkness.
The darkness.
You should just go listen.
We were crying laughing.
Crying.
Go if you need a little palate cleanser, but you still want to hang out with us, which
we hope you do, come on over to the re-watcher.
It's getting funny over there.
And if you've never watched the show, that's okay.
Exactly.
You just watch it as you go, go, go, go, go, go.
There you go.
In the darkness.
In the darkness with Angel.
So yeah, so if you need a palate cleanser, head on over there.
But we are at the conclusion of the Gein Saga.
And we got through the worst of it, I would say.
This is really the wrap up.
This is what happened afterwards.
This is kind of where he fits in into the kind of pop culture at this point, how that
evolved.
We told you, I told you all the terrible stuff the last episode, that was for sure the heaviest one,
which is why we needed a little bit of a breather
for this one.
When we last left you, he had been found and caught
and was not super forthcoming about what was happening.
Every once in a while, he would spill his guts a little bit,
but he was pretty tight lipped.
But that led to a lot of people speculating.
There was lots of cannibalism, necrophilia talk, all these rumors.
None of them were substantiated at the time.
They were just rumors because of the macabre and very ghoulish reality of that house and
what they found.
They weren't really going very far to find these rumors.
It was just kind of naturally occurring out of this because no one had ever seen anything
like this before.
And probably never did again.
Yeah. I mean, this is a very, and I think that's why this case and I'll talk about it
later, but I think this is why this case is so enduring.
Yeah.
Because it's just what the fuck.
It's like all over the place.
What the fuck.
And especially at this time in period, it's like this was like, what the place. What the fuck? And especially at this time in period, it's like, this was like, what the fuck?
And in the Midwest, it's like, you know, America's heartland.
In this tiny little town where nothing ever happens.
And everybody knew this guy.
That was the other thing.
It's not like this.
And it wasn't the weirdo that no one ever talked to and no one knew anything about him.
They knew everything about this guy.
They grew up with him, right?
You babysat their kids. Stop that. Stop telling you that. I know I can't
stop it. As these rumors of cannibalism and necrophilia are spreading like wildfire,
investigators were working very diligently in an attempt to get just a little bit of the truth or
as close to the truth as they could from Ed himself. During his initial interrogation,
he had a lot of trouble remembering things,
or so he said, and he frequently struggled
to answer questions.
But in the days that followed that,
he was becoming a little more forthcoming,
at least as far as the grave robbing was concerned.
At first, they weren't getting a lot out of him about that,
but he started to open up more.
Also, while he didn't seem like he was being
particularly boastful or proud of what he'd done,
he wasn't like, oh yeah, this is what I did.
He also didn't have any remorse.
He wasn't sitting there being crying and being like,
I can't believe I did this, I'm so ashamed.
He was by no means being prideful about it,
but there was no emotion attached to it.
It was just very matter of a fact.
It was very just, this is what I did.
Wow.
Like it was just very robotic.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
And he spoke about his quote unquote collecting
in a very matter of fact way.
And that's what he called it?
His collecting.
Okay.
Yeah.
What a fucking way to describe that.
Just very detached. Like very detached, very like, called it. His collecting. Okay. Yeah. What a fucking way to describe that.
Just very detached.
Like very detached, very like, I'm not really understanding why everyone's freaking out
here kind of thing.
Ed confirmed that to the best of his recollections, he had taken the bodies from the cemetery
and he'd used various organs and pieces of the bodies to make trophy items.
And he explained that sometimes he would open the grave and take the entire body home, while
other times he would just take parts of what he wanted and then rebury the casket in the
same night.
Okay.
Imagine.
No.
Your loved one being dissected in their casket in the middle of the night by this guy.
No, that's horrifying.
And then the casket is just shut, reburied,
and you have no idea what he took from them.
And that's the thing, you think about all the people
that went to go visit their loved ones,
having no idea that their graves were even disturbed.
That they're an incomplete set of remains.
Yeah.
And what we'll find out later is like,
we still don't really know who, like they weren't
able to put everyone back.
That's so sad.
Yeah.
And although they had already endured hours in the Gein house, followed by many more hours
talking to Ed and considering his crimes, none of the investigators were at all prepared
for any kind of explanation for why he did this, to be honest, after all they'd seen and been through.
But based on the state of things at the Gein Farm,
investigators had assumed that the explanation
was that he had taken the body parts and skeletons
simply as trophies to be displayed.
And, you know, like just so we could look at them,
like use them as art, kind of his own weird macabre art.
That's what they were assuming.
They were like, we're really not ready
for any kind of explanation here.
And like none of them makes sense,
but we're assuming that's what it is.
But the truth was actually much more upsetting.
When they asked whether he had ever worn the masks
made out of human skin,
that was literally filleted off of people's
skulls. Ed replied, that I did. He just said that I did. That I did. But that wasn't the
only thing that he did. Can you imagine being the person that had to interview him? Yeah.
Like sit in a room with this man and hear him very, and you look at pictures of him
and he looks very like, yeah.
He's like a normal fucking dude.
Like what?
Like I don't understand, why everyone's freaking out.
He looks like an old man that like you'd be friendly to
and be like, oh hey.
Yeah, you just go like, oh hey Ed, what's going on?
Yeah.
Like, and to be in that house,
and then to go back to that police station
and sit down with him and talk to him,
I don't know, again, we were saying like, I don't know how you get over being in that house.
Yeah.
I don't know how you get over talking to Ed Gein.
How do you reconcile those two things together?
Like, how do you sit in that room and be like, you're the guy?
I don't know.
Like, I don't know how the human brain is capable of it sometimes.
Honestly, it's like really wild.
And then to think about like, he had like what? Like nine masks made out of women's faces
that he had skinned off of their skulls.
And these were recently deceased women.
Right.
Like that's the thing that he knew in a lot of cases.
Yeah, because he would, he would scan the obituaries,
as you said, right?
And he would know the names.
He would have interacted with them before.
And then he's wearing their faces,
some with makeup on still.
Nicole That's wild.
Nicole And like imagine being these loved ones
of these women finding out that this man was wearing your mom, your sister, your grandmother's
face around his house.
Nicole That's like beyond a nightmare.
Nicole There's so many layers to it that it's just like,
holy shit, you can't even consider it all.
No.
But again, that was only part of his,
what he kind of referred to as his ritual that he would do.
He had made an entire skin suit
from women's bodies and hair,
and would often wear the suit.
And he said on warmer nights,
he would wear it while wandering around in
and outside the house on his property.
Thinking about that, that visual, that visual, like a, like a bright moon, this just like
decomposing farm that like nature is reclaiming.
Acres and acres and acres of land.
Like in the middle of nowhere.
And just no light but that moonlight.
Trees like reaching over and he's walking around in a human skin suit that he made from
bodies of women he murdered and dug up in the cemetery.
Also imagine...
And sewed together.
Knowing that you lived close to him
and that, like, you were just...
Like, you think, like, what was I doing
in my house miles away?
Reading a book?
Or he was wandering around his property
in dead women's skins?
It's like, did he babysit my kid that night?
That's... It's like...
Did he just go home after babysitting
and do that?
Also, what the fuck possesses another human being
to make a skin suit and walk around in it?
Like, what the actual fuck?
And that's why you also know that you are not working
with a sane human being.
No, by no means.
There is a lot wrong here.
There's layers and layers of darkness happening here.
There's not even a word for what this is.
There really isn't.
There really isn't.
And it's honestly inconceivable
and no one really understood it until the man died. We still don't understand it.
We're still like, like you can, you can point to many things
that occurred in his life and know that it's a wild
and horrifying concoction of some of the worst shit
you could think of.
But then you think that other people turn into this.
It's like, how did that intersection happen?
Because other people have a similar experience to what I had.
And it's awful.
It's, it does not take away from the fact that it's fucking horrible and it's,
it's essentially child abuse in my opinion.
Oh, 100%.
Like you can't isolate your child and it's a lot.
Yeah. And there was abuse. Like it was like, I mean, like they, she, she neglected the other, the other, you know, Henry and she was, she was mean. Exactly. But so many other
people have probably gone through similar things and don't do this. That's the thing.
And it's like, so, and that's, I don't know what the, what's the thing that makes a person
go that way. That's why I'm like, is it, is it, and then obviously this is just like thinking out loud.
