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May 23, 1950 - Richard Chase

Over the span of roughly a month in the Sacramento winter of 1977–78, Chase carried out a series of killings defined less by victim selection — there was none — than by what followed death. His crimes were driven by a delusional belief system that shaped the nature of each attack, and investigators who worked the cases described the scenes as among the most disturbing they had encountered in long careers. The legal proceedings ultimately affirmed that he understood the nature of his actions, a determination that complicated the popular narrative around his mental state. He remains a subject of study in forensic psychology for what his case revealed about the relationship between untreated psychosis, institutional failure, and violence.

From Wikipedia

Richard Chase

Richard Trenton Chase (May 23, 1950 – December 26, 1980) was an American serial killer, cannibal and necrophile known as the Vampire of Sacramento, the Dracula Killer and the Vampire Killer, who killed six people between December 1977 and January 1978 in Sacramento, California.

All of Chase's victims were chosen at random. His first victim was killed in a drive-by shooting; his subsequent victims were murdered inside their own homes, with the primary motive behind these murders being the mutilation of their bodies and the consumption of their blood and organs.

Tried and convicted of six counts of first degree murder, Chase was sentenced to death on May 8, 1979, with the jury ruling he was legally sane at the time of the commission of the crimes. He died of an overdose of Sinequan on December 26, 1980, in an apparent suicide.

Chase became known by such titles as the "Vampire of Sacramento" because the majority of his murders were committed with the intention to consume his victims' blood in his delusional belief he needed to consume the blood of other beings to replenish his own supply. The murders themselves have been described by a senior investigator within the Sacramento Police Department as the "most grotesque slayings" he had ever investigated in the 28 years he served with law enforcement.

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