Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Carroll Cole

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Victims
  
16

Role
  
Serial Killer

Span of killings
  
1948–1980

Country
  
USA

Date apprehended
  
1980

Name
  
Carroll Cole


Carroll Cole httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen224Car

Born
  
May 9, 1938

Cause of death
  
Execution by Lethal injection

Died
  
December 6, 1985, Nevada, United States

Criminal penalty
  
Capital punishment

Carroll Cole project


Carroll Edward Cole (May 9, 1938 – December 6, 1985) was an American serial killer who was executed in 1985 for killing at least 16 women between 1948 and 1980 by strangulation.

Contents

Carroll Cole Keller On The Loose Serial Killers Carroll Cole

Early life

Carroll Cole 1985 Carroll Cole Final Interview Before Execution YouTube

Carroll Cole was born in Sioux City, Iowa, the second son of LaVerne and Vesta Cole. His younger sister was born in 1939 and soon afterwards, his family moved to California, where LaVerne found work in a shipyard. Not long after that, LaVerne went to fight in World War II. While his father was away, his mother would have affairs and sometimes take Cole with her and threaten and beat him afterwards to ensure he wouldn't tell his father. Vesta was cruel to her son and dressed him as a girl and made fun of him. And at school, Cole was teased about his "girl's name" by his peers. He once retaliated against one of his classmates, a boy his age named Duane. Cole drowned him in a lake and it was regarded an accident until Cole confessed to it many years later in an autobiography he wrote in prison.

Carroll Cole Carroll Edward Eddie Cole Last Interview Before Execution YouTube

As a teen, Cole committed petty crimes and was often arrested for drunkenness and minor thefts. After high school, he joined the army but was discharged soon after for stealing pistols. In 1960, he attacked two couples parked in cars on a lover's lane. Soon afterwards, he called the police in Richmond, California, where he was living, and told them that he was plagued by violent fantasies involving strangling women.

Cole was in and out of various mental hospitals over the next three years. At the last of them, Stockton State Hospital, a Dr. Weiss wrote: "He seems to be afraid of the female figure and cannot have intercourse with her first but must kill her before he can do it." Weiss approved his release in April 1963, although hospital staff had diagnosed Cole with an antisocial sociopath personality.

Upon his release, he moved to Dallas, Texas, where his brother Richard was living. There he met and married an alcoholic stripper named Billie Whitworth, though this didn't change his perspective towards women. After two years, the marriage ended when Cole burned down a motel after convincing himself that Whitworth was having sex with men there. As a result, he was arrested for arson. Upon his release from prison, Cole attempted to strangle an 11-year-old girl in Missouri. He was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison. After the sentence was up, he ended up in Nevada, where he attempted to strangle two more women. Once again, he checked himself into a mental hospital. The doctors there noted his murderous fantasies but still didn't see a reason to detain him and he was given a ticket back to San Diego, California.

Murders

While in San Diego, Cole committed his first murder as an adult. His first victim as an adult was Essie Buck, whom he'd picked up in a tavern in San Diego, California, on May 7, 1971. He strangled her to death in his car and drove around with her body in the trunk before eventually dumping it. Just two weeks later, he killed an unidentified woman and buried her in a wooded area. He later claimed that they had proven themselves unfaithful to their husbands, and so reminded him of his adulterous mother.

In July 1973, Cole married barmaid Diana Pashal, who was also an alcoholic. They argued and fought frequently, and Cole regularly went off on his own for days at a time. He would commit murders while he was away, including one woman he allegedly cannibalized to a degree. In September 1979, Cole strangled Pashal to death. A suspicious neighbor called the police eight days later, but although they found Pashal's body wrapped in a blanket and stuffed in a closet, they decided that she had died because of her heavy drinking, and Cole was released without charge after questioning.

Cole then left San Diego and started moving around again. He killed a woman in Las Vegas, and then returned to Dallas, where he fatally strangled three more women in November 1980. He was a suspect in the second of these killings and was also found on the scene of the third murder. He was arrested and held in custody. The police then came to the conclusion that the victim had probably died of natural causes, and Cole was about to be acquitted, before he started confessing. He confessed to, along with this murder, all of them. He claimed that he had murdered at least 14 women over the previous nine years, although he added that there may have been more and he couldn't remember exactly, as he was usually drunk when he committed his crimes.

Conviction and death

On April 9, 1981, Cole was convicted of three of the murders committed in Texas. He was sentenced to life in prison at Huntsville Prison. In 1984, his mother died and his attitude was reported to have changed. He agreed to face further murder charges filed in Nevada, even though it could possibly mean the death penalty. In October 1984, Cole was sentenced to death in Nevada. Anti-death penalty campaigners tried to have his sentence commuted but Cole protested. When sentence was passed he said, "Thanks, Judge." Cole was executed by lethal injection at Nevada State Prison on December 6, 1985.

References

Carroll Cole Wikipedia