Yeah, we don't know what we're talking about.
But it's like, is it brain chemistry that is the, is the kind of the straw that breaks
the camel's back kind of thing.
Like it's like your unique brain chemistry, either you go one way or you go this myriad
of different ways. Like, yeah, I don't, and I, I don't the same thing, but it's like, why do some people like certain music and other people fucking hate that music?
It's true.
It doesn't have something to do with like some unique brain chemistry that all it, that
it takes, you know, this perfect storm of trauma and abuse to turn that chemistry into
something that's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, this perfect storm of trauma and
abuse to turn that chemistry a certain way, you know, like is it
Well, and I think I definitely think part of it is what you're exposed to or what you
expose yourself to. And I think this is just my opinion. I think those magazines that he
was reading, they fed whatever this darkness was.
A hundred percent.
Yeah. He, I fully agree with that.
And like could possibly have like changed his brain in some way.
Yeah, it absolutely could. And he gives a little bit of insight into some, some times
that he personally, which like obviously he's a very unreliable historian of his own life,
but he points to one in particular instance, which is interesting.
But I do agree with you that I think he fed himself. His loneliness and his isolation
was one thing and he did that. He was isolated, felt lonely, just, you know, grief from his
mother dying, the fucked up way he was raised, Whatever happened with Henry, his brother,
which we're all still up in the air here.
Are we?
But kind of seems like there was something there.
And then he's feeding himself nothing but violent, fantastical.
And these aren't like, you know, these aren't all like fiction.
It's not like he's sitting there reading horror books.
You know what I mean?
That's whatever.
Like you're just like horror. This is not like he's sitting there reading horror books. You know what I mean? Like that's whatever. Like you're just like, literally like not see the worst shit that real human beings,
the atrocities that are being committed against other human beings. You know what I mean? And he's
looking at it and being like, that sounds interesting. Like he's inspired by that.
Like something I want to try. Like that's the thing. It's like, that's where the,
Like he's inspired by that. Like something I want to try.
Like that's the thing.
It's like, that's where the road diverges here.
The disconnect, yeah.
He's not just reading horror books or something like that, or, you know, it being like, I
like to be scared.
That's fun.
Yeah, you know, like that's a totally different brain chemistry.
But to look at the real atrocities that human beings are committing against each other and
saying, well, that sounds fun.
That's when it's like
you're feeding a darkness that was already there. Yes.
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Yeah, so that's what he was doing. So people around that farm just going about their business
while that's happening. When asked why some of these body parts that they found in the house had been painted or
like embellished, some had been salted, you know, like we talked about one of the vulvas was like
covered in salt. That's part of where that rumor probably came from of like cannibalism.
But he explained he had simply been trying to find effective ways of preserving them.
I was going to ask that.
Yeah, that was my associate.
But in the fifties, especially like, when you hunt, like, isn't, don't you like packet
and salt or something?
Yeah, I think so, at least.
Well, it makes sense.
I mean, salt is a preservative.
Yeah.
And I mean, that's what they used to do like way back when.
Yeah, exactly.
But well, Ed seemed to have no reservations about confessing to some of
the most shocking crimes imaginable, he was strangely less forthcoming and cooperative
when it came to the murders of Mary Hogan and Bernice Warden.
Interesting.
Following a polygraph exam, he confessed to killing Hogan and Warden, but he did so very
reluctantly. And only after it was pointed out
that there was a veritable mountain of evidence
pointing to his guilt.
So they were like, you literally can't get out of it.
You have to wonder, or at least I'm wondering,
if that's because his religious upbringing explicitly says,
thou shall not kill.
And obviously, thou shall not do
all those other horrific, heinous things.
But it doesn't explicitly say all that.
I feel like that packed a different kind of meaning for him that he was a murderer.
Yeah. And I think he looked at the other things as he, from the way he seemed to talk about
it was these women were dead. Like what were they doing with that stuff? Like I need it. Right.
Kind of thing, you know what I mean?
Like he looked at it from a very detached,
like they didn't need it anymore.
Why, like why is this a problem?
Like maybe it's weird to you, but like,
Right.
It's not bad what I did.
Which is.
You know, like that's fucked.
Really fucked.
Like incredibly fucked, but I think that's what it was.
I think that's where his brain.
He was wrong for that.
No, I think he was like, sure, maybe you find me gross or weird,
but like, I didn't do anything wrong.
It's a dead person. Like, what do you mean?
Which like, no, that is wrong.
Like, of course I can make art out of their flesh.
And it's like, no.
And then when it comes to murder, though, he knows that's bad.
Everyone knows that's bad.
That's illegal. He knows morally that's wrong.
And he's preaching morals all over the place.
And his mom was always screaming morals at him, which she had a very skewed fucking view
of morality. And we'll get to that in a minute too. You will find another instance where
it's like Augusta.
Really? But not another one.
Yeah. But, but yeah, I think you're right. I think it's like murder was something he
just knew was wrong. Exactly. So he knew by admitting to that he was admitting also he
probably thought he was admitting in front of technically his mom.
Yeah, the ultimate sin.
That he had done the ultimate sin.
Right.
So as for the other crimes that he was suspected of, a spokesperson for the crime lab indicated
they had not made any determinations as of yet. Meaning they didn't know if he was a
cannibal, they didn't know if he was an acrophiliac.
The press was told an avalanche of physical evidence has been recovered, which will take
weeks and possibly months to completely evaluate and process.
But based on his responses during the polygraph examinations, because they brought up the
cannibalism, they brought up the necrophilia, they also brought up the several people that
had gone missing.
We had talked about Evelyn Hartley, Georgia Weckler, like all those cases that were kind of open and strange, they brought those up.
And investigators after the polygraph were reasonably confident that Gein had nothing to
do with the disappearances of Evelyn Hartley, Georgia Weckler, or any of the young women who
had gone missing over the years. I think that's a little sus. I'm not
placing all my shit on a polygraph exam. No. Obviously. And it's like, and especially one
where the guy doesn't really understand that that's something like taking people's body parts from their graves and using them as soup bowls is wrong and
not just gross and weird. I don't know if we can look at that polygraph the same way
because his physiology is not going to react the same way to a question like that. You
know what I mean? Like he's not going to think he did something wrong. So he's going to be
like, well, no. That's why polygraphs are so tough. Yeah.
Cause it's like, this guy has a very different view of what is wrong, right, weird, strange
and the like. Like he's not, it's just not going to have the same baseline. So like there
was some stuff that we talked about in part two that like kind of made you question the
Evelyn Hartley thing. I'm not saying he did it. I'm just saying there's things that still make me question
it a little bit. Yeah. And it's like, and if you're just going off the polygraph exam
to say like, we're pretty sure he didn't do it. I'm like, Oh, I don't know. Cause he had
an obviously not that this is like a smoking gun by any means, but he had newspaper clippings
of her disappearance. Reports said that he did. His house. Yeah.
So whether he was just interested in the case or what, you know, there's very, but that
is interesting, you know, at the very least. How a polygraph isn't going to really work
the same on somebody like this. But for a time, the grave robbing and trophies were
effective at quelling his anxiety, he said, about his
mother dying and it would help quiet the voices in his head, he said.
Okay.
So that can tell you a lot.
Sure.
But after a few years, he said they were no longer a sufficient means of coping and he
was struggling.
So one afternoon, he said he stopped into Mary's Tavern with a neighbor and was struck
by just
how much Mary Hogan resembled his mother.
They do look similar.
Yeah.
And he said it soon occurred to him though that while she definitely resembled her physically,
he said Mary Hogan's personality was almost the polar opposite of who he believed his
mother to be.
And Ed fixated on Mary for a few weeks until one morning he said he just went
to the tavern and shot her in the back of the head with a 32 caliber Mauser pistol. Once he'd
killed Mary, Ed loaded her body into the back of the truck and brought her back to the farm
and hung up her body in the summer kitchen where he proceeded to mutilate her body in the same manner that he had Bernice Warden.
So Mary Hogan went through the exact same thing.
That's horrible.
The murder of Mary Hogan seemed, he said,
to satisfy this dark need or urge that he was feeling.
He said for a few years.
