Louis Craine was an American serial killer who committed of at least 4 rape-slayings in South Los Angeles, in the period between 1985 and 1987. He was convicted for these crimes in 1989, and received the death penalty as punishment. Since more than 100 women were killed, and it was later determined that at least 5 other serial killers operated in the area during the 1980s and 1990s, Craine was suspected of several more murders by the investigators. At the same time, his guilt was controversial and questionable, as he was diagnosed with signs of intellectual disability.
Early life
Craine was born on January 6, 1957, in Los Angeles, the third in a family of four children. Early in his school years, he showed signs of intellectual disability. He left school after graduating from the 4th grade, entering into a social conflict with the rest of his family. In the early 1970s he left his parents' home and became a vagrant. Without a qualified profession, Craine was forced to engage in low-skilled labor over the next years, and changed several jobs in the construction industry. At the time of his arrest in 1987 he was unemployed.
Murders
Craine was arrested on May 29, 1987, on charges of killing a 29-year-old prostitute named Carolyn Barney. She had been raped and sodomized before being strangled, her corpse found in an empty house, not far from where her parents, and Craine's brother, lived. After finding the body, the police noticed Craine, who, due to the area being cordoned off, was watching their actions, behaving in an inappropriate manner. He was arrested, taken to the police station and subjected to long hours of questioning, during which he confessed to the murder of Barney and two other women: 24-year-old Loretta Perry and Vivian Collins. Both of the women, like Barney, had been strangled and raped before death. During interrogation, Craine claimed that Collins was murdered by his older brother Roger after they had paid her for sex. According to his story, Roger strangled her during sexual intercourse; however, relatives, including their mother, provided an alibi for Roger on the day of the murder, which resulted in no charges being brought against him. Subsequently, Craine was charged with the murder of two more women: 24-year-old Gail Ficklin and 30-year-old Sheila Burton, who were killed on August 15, 1985 and November 18, 1984, respectively. Their bodies were also found not far from where other victims' corpses had been located, all of whom were near the house where Craine's parents lived.
Trial
Craine's trial began in early 1989. The main material evidence was a blood-stained shirt, the group of which coincided with the blood group of one of the victims, as well as testimonies from Craine's relatives, including his mother, who told the court that he had repeatedly expressed aggressive behavior towards prostitutes, and was spotted in a bloodied shirt after one of the murders. Other evidence pointed to him as well, that being his confession of killing Loretta Perry - initially, it was believed that she had died from a drug overdose, but after Craine's testimony, her body was exhumed and subjected to a thorough pathological study, the results of which validated Craine's claims. Craine himself, over the course of the trial, insisted on his innocence. He refuted his testimony, stating that he had been pressured into confessing, and also stated that the bloodied shirt in which, according to his relatives, he had committed the murder, didn't even belong to him. He accused his family of perjury. The lawyers of the defendant insisted that on the basis of various tests, Craine showed signs of intellectual disability, with threshold of intelligence coefficient of 69 points, a tendency to exaggeration and high susceptibility to suggestions. As a result, they requested a forensic psychiatric examination, but their application was rejected. On May 16, 1989, he was found guilty of four murders and acquitted of Burton's killing, and on June 6 of that year, the court sentence him to death.