StMU Research Scholars

Featuring Scholarly Research, Writing, and Media at St. Mary's University
November 2, 2017

America in the 1980s: Obsession and Romanticism over The Night Stalker

Winner of the Fall 2017 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “Crime”

Think back to the first horror movie you ever watched. Was it Halloween? Nightmare on Elm Street? Friday the 13th? Think about what all these movies have in common. If you guessed death, then you’re right. Most people will say they love a good horror film because of the rush of adrenaline; others will say they love the absurdity. Regardless of the reason, there is still a love for all things horror.

Handwritten letter from Ramirez to one of his many female admirers | Photo courtesy of Pinterest

But, where does this culture come from? While there are some people that love fictional horror, there are those that love real-life horror. These men and women idolize and fantasize about serial killers and murderers. They study all the crime reports, watch every documentary, and read every biography or narration of a killer’s life. Why is it that men and women like Richard Ramirez, self proclaimed satanist and vicious murderer, become celebrities through their killing? Serial killers sometimes gain groupies and copy-cat killers. Ramirez is one of many examples of distorted stardom but, his story gives us an image of America’s culture of death and our obsession with serial killers.

There are countless examples of killers being studied and filmed for the purpose of entertainment. Serial killers like Ted Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer have had numerous documentaries appear, studying and depicting their lives. Books like The Stranger Beside Me and Zodiac have made millions in simple narration of the investigations or the killings themselves. Even Ramirez has had his name in Hollywood several times. He was depicted in one episode of the 2015 season of American Horror Story, and in 2016, Lou Diamond Phillips portrayed Ramirez in a dramatization of his life in A&E’s The Night Stalker.1 A Google search of his name will turn up thousands of articles and blogs detailing his life and killings. On YouTube, there are hundreds of videos from Ramirez’s trial along with subsequent interviews. Scrolling through the comment section, there are varying opinions on Ramirez. Some call him charming and philosophical, others say he is cocky and Charles Mansonesque.

Then, you will find men and women who find Ramirez attractive. This psychological phenomenon is known as hybristophilia, a type of paraphilia where a person is sexually attracted to and aroused by a person who has committed a vicious or gruesome crime.2 While Ramirez was still alive and in prison, hundreds of women would line up to try and visit him. At one point there were so many women in line, that more than half had to be turned away. Ramirez himself ended up marrying one of his “fans” while in prison. This woman was Doreen Lioy, a forty-one year old freelance editor. They were married on October 3, 1996 and remained husband and wife for twelve years before Ramirez died of B-cell lymphoma at the age of fifty-three.3

Richard Ramirez and his wife Doreen Lioy | Photo courtesy of Flickr

While she was the only woman to have married Ramirez, she was not the only woman “in love” with him. From the time of his arrest to his death, there were hundreds of “women in black” who wrote him letters in jail and went to every court hearing of his. Below is a news segment featuring two of Ramirez’s deluded fans.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Rlm-n3vfVM

To the average person, a serial killer is not a person, but a monster incapable of giving or receiving love. Very few would look into the eyes of a murderer and feel overcome with affection. But, in the 1980s and 1990s when Ramirez’s trial was all over the news, Americans couldn’t get enough of him. And so, the rise of serial killer notoriety comes to a peak, with an all-time high of serial killer reporting taking place and law enforcement spending more time and funding trying to understand serial killer psychology and motivation. Thus the culture of death was born.4

That is not to say that serial killers or murderers have not existed in history previously. They have, but there was not nearly as much attention given to them. The mid-twentieth century saw a worldwide increase in serial killers and mass murderers. This phenomenon has been documented all the way through the twentieth century, with a high concentration of killers and murders in the United States. Interestingly enough, there has been no evidence to show a slowing point to this killer influx. The rate of murder and killing has exponentially grown through the twentieth- and into twenty-first century. Because of this, there is an increase of study and focus being put onto these killers and atrocities. Many scholars and public health practitioners have devoted their time to researching and interviewing these killers in hope of understanding their motives for committing such heinous crimes.5

Though, with all this research, the primary focus is always put on the killer and their survivors, if any are left. In situations of a serial killer being found and arrested, public health officials will spend time talking about the crimes committed and their political and social ramifications. And, while they investigate and interview those who knew the killer, sometimes a motive is never found, leaving the community to deal with the loss of life in a shroud of mystery and anguish.6

Richard Ramirez as a child |Photo courtesy of The Post-Mortem Post

So, with all the time and resources devoted to understanding and predicting psychotic behavior, there has been no major breakthrough. Most of this difficulty comes from how “normal” these killers and murderers look. They could be friends, co-workers, or even family members—they blend in.7 Take for example The Stranger Beside Me, written by Anne Rule. She wrote about her experiences with Ted Bundy and described how she was completely shocked by the atrocious crimes he committed. But, before his arrest, he was a master of disguise and incredibly charming; there’s no way a man like that could be a cold-blooded killer. Right?