Wow.
Until the fall of 1957 when he murdered Bernice Warden.
So that's very interesting and also a very horrifying study of this guy, according to
him, went years, which is interesting.
Yeah, because it doesn't happen.
Obviously it happens, but it doesn't happen often.
But it's always like one of those like strange occurrences where it's like one then years
later, you don't do it again until years.
Like it's like one, then years later, you don't do it again until years. Like it's allegedly.
Nicole Sarris But I do wonder if it's because he had her
around for years.
Ed Gein I think, yeah, it's like, was he able to...
Nicole Sarris Yeah, I think it is part of it. With each
new story published about Ed Gein, the American public's fascination was just growing. I mean,
this is a new thing. Like no one's ever seen this. To the point that guards had to be appointed
to the Gein farmstead to keep the public
from entering the home, digging through the contents
of the house and contaminating evidence
or otherwise influencing the case.
I would not want to go there
while that was an act of crime scene.
No, thank you.
You really want to stumble upon that horror voluntarily?
That's the thing you want to, what are you doing? Like, come on. You sure want to stumble upon that horror voluntarily? That's the thing, you want to, what are you doing?
Like, come on.
You sure about that?
You sure about that?
But for three weeks, a full-time security guard
with support from county deputies guarded the property
around the clock until crime scene technicians
finally finished the excavation in early December.
Wow.
So psychiatrists and medical professionals
had a field day with Ed Gein, obviously.
They labeled him, and these are people who weren't seeing him, had never met him, just
speaking out of turn.
Which like, isn't it true that you're not technically supposed to diagnose somebody
you've never met?
No, you're definitely not supposed to. They were labeling him a sexual psychopath, a schizophrenic
and many other terms that at that point in 1957, the
American public had never even heard of.
Like they had no idea what any of this meant.
And in the meantime, Ed was being arraigned at the Washara Courthouse for the murder of
Bernice Warden.
Standing before Judge Herbert Bundy, Ed's attorney William Belter spoke on Ed's behalf
and pled not guilty by reason of insanity.
Given the evidence collected at the farmhouse,
it was kind of hard to argue anything else.
So Judge Bundy accepted that probable cause had been found
and waived the preliminary hearing
in order that Ed be bound over for trial.
So in total, the hearing took three minutes.
Wow.
In the week that followed his arrest,
many people tried to get more information from Ed about the murders, about the items found in the home. But aside from his initial
police interview, his answers were mostly, I don't know, and I don't remember. Adams
County Sheriff Frank Searls suspected Ed knew something about the disappearance of two local
hunters a few years earlier. Really?
And Ed hoped now that he was under arrest,
that he might be a little forthcoming
with some information, but Ed had nothing to say.
And now I'm like, oh, I want to know more about that.
Like did he-
How many people, yeah.
Cause I'm like, that's interesting.
Cause you could see something like that happening.
Two local hunters, like they're in,
maybe they stumbled on his property or something like that.
Literally like Texas chainsaw massacre.
Literally like Texas chainsaw massacre.
Like, cause as we'll find out later,
and as some of you I'm sure know,
Leatherface and that whole family
is kind of loosely inspired by these events.
Yes.
But yeah, he had nothing to say about that.
Huh.
Not that he like, you know, He didn't even deny it. He didn't even deny it, he just had nothing to say about that. Huh. Not that he like, you know, was like, deny it.
He just had nothing to say about it.
Huh.
Yeah.
What he wanted at this time, and he had been requesting it for several days, was to speak
to a minister.
So on, yeah.
What fucking minister wanted to go talk to, or obviously didn't want to, but had to go
talk to Ed Gein.
Well, on November 22, Shlee finally got around to bringing one into the jailhouse.
How do you convince that that person to go do that?
Well, so it's impossible really for us to know if anybody like who Ed had in mind when
he requested a minister, but I'm willing to bet that he definitely wasn't going to ask for Reverend Kenneth Engelman. He was only 33 years old. He looked a lot younger
than 33. He was also of a different faith. He was Methodist and Ed was Lutheran.
Oh, okay. Ed was pretty pleased to see him though. Like I don't know what he wanted.
I'm like, he's not the same religion as you, but I guess.
Maybe just to confess his sins.
Yeah. Maybe it was just some kind of comfort. And afterwards, like after they spoke, which I was
like, whoa, Reverend Engelman held a press conference and he told reporters how it went.
He said, Ed Gein is a man who needs help. And according to Engelman, the two prayed together
in Ed's cell. And that's when-
Inside of the cell.
I'd be like, we can do this bar separating us.
Bar separating us, girl.
But Ed began sobbing and he said he was quote, sorry for himself for having gotten in trouble.
And then he said, and so a reporter, so you hear that and you're like, so you're just
sorry you got caught.
Yeah, forthcoming.
And it's like, you weren't even trying to pretend that you were crying for something
else. That's what makes me think like, he has no idea.
What's right and wrong.
No idea. He's just like, like, or that like, he's just detached. He's totally detached
from that.
Yeah, because obviously he knows, like, just the fact that he...
Yeah, like he knows right and wrong.
Right, of course.
But like, he just doesn't see it the same.
Like this is not a man who is looking at things the same way that you or I am.
Like you know what I mean?
Like this is...
And he's just outwardly being like, I'm just really sad that I got in trouble.
You know?
What the fuck?
And so reporters asked him whether he expressed sorrow for the persons he had injured.
And Engelman said, no, he never did. He never expressed
sorrow or remorse for any of it.
Which is so fucking monstrous.
So beyond. And if that was your family member, you would want five minutes in that cell.
Oh, it would be on site. I'd be like, let's go. Like, this would be like, yeah, finish
him. But you also be terrified. You'd be like, like's go. Like, this would be like, yeah, finish him. But you'd also be terrified.
You'd be like, like, obviously anybody who murders somebody
is a monster, but Ed Gein goes so far beyond monster.
In a completely, like, you can't comprehend him.
No, and I keep saying there's just no words.
It's indescribable what he did and how he reacted to what he did.
Yeah. And even he doesn't seem to fully, like he points to things that he thinks is the
reason. And it's like, I think he holds those as his reasons. And it's like, okay, like
what? But you just think of, it's hard to like grasp it all at once because it's, there's
so much in this that you're just like, I can't conceive of this. But you just have to think of this man sitting in this house,
which he's boarded off his mother's bedroom as like a shrine. And he's sitting in just like filth
and surrounded by dead bodies, decapitated heads and body parts all day and all night.
That man is closing his eyes in a bed where full articulated skeletons are attached to
the bed.
I don't know what to say.
This doesn't seem real.
That's why when movies were made later, yeah, cinema magic, because it's just like, that's not real. That's why when movies were made later, yeah, cinema magic, because it's just
like, that's not real. And then you think about it and you're like, Oh my God, that's
real. Yeah. Like that's real shit. That's so inconceivable. You think of these things
like he's just going to bed surrounded by death.
It's one of those things where you would read it in a book or like see it, see it in a movie
and say, that's too much.
And you'd be like, wow, what an imagination.
Like, no, it is real.
Oh, and just the fact that he had no remorse, none, no sorrow and no remorse.
Just for himself.
Now, while the press clamored for any scrap of news they could publish on the story.
And he was called at one point, the ghoul slayer, which was like, I don't know about that.
That's silly.
I don't know about that.
District Attorney Earl Kylene and Ed's attorney were locked in an increasingly public battle
over how the case should proceed in the legal sense.
Having entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, William Belter was pushing hard for Ed to be examined
by a private psychiatrist as soon as possible.
I can understand that.
Yeah, so, cause he said the defense,
in order to have any evidence of value,
must obtain it now.
And while Ed is, and this was all while Ed
was still willing to talk.
This guy would shut down at a moment's notice.
So they were like, we gotta get this going now. While he remembers it, while it's fresh, while we can at least try to get him
talking. Like if he goes silent, we're not going to get anything.
And obviously like you don't want it to benefit the defense because like you don't, I don't
think there's any chance that this guy would have walked. He just would have gone to like
a mental facility, like a hospital, but it would also be helpful for law enforcement
and the FBI and just agencies like that.
Just start understanding what we're looking for here.
What's this profile?
What's happening in this brain?
