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With the arrival of Conversations with a Killer: The John Wayne Gacy Tapes on Netflix, it’s clear that the platform continues to be betting heavily on documentary series about horrible criminals.
The story of John Wayne Gacy is narrated in three parts and through the voice of the murderer himself. Production led by Joe Berlinger (the director of The Ted Bundy Tapes) has over sixty hours of exclusive material.
“The unseen audio of the interrogations of serial killer John Wayne Gacy is weaving the fabric of his bloody revelry in the 1970s, while new interviews with investigators and survivors have focused everyone’s attention on the horrors of his crimes ”, the details of the official summary of the documentary.
The two faces of John Wayne Gacy.
The story, in addition to reviewing the murders committed by Gacy, serves as an exploration into the troubled mind of the main character. Killed the sinful murderer, raped and tortured at least 33 teenagers in the United States in the 1970s he buried the bodies of almost everyone in his basement.
Now, with the scary story on the table, the question arises: Where and how is the home of terrorism today where all of Wayne’s victims went?
Gacy killed at least 33 young men and buried them under his house.
The first to say is that in April 1979, the house where Gacy lived and where his victims were hiding was destroyed. Investigators reversed this when they took their case and made it uninhabitable. Being in it is a danger and that is why they believe that the best thing is to destroy it.
A sketch in 1979 of how Gacy’s house was built.
The land remained deserted until 1984, when Hoyne Savings & Loan bought it at a sheriff’s sale for $ 30,544 behind taxes owed on two mortgages from Gacy, his mother, and his two sisters.
Four years later a woman named Patricia Jendrycki to give it to his parents. The new owner rebuilt the house and slightly changed its number so that it would not be visited by curious spectators. It is unclear how much Jendrycki paid for the property..
The bodies were discovered when they searched Gacy’s entire home. He buried at least 29 in his basement.
In 2004, according to Cook’s work record, the property was sold for $ 300,000 to a finance company. Fifteen years later, the institution sold it in 2019 for 459, but it wasn’t removed until two years later, when a bank trustee – the current owner – bought it for 395.
Today, the space where the killer lives is in Norwood Park, a suburb of Chicago. According to the appraiser Orell Andersonthe “stigma” of the place does not run on the house, but on the ground …
The house was sold in 2021.
If one searches Google Street View for the exact location of the house, one will find it:
The “territory of Gacy” in Street View.
Source: Clarin