When speaking about Richard Ramirez, there was no surprise that he was troubled. As a child, he was diagnosed with epilepsy and grew up under the influence of his older cousin Mike. His older cousin was a Vietnam veteran who taught Ramirez to kill and smoke weed. As Ramirez grew older he began stealing to pay for a growing drug addiction; during this time, he also began to see himself as a child of Satan. As he grew, he became more troubled, working at a hotel and then being fired for trying to rape a woman in her room. He was sixteen at that time, though Ramirez was not found guilty because the Judge felt he had been lured into sex rather than the one to force it.8

After dropping out of high school, Ramirez, at the age of eighteen, moved to California and became a full time criminal. As his addiction to drugs grew, so did the violence of his crimes, resulting in a deadly cocktail of rage and addiction. All of this came to a climax in June of 1984, and after brutally murdering his first victim, seventy-nine year old Jennie Vincow, he went on a year-long killing spree.9 The wake of destruction he left after every break-in and murder left the nation in shock and terror. After every rape and murder he committed, a pentagram could be found either on the body of his victim, or somewhere in the crime scene, and this became Ramirez’s signature.10

He was finally apprehended on August 31, 1985 after his last victim was able to look out the window, and see the stolen car he was driving and a portion of the license plate. When Ramirez was found, he was in an East L.A. neighborhood, and police officers had to stop residents from beating him to death.11 But, during his trial there was no clear motive found. The disturbing conclusion was that Ramirez killed people and raped women because he liked it. And so, there comes a battle between sympathizing with Ramirez because of his traumatic and turbulent childhood, and condemning him as a “Satan-obsessed serial killer who enjoyed every murder and rape he committed.”12

The media had a large influence on this tug of war. From the first murder he committed to his very last day in court there was no shortage of stories. The more stories printed about “The Night Stalker,” the more the public wanted. News outlets focused on his surviving victims and the gruesome details of his crimes. News had begun to focus on the spectacle of things. Newspapers depicted his crimes as atrocities and disasters to the L.A. and San Francisco area, and every story of his made the front page. As Mary Ann Doane, a commentator on mass media, said “Catastrophe is at some level always about the body, about the encounter with death.”13

So, as a society we became obsessed with death. Even now, thirty-two years after Ramirez’s arrest and four years after his death, we still watch his documentaries, we still read the biographies, we still find him disturbingly fascinating. Richard Ramirez still has our attention.

  1. “Richard Ramirez Biography,” biography.com, last modified October 13, 2017, https://www.biography.com/people/richard-ramirez-12385163.
  2. James Alan Fox, “Lovesick over Charles Manson. Really?,” USA Today, (2014): 08a, 6 October 2017.
  3. “Richard Ramirez Biography,” biography.com, last modified October 13, 2017, https://www.biography.com/people/richard-ramirez-12385163.
  4. Judith S. Baughman, Victor Bondi, Richard Layman, Tandy McConnell, Vincent Tompkins, eds., “Serial Killers and Mass Murderers,” in American Decades Vol. 9, 1980-1989, (Detroit: Gale, 2001).
  5. D. L. Peck and R. B. Jenkot, “Serial and Mass Murderers,” in International Encyclopedia of Public Health Vol. 5, 690-691 (Oxford: Academic Press, 2008).
  6. D. L. Peck and R. B. Jenkot, “Serial and Mass Murderers,” in International Encyclopedia of Public Health Vol. 5, 690-691 (Oxford: Academic Press, 2008).
  7. Jarlath Killeen, “The Monster Club: Monstrosity, Catholicism and Revising the (1641) Rising,” in The Emergence of Irish Gothic Fiction: History, Origins, Theories 2014, ( Scotland: Edinburgh University Press, 2014), 5.
  8. J. Gordon Melton, “Ramirez, Richard (1960-),” in Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology, (Detroit: Gale, 2001), 1279.
  9. “Richard Ramirez Biography,” biography.com, last modified October 13, 2017, https://www.biography.com/people/richard-ramirez-12385163.
  10. J. Gordon Melton, “Ramirez, Richard (1960-),” in Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology, (Detroit: Gale, 2001), 1279.
  11. “Richard Ramirez Biography,” biography.com, last modified October 13, 2017, https://www.biography.com/people/richard-ramirez-12385163.
  12. Jarlath Killeen, “The Monster Club: Monstrosity, Catholicism and Revising the (1641) Rising,” in The Emergence of Irish Gothic Fiction: History, Origins, Theories 2014 ( Scotland: Edinburgh University Press, 2014), 5.
  13. Mark Seltzer, “Serial Killers (11): The Pathological Public Sphere,” Critical Inquiry 22, no. 1 (1995): 131.