What is in his past that triggered certain things
that he's done?
Even if just to help like people who profile or anything.
Honestly, it's like you need this.
And Belter told reporters the important question is whether Ed Gein is insane now, not three,
five or 10 years from now, which is true.
But Kylene on the other hand was pushing for a speedy trial.
He just wanted to push it through.
Now, Gein appeared before Judge Bundy a few weeks later.
And this time, Kylene had changed his stance
and actually shocked spectators
when after Ed entered a second plea of not guilty
by reason of insanity, the district attorney recommended
that he be evaluated by psychiatrists
at the Central State Hospital
before proceeding with the trial.
So he's now changed his tune to be like, we should have this guy looked at. evaluated by psychiatrists at the Central State Hospital before proceeding with the trial.
So he's now changed his tune to be like, we should have this guy looked at.
I wonder how much say like family members got in that.
I wonder too, because I doubt a lot to be honest.
Probably not back then.
And honestly, this was a politically risky stance he took.
Because according to Schechter, most people felt hospitalization would be tantamount to
him getting away with murder, especially in the 50s.
You can understand why people would feel that way back then.
People thought it was just going to be him getting away with it.
Well, there was no mental health awareness whatsoever.
So Kylene couldn't ignore the fact that what they'd seen at the Gein farm was well outside
the bounds of sanity.
Like he was like, I can't pretend that this is sane, what we saw.
Like there's gotta be something here, you know?
And he said, I don't know whether a person
in his right mind would do that sort of thing or not.
And then he, and that's what he conceded.
He was like, I guess we've seen bad people do bad things,
but like this is kind of outside the scope of that.
So I don't know.
And I'm glad he kind of like went this way
cause he's like, I can't say whether this is sane or insane behavior. And like, I think a psychiatrist
needs to tell us like none of us can determine this. Well, the judge agreed and ordered the
examination. Now there was no question that Ed had murdered Mary Hogan and Bernice Warden. He
would be punished for those crimes. But the other bodies found at the farm presented a larger problem for the district attorney.
Specifically, where were the additional victims
that Ed simply refused to take responsibility for?
Like, we don't even know who everybody is in this house.
And we need to return people back
to where they were resting. Exactly.
Although he had already explained
that the bodies and body parts discovered in the house
were taken from graves, few people in Plainfield,
including some in law enforcement,
found it plausible that meek little Ed Gein
had the wherewithal or the strength
to dig up all those bodies.
A lot of people thought he killed more people.
I get it.
And I don't blame people for thinking that.
And people in law enforcement thought that.
I kind of lean toward that opinion.
Besides, they reasoned, wouldn't someone have noticed
if random graves had been dug up around the cemeteries
in town?
Like no one noticed this?
Because the sheer number of things and body parts
and everything that was found in his house.
And I was just saying earlier, like you would go
to your loved one's grave and visit them.
Because again, these are recently deceased people.
Exactly.
And we were talking about nine masks he made. That's nine women who he skinned
the faces off of. But also what I'm thinking is he did go after recently deceased, which
means recently buried. So it would be harder to determine that those were disturbed graves.
That's a good point.
The earth is already disturbed. Yeah. Recently. Yeah. That's a good point. So you can look
at it both ways. I can understand why people were like, would we have not noticed
this? It's like, maybe not. Maybe you're right. Like maybe, maybe that is wild to think about
and to be like, okay, maybe he killed more people than we think and he's just doing this.
But on the other hand, he did go after recently deceased, like their obituaries were right
in the paper that week.
And the dirt was.
And the dirt was already recently disturbed.
So he could have just gone and put it back
and it really wouldn't have looked any different.
So there's that.
You also think about that and you're like,
is that why you did that?
Well, that's the thing, I'm like,
that's pretty diabolical.
And like you have those,
I don't wanna call that reasoning,
but like it sort of is.
But that kind of like your brand of logical thinking, you know, like where you're planning
this out because you know you won't get caught that way.
And it's the same thing of like, so that's pretty same.
He went into Bernice Warden's store with ammunition in his pocket and went to the gun that he
knew that ammunition went into.
And knew full well that her son was going to be off that day hunting.
Yeah, he asked him the name before.
So there's a lot of like premeditation here as well. Right. But there's also a lot of insanity. So it's like,
that's why it is necessary to get him looked at by a psychiatrist because none of this makes sense.
None of it correlates. But in this case though, the only way to be sure the bodies at the farm
weren't traditional murder victims was to get Ed to identify the bodies at the house and disinter
the caskets and
confirm that they were missing from their plots.
And did they do they tried to do that?
Well, the thing was, Washera County was in relative like financial straight, like they
weren't doing great.
It's not like they had all this money to throw around.
It was a small community.
It wasn't like, you know, very wealthy.
And the Gein investigation and trial threatened to eat up a huge amount of the county's budget
in the prosecution of the Hogan and Warden cases alone.
So the idea of adding eight to 10 at least disinterments to the price tag and the cost
of processing any additional evidence, it seemed unwise and a little from what they,
their point of view at the time,
they felt it was unnecessary.
Okay.
Also, it was the dead of winter.
So the process was gonna be a lot more difficult
and a lot more expensive
if it was even possible to do at that time of the season.
It's frozen.
It's frozen.
Still, when Ed was arrested,
Kylene vowed to the public
that he would do everything in his power
to ensure that Ed would never walk the streets again.
And given his recent agreement
to the psychiatric evaluation,
he needed something to offset the appearance
that he was going soft on the case now.
Cause he was, people in Plainfield want this guy gone,
like done, which I can't say I blame him.
No.
But he's now looking at it from an inside perspective,
seeing all the evidence that
everybody's not seeing, seeing the interviews, seeing all this stuff.
That's why he's gone to this like, he should be evaluated.
But that also opens up the possibility that he could walk the streets again.
He could be let out of a psychiatric facility when he is deemed sane.
And that's terrifying.
Yeah.
And that's the fear.
Because how do you reform that? And he's terrifying. Yeah, and that's the fear.
Because how do you reform that?
And he's vowing to the public,
he'll never walk the streets again,
but now he's saying he does need a psychiatric evaluation,
he might need to be in a hospital.
So it's like, he's really teetering,
which I'll give it to him,
it sounds like he was going with the right moral stance
of like, I can't just posture to people. I have to be real
and do the right thing. It seems like this is a matter of like, we got to determine the
sanity here.
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and enter code morbid. Nutrifol.com spelled N-U-T-R-A-F-O-L dot com promo code morbid. That's Nutrifol.com promo code morbid. Now, surprisingly, Ed was mostly forthcoming with the identities of the women whose graves
he'd opened, and by early December he'd named at least seven. Okay. However, before Kylene and some local cemetery workers
would charge in and dig up the graves,
state crime lab chief Charles Wilson
loudly protested to this.
He told Kylene and the press,
we can determine scientifically
if the graves have been quote unquote molested.
That's how he called it.
That's a weird way to put that.
I don't know why.
So they needn't dig up and open the caskets.
Okay.
But Kylene answered, and I can see where he's coming from.
He said, scientific findings won't convince the people.
These people in Plainfield want those graves opened.
I get what he's saying.
And it's true.
They're not, the people of Plainfield are in 57
are not gonna hear like scientifically,
we can tell if they've been disturbed.
But like, they're gonna be like, fuck no, open it up. I want to see like, they're not going to believe you.
Yeah, like I want to know for sure. Yeah, they've been fucked up by this. They want to know.
Absolutely. So the problem as far as Kylene saw it was that soil analysis and scientific testing
could also take weeks or months. And it's expensive too. Exactly. And he didn't think the residents of
Plainfield were going to be willing to wait that long
to find out whether Ed was bullshitting them or not.
So while Kylene and the state crime lab were arguing over whether or how to disinter the
graves of the locals, Ed was transferred to the central state hospital at Waupon and instantly
became the most infamous patient the hospital had ever seen.
Head psychiatrist Edward Schubert told reporters,
our primary purpose is to determine the legal question
of gene sanity, but we will do a complete workup on him
and find out just why he has reacted in the way he did.
Now, in the meantime, Ed had a theory of his own
about what caused him to snap.
And he finally was open about talking about it.
He talked to his lawyer actually about it first before he,
or like while he was being transferred to the hospital.
According to Ed, in 1945,
he and his mother had visited a neighbor farm
to purchase some straw.
And he said, while they were there, they went,
and this is really awful,
kind of brief mention of animal cruelty.
So trigger warning, I'll breeze over it. While
they were there, they witnessed the farmer kill a puppy. Oh God. Which caused a woman
to come running out of the farmhouse, hysterically imploring him to stop. Of course. The scene
very much upset Augusta Gein.
Not because of the violence.
She didn't give a shit about the puppy, but because the woman quote, wasn't married to
that farmer and shouldn't have been at his house.
Are you fucking kidding me?
No, I'm not fucking kidding you.
Yeah.
So she-
What? And that's what you tell your kid?
Miss Augusta Gein.
Like, that's what you tell your kid to gather from that situation.
Miss Augusta Gein watched a man violently kill a puppy and was upset because a woman
who got upset about it wasn't married to that farmer and shouldn't have been in his house.
Also, you don't know why the fuck she's there in the first place.
And also, get so fucked, Augusta. Like, are you kidding me?
What? Yeah.
What? Yeah. It was the farmer's
immorality and wickedness, Ed claimed, that because that or the farm, the woman's immorality
and wickedness that Ed claimed had caused his mother's second stroke
and eventually her death,
which led to his unbearable loneliness
and drove him to violence.
What?
Yeah.
What?
Yeah.
What?
Yes.
Yeah.
What?
Yep.
Yep.
Yep. Make it make sense. I will yeah. What? Yup. Yup. Yup.
Make it make sense.
I will not.
There's no way.
I cannot.
That I cannot do.
Nope.
I...
Yup.
That's what, that's how broken that is up there.
What the fuck, dude?
Is he said that with his whole chest, that that's what led him to do this.
You have to wonder what other instances they ran into as a duo.
As a duo. And Augusta was like, that one's wrong too.
What?
And you would think with that, when you first hear the beginning of the story,
you're like, oh my God, he watched a farmer hurt a puppy.
That's fucked up.
That's going to stay with you? puppy like that's fucked up. And that'll like really stay with you.
No, it's not that.
I thought you were gonna say he was like fucked up
and like got excited that that happened.
He breezed over that.
Although there was something he also said
and this is really gross as well.
I'm just gonna breeze over it
because I think it's important to at least mention.
He said when he was like eight years old, right?
Like really young, he walked into a shed on the farm
and saw his mother and his father like preparing,
I think it was a pig.
Okay.
Which they had like cut open, like it's pretty horrific.
Yeah.
Essentially they're like, it was like hanging
like Bernice and Mary were.
And he said it excited him to watch that happen. So there is another quick
little insight into that mind of his at a very young age.
And that's the thing. He was so young when that happened. Did you say eight?
I think he was around eight. He was somewhere around that age, like very young.
What the f... So that leads you to believe like you're already like something innately is fucked up in you.
And you're just seeing too much and you're being exposed to a lot of big ideas, you know,
God only knows what literally God only knows what Augusta was saying.
It's true.
So that's interesting.
So Ed's explanation is very obviously
like the delusional justifications of a very broken mind.
Like that is, you're like, no, I don't think that works, Ed.
But his self diagnosis did reveal something
about his actual motive, which is from the moment
Ed was born, Augusta Gein had done everything she could
to impart to him her belief that women's wickedness
was responsible
for all the world's problems. It was women's wickedness. Like in this story about the farmer
and the dog, it wasn't the farmer. It wasn't the farmer's explosive act of unbelievable
cruelty and violence that started her into her second stroke. It was the fact that he
had been in the presence of a woman to whom he was not married.
That's also just the fact that she was like, like they're just in each other's presence. Yeah. I'm like, but you're at his house. So like, are you wrong? Yeah. You like, what are you're
interpreting so much from that woman just being at his fucking house. Yeah. You're at his house. And she's just driving into this kid
that women are responsible for everything bad in the world.
They will fuck with you.
They are wicked.
They are manipulative.
Don't trust them.
They want to ruin you.
They want to take you from me.
Like all this shit at such a young age.
And what is he going to look at women like later?
I'm like, Augusta, what did you want out of this?
That's what I don't get.
I'm like, what was the end game?
It was so self-serving.
It was.
I don't think there was an end game for Ed.
There was an end game for her.
Yeah, that's all it was.
She got to be-
So at the end of her days, she's taken care of.
Right.
And who cares what happens afterwards?
That's another level of evil too.
That really is.
What she did.
I mean, nothing compares to what Ed did and where he went, but like.
But that's a totally different side story of evil as well.
That is evil.
But also it wasn't Augusta's relentless psychological abuse that led to his murdering Mary Hogan
and Bernice Warden, but the fact that those women had so closely resembled
his mother physically, but betrayed her saintliness in character to him. Like that was his reason
for those.
Because they were like boss bitches doing boss bitch stuff.
Exactly. They were just doing their thing. William Belter told reporters, oddly, he blames
the women. Or he blames the woman, he's talking about the farmer one.
Oh, okay.
He said, oddly he blames the woman.
If she hadn't been there,
his mother wouldn't have had the stroke
and he wouldn't have been left alone.
That's what he looked at it as.
If that woman wasn't there.
So it's her fault.
I would have just watched this farmer cruelly kill a puppy.
And I would have been fine.
Like that's what he's justified.
Like that's inconceivable to me, it really is.
I'm so shook.
Now, almost immediately following his arrival
at Central State Hospital in early December,
Ed started a battery of tests
that would take nearly a month to complete.
There were some that were physical tests,
like extensive examinations of his body, his
blood, biological and physiological functioning.
All of these were determined to be within normal range for a 51 year old man.
Physically he was fine.
Okay.
Despite that, Ed seemed to find the physical examinations so frustrating and so daunting.
He would frequently whine like a whiner about headaches and nausea,
and he would complain that he needed a wheelchair. He was only 51.
Are you kidding me?
I was like, you were dragging people out of their graves and bringing them home. You killed two
women and you strung them up and mutilated them. And you're complaining because you might have to
walk on a fucking treadmill.
Shut up.
Shut up, Ed.
Shut up.
Another common complaint from Ed,
and this is interesting,
was that he said there was a lot of offensive smells
that he would smell that the host, yeah, thank you.
I know, Ash is losing her mind.
No, motherfucker, what? like you lived in that house.
You lived in that house full of everything we know it was full of, and the hospi-
Okay, Mary Cosby, what?!
That's what I have- So I have a theory.
What?!
So he would say all these offensive smells were happening, that the hospital staff was like,
we don't smell these, like what are you talking about?
And finally, one of the doctors was like, what does it smell like?
Is it cleaning products?
What are you talking about?
No, he said, it smells like flesh.
Don't you like that?
I can tell you 100% with 100% certainty,
after performing an autopsy,
I have the smell in my nose for a little while.
Yeah.
It sticks around.
And sometimes things, food will smell like it,
it sticks for a minute.
But that's just doing an autopsy and it goes away.
Living in a place where all you smell 24 seven
is the smell of flesh and decomposition.
I wonder if he was just there.
He just smelled it.
But he wasn't complaining when he was at home.
But that's what I mean.
You go smell blind while you're there and then you leave.
And all of a sudden you're like, like, why do I smell this everywhere?
Like I would be like, do I smell like it?
Like I would make John smell me like, but while you're in there, you're just doing your
thing.
And I'm obviously saying in autopsies.
So I'm imagining in his home, he would not really notice it because he's there all the
time.
But then he's going to this place that's clean and like probably smells like cleaning products
and other things like that, like clinically clean.
I'm like, maybe he doesn't like the smell of his sterile environment though.
And I think it's triggering.
I think that smell is stuck in, cause I don't know, this was right after.
So it's like, I don't think that was the case for the rest of his life that he would smell
these foul smells all the time. I think it was like, maybe he was still just smelling
what he was living in for the last however many years.
That's bonkers to me. I truly like I see what you're saying. And I definitely think that
could be it because I haven't had that experience. But I fucking wonder if that guy just didn't
like the smell of clean.
But he said it smells like flesh. That's what he was saying. No, they literally, a doctor said,
Ed, what does it smell like? And he said, it smells like flesh.