Recent Comments

109 comments

  • Christopher Hohman

    Nice article. Richard Ramirez was an evil monster. He did terrible things and terrorized many people. It is true that our culture has become obsessed with death and serial killers and the like. It seems like every time I tune into Netflix there is some new documentary detailing the crimes of a particular individual or sometimes even a group. I mean they are very fascinating cases, but one has to wonder if this obsession with death is healthy or not.

  • Paola Arellano

    Personally, I had never heard of one Richard Ramirez and am shocked that there was so many people/ women obsessed with his case. I can completely agree with the idea that people, especially in America, are obsessed with crime. It is proven that murders, rapes and chilling stories can get the most attention both in movies and in newspapers. WE love to read of the scary thoughts that many individuals have and act upon. It is a scary feeling but we ultimately love to experience it. I think there should have been a larger emphasis on Richard Ramirez’s life in this article being that he was the title and the head picture. I do not feel as though there was much about him or his murders but it was more about how America loved him. There is a creepy factor with someone actually wanting to marry him even after he has a history of raping and killing women but to each its own.

  • Emily Velazquez

    First of all, I never knew there was such a thing as being attracted to people who kill and/or commit crimes. Second, reading this article made me think of how true it all is. People are obsessed with death which would make sense why they are obsessed with the people who kill. Sometimes I think this could be one of the main reasons a normal person becomes a murderer. They are clearly not stable and may have a lot more problems in their lives, but they could also be wanting all that attention from other people and be willing to go to the extreme to get it.

  • Avery Mascorro

    This article brings light to the morbid curiosity of humans. Humans are naturally attracted to the unknown. Death and horror are unknown to us, so there’s a strange attraction to it. I don’t know about going as far as “falling in love” with a serial killer, because that seems like more of a psychological issue with those women.

  • Clarissa Gonzalez

    I feel like all violence is romanticized. People are not only obsessed with serial killers nowadays, they’re also obsessed with horror movies, crime shows, and about anything else. People are fans of anything and everything to an unhealthy amount, I wouldn’t expect anything less with how people are. The fact that someone also married him despite what he was accused and found guilty of, is still mind blowing to me. Some people’s interest are just a bit too much.

  • Lilliana Canales

    This article was very interesting because even today, fascination with Richard Ramirez still exists. I had no idea of his fan club, or that many women lining up to talk to him, my question is how were they even permitted to see him if they were’t family or friends? And how did he feel about this? Again, this article was very interesting.

  • Jennifer Salas

    As a society it’s no surprise that we find serial killers interesting with the amount of attention they receive from the media and the high demand of crime movies and books. I found it fascinating how women would show up to the jail Ramirez was being held in to interact with him.I believe his physical appearance had a lot to do with women showing up in hopes to meet him. I enjoyed reading this article and it was very informative.

  • Sofia Andrade

    I do agree with this article. In reading this article it proves that we do find it fascinating reading about serial killers. When there is a serial killer the media ensures that a name is given to the serial killer and they are all over the media. As for Ramirez himself I believe that his physical appearance has a lot to do with him being a popular serial killer among women.

  • Adam Portillo

    I truly believe that we as a society glorify serial killers for their heinous acts. Serial killers and they’re names can become very notorious which is in part to people and the media. We’re constantly reading articles, books, and watch documentaries on serial killers. I really liked how this article was very well written and able to main it’s balance with Richard Ramirez along with the publics fascination. Awesome article to read!

  • Eloisa Sanchez Urrea

    This was definitely a very interesting article that provoked different emotions. I found it disturbing that there could be woman that claim to be in love with murderers and that it is an actual diagnosed condition. Later on, when the topic of motive came up I was very intrigued. I found it intriguing that for some killers like Ramirez, their sole motive is wanting to feel the pleasure of killing.

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