What the fuck? And that man knew what that smelled like. He wasn't confusing cleaning products for that.
No. And you sat in your house and like, did nobody say to him, Ed,
you don't think your fucking house smells like flesh? Well, then I'm wondering, I'm like, this is a hospital environment.
They've done, you know, they've done autopsies. They've all been through gross anatomy. They've
smelled body smells. Sure. I wonder if they're like, that's it. Like you're probably smelling
what you smell when you're around it. That is. And you're coming out of that environment now and it's stuck in your nose.
This just gets more fucked up as we go.
It's real fucked up.
What?
But yeah, so the net,
and also I want you to picture like being a doctor
and like this guy just keeps complaining
about the bad smells and you're like,
Ed, what does it smell like?
And he just says, it smells like flesh.
I'd be like, I gotta go.
Like I'd be like, I'm retiring today.
I'm just, this wasn't what I wanted. Here's my two weeks.
That's a lot. Anybody who says it smells like flesh, it's like, what the fuck Ed?
Now the next step was the baseline psychological and neuropsychological
exams and the doctors at Central State, they established that Ed had an IQ of 89,
which would put him in the low to average category.
Some sources I found did say 99,
which would put him more towards the average.
He wasn't exceedingly low.
It's not like he was like down at the bottom.
Well, and if you think about it,
he left school in eighth grade.
Exactly.
So a lot of that testing is probably just like basic stuff
you learn in school.
Exactly.
And honestly, they also noted that he possessed, quote,
a fair amount of information, a good vocabulary,
and an ability to reason abstractly.
So?
Because he read a lot.
Mm-hmm.
This suggested that despite the Weschler adult intelligence test,
despite what it indicated,
he was likely more intelligent than he appeared.
Mm-hmm.
Also, the results of the Rorschach,
I can never say that right, Rorschach assessment,
which is the Inkblot test.
Oh, okay.
They were quote, not that of a well person,
but of one with insufficient ego, immaturity,
conflict concerning identification,
and possibly the presence of illogical thought processes.
Correct, I believe that.
Yeah.
Additional tests revealed things many had suspected but couldn't confirm.
Ed possessed bizarre and powerful religious beliefs.
He strongly identified with feminine figures and he had a strikingly immature level of
sexuality characterized by strong feelings of guilt.
Okay.
So a lot of conflicting feelings happening here and things he wasn't able to
understand or actually put a finger on, you know, because he was so jumbled up as a kid
with so many different messages. When considered together, the results painted a picture of
a man who was of average intelligence, very suggestible, but emotionally dull and prone
to irrational, inappropriate, and aggressive
responses, which is not great.
No, that's kind of the worst.
The earlier tests were useful in establishing a baseline, but the more in-depth testing
proved more useful at identifying Ed's true motives for his very shocking behaviors.
During an assessment of his social and sexual histories,
Ed's rigid beliefs about morality and more specifically the immorality of sex were a
frequent topic with him at one point exclaiming, morality is pretty low in Plainfield, which
is what his mother would always say. With regard to his victims, Ed explained Mary Hogan
quote was a dirty talker, operated a tavern,
and people said she was in some crooked business.
So even just the fact that she operated a tavern, that he literally went to before he
even developed like any kind of hating feelings about her.
Like, but it's okay that you're at the tavern.
Exactly.
Because she's a woman, she can't own a tavern.
And also she can't, she can't swear.
His mother would have been horrified.
Swearing is inappropriate.
Of course not.
Oh my God, Augusta?
I know.
Augusta would have lost her goddamn mind.
Now about Bernice Warden, he said, quote, she wooed her husband away from another girl
and married him shortly after that other girl committed suicide.
That's a quote.
So this motherfucker is also just like gossiping.
He's just going on rumors. Like he's just following the rumor mill and being like,
well, she should die then.
Like you don't even know.
Yeah. His attitudes towards women in general were very negative and his attitudes towards
his victims were similarly negative and reflected the belief that their deaths were a just punishment
for their sins.
Like he's playing God.
Yeah. He said they were sins, like they were a just punishment for their sins. Like he's playing God.
Yeah, he said they were sins, like they were sinful,
so they should die.
I took care of it.
I did the correct thing.
Like that's why he just doesn't see it as like,
I don't get it, what's the problem?
Broadly speaking, Ed seemed more or less incapable
of taking any responsibility for his actions,
like personal responsibility,
and frequently blamed his behavior on everyone else.
He said, quote, if his neighbors had shown some interest
in him and would have visited,
then he probably wouldn't have been so lonely
and engaged in illegal acts.
I don't really think that all of this happened
because nobody stopped by to ask you for some sugar.
I feel like this was gonna happen.
I don't think it helped that you were
so isolated. And I think that probably made you way fucking weirder than you ever would
have been. But I don't think we should blame everybody else for this.
I don't think it's the neighbors' fault. I don't think so.
By all accounts, everybody, when he came into town, everybody was kind to him and nice to
him and went about their business.
Yeah. And I'm sure it kind of sounds like Augusta turned people away.
Oh, 100, but nobody was allowed at that farm.
Right.
Their whole life. I'm like, blame your mom.
Right.
She turned everybody away. You would have had friends probably.
Exactly.
And also he frequently fixated on small slights and misunderstandings that had occurred throughout
his lifetime. Like they were far more significant reflections about how other people felt about him. Okay. He would like very much focus on the minutiae. In like simplistic terms, everyone
treated him poorly. Everyone took advantage of him, which is what led him to do what he
did. Not him. Huh. Had nothing to do with him. Okay. When it came to the murders, Ed
was far vaguer about it. He frequently claimed not to remember a lot of the details of the murders, but in the
case of Warden's death, he was confident it was an accident that had occurred when the
gun discharged accidentally.
Though he doesn't explain how or why he physically loaded the gun with bullets he brought into
the store in the first place.
And they were like, can you explain that?
No.
I just traveled with bullets in my front pocket.
So it was just an accident that you loaded the gun, the exact gun that you had the exact
bullets for in your pocket?
No, sir.
These are the things that you're like, fuck off, Ed.
Like I can see you.
Yeah.
And you're lying because you know, and you're lying trying to make it sound like this was
accidental because you know that it's wrong and you know you're going to be punished.
There is no rhyme or reason to this man's.
It's increasingly frustrating.
I can't imagine being part of this investigation and like the people in the hospital and everything
having to deal with this.
Also he claimed not to remember loading Bernice's body onto the truck or returning
to the farm, but he didn't deny having killed her or mutilated her body. So he admitted that.
In their conclusions, the doctors at Central State determined that Ed's social and physical isolation,
along with the powerful influence of his mother, led him to develop a strong and rigid set of
beliefs about himself and those around him that were
rooted in religious understandings of right and wrong. Following his mother's death,
he engaged in a very intense fantasy life in order to cope with the profound grief,
anxiety, and stress that was by all accounts consuming him, which eventually required more
elaborate acts to achieve the desired effect, hence the grave
robbing. He denied ever engaging in sex with the bodies, not necrophilia. He said he did not do
that. And he said, at no time did I even attempt or consider eating any flesh.
In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red wound on his arm and seemed unwell.
She insisted on driving him to the local hospital to get treatment.
While he waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the
exit but would never be seen alive again. While he waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab her car to pick him up at the exit,
but would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott?
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one and many more.
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As far as his tendency to forget details of the more emotionally charged situations, Dr.
Schubert suggested it was kind of a quote, self-serving amnesia.
Yeah.
Engaged to help him cope with the more unacceptable acts such as murder. Kind
of like what you said about, I think he just kind of like feigns amnesia because it's like
a self-preservation technique that like his brain is just kind of doing for him, where
he knows those are unacceptable. So he's like, I don't remember.
He has housewives amnesia.
There you go. As for why he murdered Mary Hogan
and Bernice Warden, Schubert stated that Ed's motivation for the actions, quote, is elusive
and uncertain, but several factors come to mind. Hostility, sex, and a desire for a substitute for
his mother in the form of a replica or body that could be kept indefinitely. But in support of
this theory, Schubert pointed to Ed's frequent comments
about the bodies being like dolls. That's how he would refer to them and how he was
often comforted by their presence. So when we talk about this man went to sleep with
like skeletons attached to his bedpost, he was comforted by all of that. Like this is
what gave him his like-
Is sinister.
Yeah, that sinister is a perfect way to describe it. Yeah. Basically, Ed Gein's mental state
and frequent delusions were the result of a complex combination of social, environmental,
and psychological factors that while useful in understanding him a little bit, like at
least trying to understand him, it would never adequately or to any satisfaction explain why he did what he did.
Not at all.
He was frequently paranoid, delusional.
He experienced hallucinations to which he responded with bizarre behavior and violence
sometimes, even when he didn't remember doing so.
So there was a lot going on here that nobody could understand.
Based on all the test results and examinations,
the medical and psychiatric staff
at Central State Hospital unanimously agreed
that Ed Gein easily met the legal definition of insanity
and was not competent to stand trial at that time.
Yeah, I mean, I can see why they felt that way.
In his summary review sent to the judge
along with the test results, Dr. Schubert wrote,
Mr. Gein has been suffering from a schizophrenic process of an undetermined number of years,
for an undetermined number of years. As a result, although Mr. Gein might
voice knowledge of the difference between right and wrong, his ability to make such judgment would
be influenced by the existent mental illness. He would not
be capable of fully realizing the consequence of any act because he would not be a free
agent to determine either the nature or the consequence of acts which resulted from disturbed
and abnormal thinking. Because of these findings, I must recommend his commitment to Central
State Hospital.
Okay.
Now, in January 1958, a hearing was held to formally determine whether Gein was fit to
stand trial.
And during his testimony, Dr. Schubert explained that Ed was a schizophrenic who had insufficient
ego, was immature, lived a rather expansive fantasy life centered about himself, and had
little faith in people.
Yeah, sounds right on the money.
Schubert believed Gein's illness had been chronic and he had been experiencing symptoms
for at least the last 12 years.
And because he was unable to give a chronological account of his life and the events related
to his crimes, he was not able to participate in his defense, making him incompetent to
stand trial.
So to the people of Plainfield, the determination seemed preposterous.
I can also understand that.
They were outraged that Ed appeared to be getting off with a light sentence from what
they saw.
Like, especially with a lack of understanding of mental health and everything that goes
along with it, especially during that time, I would also be upset.
Like you have to consider the fact
that these people are not necessarily well educated
and don't have all the resources
about these kinds of things.
And like you said, some of the things
that they were talking about, like the diagnoses,
these people had never heard of.
Like the American people, I'm not saying
because they're like in a small town, they don't know.
Literally like America.
That's what I'm saying. So it's like, you can understand why they'd be like,
I feel like this is a fucking cop out. They were pissed and they were, they, I mean,
this was ghoulish. This was horrible. This was a nightmare. And this, and these were people that,
because again, the small community, people they loved and respected. Exactly. New forever.
This was like an institution. Right.
Like Bernice Warden and Mary Hogan as well.
Like that was, everyone went to that tavern.
But Bernice Warden, it was like,
that was an institution, that hardware store.
Right.
Like she was just, she was named citizen of the week,
you know, like she was, everybody knew her.
Yeah.
And people were even more outraged because they were like,
we've known him our entire lives for the most part.
Like everyone in that town had known him forever.
And they're like, I never saw anything.
Well, and they were like, yeah, he's odd.
And they said like sometimes and they referred to him as like simple quote unquote.
Yeah, which is not.
They said he hardly seemed to be what they termed psychotic.
Well, because now all of a sudden he's having these violent outbursts and hallucinations. We let him babysit our a sudden, he's having these violent outbursts and hallucinations.
We let him babysit our children.
He wasn't having these violent outbursts.
Do you think some of them were potentially put on?
I wonder.
Or do you think it was all the stress that he was under?
I can see both of those being the case, for sure.
But you can easily see him play acting this whole thing
and kind of manipulating everybody, or I can see that it's just, he snapped. When you're easily see him play acting this whole thing and kind of manipulating
everybody or I can see that it's just he snapped when you're put under stress. It all started
coming out. But you do I mean, as a citizen of that town and seeing him your whole life
and letting him sit your kid and he was fine. I'd be like, I don't fucking think so. So
I can understand why they're like this sucks. Yeah. But of course, on the flip side of that, in 1958,
few people outside of the medical and psychiatric
community even knew what schizophrenia was,
much less how it can manifest.
So no matter how well it was explained to them,
they most likely would never believe
Ed had a very serious and extremely complicated mental on
this. It was just too much to tell everybody what it was. You know, like that nobody's
going to get it. Right. Because it's the first time they've ever even heard it. It's too
complex. And there's not like a ton of research or they can't just call a town hall and be
like, let me explain schizophrenia to you and like how it manifests why this is so complex,
why these behaviors might make sense. Like we're still learning about this.
Yeah.
But regardless of how the townspeople felt, Judge Bundy accepted the recommendation of
Schubert and the other doctors at Central State Hospital.
And Ed was sent back to the hospital where he could stay for the next 10 years.
Now although it may have appeared as though Ed Gein was quote unquote evading justice
by being confined to the state
hospital. State attorney general Stuart Honak assured Wisconsinites quote, upon his recovery,
if that should occur, the defendant may still be brought to trial. They were like, he's
not just going to be let out. If he is found to have recovered and is found to be sane,
he will go on trial. Okay. So while that was probably little comfort
to the friends and families of the victims at the time
or the residents of Plainfields,
that day did eventually come.
In February of 1968, when Ed was found to be competent
to stand trial for the murders
of Bernice Warden and Mary Hogan.
In recent years, Ed had become a model patient
at the hospital and had shown considerable improvement
since his arrival, even to the point of holding a job at the hospital's lapidary.
Lapidary? What is that?
And it's relating to stone and gems and the work involving engraving, cutting or polishing
them.
So like he was making rings and shit?
So he was like, I think it was more like engravings and stone and stuff.
I don't want that.
I mean, who does?
Really?
But he was doing it.
He was holding a job there.
In a hospital, Spurks person said, quote, he seems content to live day by day.
We've never had the least bit of trouble with him.
Kind of not dope that he gets to be content living day by day. Kind of not dope. Kind of not dope that he gets to be content living day by day.
Not dope.
Kind of not dope.
That's a great way to describe it.
Kind of fucking shitty.
I think that's a good blanket statement for what happened here, which kind of not dope.
You just get to be content after you killed two?
Question mark, question mark people.
So you know what? Super not dope. And I'm saying like question mark, question mark people. So you know what?
Super not though.
And I'm saying like question mark, question mark two,
like me thinks not.
Yeah, at least two and possibly your brother.
Yeah.
Now despite being-
I'm glad you're content though, sorry.
Yeah, it's fine.
You're content to live day by day.
Despite being found competent to stand trial,
Schubert was emphatic that Ed Gein
was still profoundly
mentally ill and was unlikely to improve any more than he had in the time since he arrived.
He said, quote, I doubt if Mr. Gein will ever change. And truly, with the horrific discovery
now a decade behind everyone, most people around Plainfield would just as soon have
left it in the past. Like they didn't want to relive this all over again. But Ed had spent 10 years locked in a psychiatric facility without ever having stood
trial for the crimes that put him in there. And as far as he was concerned, as Ed was concerned,
he wanted his day in court. He thought he was going to talk himself out of this one. Yeah,
it was like, do you really want your day in court? The day finally came on November 7th, 1968.
And despite a courtroom packed with press and spectators, it was very underwhelming.
Because Ed opted for a bench trial, the prosecutor spent just one day presenting his case to
the judge, which was by then very familiar to everyone in the courtroom.
And the defense spent just a few days more to present their case of not guilty
by reason of insanity. It was as though everyone was simply just like kind of going through the
motions to kind of satisfy Gein's right to a fair trial. Like we're just going to go through this.
On November 14th, 1968, Ed was found guilty of murder, after which the second phase of the
trial to determine his sanity at the time of the murder began. This too was over in a very short amount of time,
with the judge returning his conclusion that he was insane after two days of testimony
from psychiatrists at Central State Hospital. Based on the findings, Ed Gein was returned
to Central State Hospital, where he would remain institutionalized
until he was deemed sane and no longer posed a threat to society.
Although this technically meant, like I said, it was possible that Ed could be released
back into the community, and he did in fact petition for this in 1974.
The fuck he did.
That man petitioned to be let back out.
Kind of not dope. Yeah, definitely he did. That man petitioned to be let back out. Kind of not dope.
Yeah, definitely not dope.
Given the extent of his crimes and their effect on the community, there was no real chance
of him ever being released from the hospital.
I'm like, who the fuck signed that petition?
So Gein returned to Central State Hospital where he remained until the facility was converted
into a correctional facility in 1978.
From there, he was transferred
to Mendota State Hospital where he spent the days working, watching TV, reading books and
magazines. Just chillin'. Just as he had for the previous two decades. Ed remained
a model patient, never caused any problems for the staff, was never violent, never did
anything really wrong in the prison, or excuse
me, in the hospital. And Ed Gein died of respiratory failure on July 26, 1984 at the age of 77.
I did not realize for some reason that he lived till the 80s.
Yeah, to the 80s. And he was 77 and he was buried in an unmarked plot in the Plainfield
Cemetery.
Wow. Now, I mean, I guess when you think about it, I was just so annoyed that he got to read books
and watch TV. Yeah, of course.
You can also do those things in prison.
That's true. I just thought that to myself.
I was like, really, what's the difference?
It's true, exactly.
He was just getting treated at the same time.
And yeah, I don't know.
But in March, 1958, the Gein Farm
became the property of the county.
That was in 58, by the way.
We're going back for a minute.
Oh, okay, okay.
So I just said that we're still in 1958. No, it's okay. But in 1958, by the way, we're going back for a minute. So I just said that like we're still in 1958.
No, it's okay.
But in 1958, like in case you were wondering what happened to the farm, it became the property
of the county and the local auction company, the farm sales service of Reidsburg.
They were contracted to auction the property and the land off.
Can you imagine having that place be your responsibility?
No, thank you.
Like, fuck! But prior to the auction, the farm sales service of Reidsburg tried to cash in on the
notoriety of the case by charging 50 cents to anyone who wanted to do a tour of the property
and buildings before they were sold off. Had it been like cleaned up yet? Yeah, I mean,
cleaned up yet? Yeah, I mean, as much as it could, I suppose.
I'm not really sure what kind of crime scene cleanup they had back then, but probably wasn't
that advanced.
But already exhausted and frustrated by the overwhelming attention the case was drawing,
the residents of Plainfield vehemently objected to the admission fee.
And a judge quickly shut down the company's attempt to quote, make the house a museum
for the morbid.
And I was like, Hey, hey, we were there.
We were there.
We did not ask for that.
We did not want to do that.
Wow.
A few weeks later, the auction of the property and remaining contents of the house, remaining
contents of the house. Theaining contents of the house.
The fuck did that house contain?
Whatever was left.
It was held and drew more than 20,000 spectators.
What?
Which I can see the like morbid curiosity
of wanting to see like who buys this thing.
Like I can understand like just being like,
what's gonna happen here.
I can at least understand the morbid curiosity of that,
like wanting to see who this goes to.
I see, like, both sides of it.
But for me, I wouldn't want to touch that with a 10-foot hole.
Oh, I feel like it's got such bad energy in there.
That's the thing. I'm such an energy human.
Mm-mm.
There was an arson fire that occurred on the property a week before the auction.
You're trying to burn that energy into the air?
Yeah, it's apparently...
It destroyed much of the main house actually.
And by the time the auction was held on March 23rd, 1958, all that remained was five old
sheds in the foundation of the main house.
Wow.
In the end, the property and the remaining contents of the farm were all sold for less than $4,000, which went to offsetting the significant costs of the investigation and
hearings. In the decades that followed, hunters and those exploring the property surrounding
what was once the Gein Farm would occasionally find human bones buried on and around the
property, which is a really sinister reminder of the hideous
things that had happened on that property.
Like for literally decades, hunters would find human bones.
Which I don't think he killed just two people.
I feel like there's more, man.
Although his crimes were truly bizarre and shocking, it's possible the story of Ed Gein
would have kind of faded out into history with the passage of time.
I mean, it's a long time ago.
Maybe.
But there was a little known strange fiction writer named Robert Bloch that at the time
of the murders, he had been living in the Midwest and started following the Gein case
as it unfolded in the papers.
The story eventually became the basis for Block's 1959 novel, Psycho.
The year after its release, Alfred Hitchcock, you might have heard of him.
I think maybe.
He adapted Psycho for the big screen and created one of the most iconic and enduring characters
in horror cinema, Norman Bates.
I still need to see it.
Despite being an amalgamation of a few different characters,
Gein would become synonymous with the character of Norman Bates
in the years that followed.
And his, I mean, ghoulish acts would live on in horror cinema,
most notably in 1974's Texas Chainsaw Massacre,
1991's Silence of the
Lambs and 2001's House of a Thousand Corpses.
Oh, I didn't realize that was also.
Yeah.
No, Ed, especially the name alone.
Yeah.
You could call the Gein farm House of a Thousand Corpses.
Seriously.
Ed Gein was not the first American murderer to capture the public's imagination, but his
crimes were so bizarre
and so ghoulish and so beyond anything we'd ever seen before that they definitely left
a massive mark on the American psyche and inspired an interesting crime and criminal
behavior that really is what we have today.
Think about it, the psychology aspect of this case was so huge.
Yeah, absolutely.
That really took off.
I think that much like the murder of the Clutter family in 1959, the discoveries at the Gein
farm kind of represent this like shattering of a collective innocence.
It's like a pivotal shift.
It really is.
It's just like, oh shit, like these people live among us.
This is what can happen here. And it was, you know, these were such brutal and hideous crimes and they happen
in what was America's heartland. And they were committed by a mild mannered handyman
and sometimes babysitter.
I wish you would stop saying.
And if they can happen in the American heartland, they can happen anywhere.
And no one is ever going to be safe again.
Is that where you're ending it?
And that's where we're at.
You crazy girl.
No, but it really was like, this was the moment
when everybody said, this, no one's safe.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like where can we go in this country that like,
if it can happen here, it can happen
anywhere.
You've got to lock your doors.
You've got to, you know, be watching over your shoulder.
So scary.
This case gives me nightmares.
Ed Gein, and I think the case is so well known and it's been covered so many times, but it's
like when you really hear all the nitty gritty of it, there's a lot more to it.
I learned a lot and I've heard coverage of this before, obviously.
I think I said in the beginning, not a ton, like I've listened to a couple podcasts, but
even still I learned a lot with your coverage.
Thanks, Dave.
I don't know if I'm better for it.
Dave was a real one with this one.
I know, Dave.
It was a journey.
It was probably.
It was like, sorry.
A poor man. I know Dave. It was a journey. It's probably like, sorry.
Poor man. Poor man. But we put him through voluntarily. You know, he's here. Okay. He loves
us. He's here. We love him. He loves us. Dave's listening right now being like, not this much.
He's like, I don't love you guys at all. Oh my god! Yeah, so that's the Ed Gein case.
Well, I'll be coming at you next with something pretty morbid. There we go. So that's the name
of the show. That's the name of the game. It's the name of the game. And since no one's safe again,
we hope you keep listening. We hope you keep it weird.
I need like an ice cream or something. Get an ice cream. I need like, I don't know, I need a cocktail. If you like morbid, you can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery+, in
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Hey, Morbid!
This is Weirdos.
Since Elena betrayed me and didn't go through with our brilliant plan for opening episode
544, The Career Girl Murders Part 1, we thought that we'd get it right with this go-round,
as we tell you about one of our favorite deep dives that you might have missed within our
feed.
In August 1963, Patricia Tolles returned home from work to find her apartment demolished.
Shaken, she contacted one of her roommate's fathers, who stumbled across a truly grisly
murder scene.
The media created a narrative that would, to their benefit, sell newspapers.
Every headline set out to make single women feel afraid and deter them from pursuing personal
independence, instead of focusing on how people are depraved
and that we should stop assholes from being assholes.
You can find this episode by following Morbid and scrolling back a little bit to episode
544, The Career Girl Murders Part 1, or by searching Morbid Career Girls wherever you
listen to podcasts.