Carl Panzram

"I was so full of hate that there was no room in me for such feelings as love, pity, kindness or honor or decency. My only regret is that I wasn't born dead or not at all."

Carl Panzram, also known by several aliases, was a prolific American serial killer and serial rapist.

History
Carl Panzram was born in the rural Polk County, Minnesota in 1891. His parents, Johann "John" and Lizzie Panzram, were Prussian immigrants who owned a desolate farm and later had five more sons and a daughter, all of which, according to Panzram, became honest and dedicated farmers. Panzram, on the other hand, became a delinquent at the age of seven, when Johann Panzram abandoned the family. The next year, aged eight, Carl was arrested for being drunk and disordely and eventually moved on to committing burglaries, breaking into a neighbor's home and stealing a number of valuables, including a handgun. When his brothers found out, they beat him unconscious. In 1903, aged 11, Carl was arrested for the break-in and sent to the Minnesota State Training School, a juvenile reform institution, where, he later claimed, he was frequently beaten and sexually abused. He also claims to have committed his first murder there, the victim being a 12-year-old boy at the facility, though this has not been verified. Having little formal education, he had difficulties reading and was often punished. On the night of July 7, 1905, he built a crude firebomb and used it to burn the school workshop to the ground in an act of revenge for the way he had been treated. Later that year, having become a skilled liar, he convinced the staff that he had been reformed and was released back into his mother's care. At the age of 14, he convinced his mother to send him to another school. At one point while there, he held a handgun at a teacher who had abused him. As Panzram threatened to kill him in front of the class, he lost grip of the gun. Consequentially, he was expelled. Two weeks later, he got on a freight train going out of Minnesota and became a drifter. Shortly afterwards, he, by his own account, was gang-raped by four hobos, leaving him traumatized and more full of rage than ever.

From there on, Panzram lived a mostly transitory life. After being sent to a reform school in Montana for burglary, he escaped with another inmate, Jimmie Benson, and the two began a crime spree of burglaries, robberies and arsons throughout the Widwest, sometimes stealing from churches and burning them down, that lasted until they split up and Panzram, for some reason, joined the U.S. Army. During his brief stint there, he was by no means a model soldier, being frequently jailed for minor offenses and insubordination. After being found guilty of three charges of larceny, he was dishonorably discharged and, on April 20, 1908, sentenced to three years of hard labor in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, aged 16. After finally finishing his sentence, he spent the following years drifting, committing numerous acts of burglary, arson and rape, always targeted at men, throughout Kansas, Texas, Oregon, California, Washington, Idaho and Utah. He was often found guilty of various such crimes and served time in prison under assumed names. After his second incarceration and escape from a prison in Oregon, he went to the east coast. In the summer of 1920, he broke into the home of former U.S. president William H. Taft in New Haven, Connecticut and stole, besides a great number of valuables, a .45 Colt handgun he later used in several murders. Using money obtained by fencing the stolen goods in Manhattan, he bought a yacht, the Akista, and began cruising along the East River, burglarizing other yachts he encountered and raping and killing sailors he hired as crew, disposing of their bodies in the ocean. In August, he lost the boat in a storm and resumed travelling by land.

After serving six months in prison for burglary and possession of a loaded gun, he stowed away on a ship headed to Angola, a Portuguese colony on the west-African coast, where he got a job as a foreman on an oil-drilling rig for the Sinclair Oil Company. During his time there, he raped an 11-12-year-old local boy and bashed him to death with a rock. After moving to Lobito Bay, Panzram committed one of the most notable killings of his serial killer career in the area; he hired six locals to aid him in a crocodile hunting expedition down a river. When the crocodiles appeared, he shot all six crew members dead and threw their bodies to them. When he realized that people had seen him leave with the men, he fled to the Gold Coast and began robbing farmers. When he saved up enough to go to the Canary Islands, he went there and found that there was nothing to steal in the area. He stowed away on a ship headed for Lisbon, Portugal, but was forced to flee again when he found that the local police knew about his crimes in Africa. By the summer of 1922, he was back in America, where he, in addition to his usual crimes such as robbery, rape and arson, raped and killed two young boys. He was caught in 1923 in Larchmont, New York when he tried to rob a train depot and sentenced to five years in prison, most of which was served at the Clinton Correctional Facility, which had a reputation for being one of the most brutal prisons in America. The guards often practiced abuse and outright torture to the inmates. Panzram, as usual, made no effort to be a model inmate; within months of his imprisonment, he tried to firebomb the workshops and tried to kill a guard by clubbing him from behind. Shortly afterwards, he tried to escape by jumping over a prison wall, but fell down on a conrete step. Though his legs and ankles were broken and his spine badly injured, he received absolutely no medical treatment for 14 months. After he was finally operated on in the prison infirmary, he raped a fellow inmate and was placed in solitary confinement. Still in constant pain, his rage and hatred of humanity intensified and he envisioned several grand schemes for mass murder. One such was to wipe out the population of an entire city by poisoning the water supply with arsenic. A particularly ambitious plan involved scuttling a British warship docked in the New York City harbor in order to start a war between the two nations.

When Panzram was finally released, his injuries and consequential limp didn't affect his criminal career; he committed a dozen burglaries and fatally strangled a man during a robbery in Philadelphia. When he was arrested in Washington D.C., he talked about killing children to the jail guards. When they contacted the authorities of areas where Panzram had murdered children, they connected the dots and Panzram was identified as a serial killer. A young guard there, Henry Lesser, pitied him for how he had suffered, even though he knew that Panzram was a child killer. When he sent him a dollar to buy cigarettes and extra food with, Panzram was visibly moved and the two became friends. Panzram soon promised to tell him his whole story if he gave him paper and writing tools. When he got the supplies, Panzram began writing his autobiography, where he gave detailed accounts of his crimes, shared his nihilistic world view and also voiced his criticism of the American justice system. The text was very articulate, especially considering that Panzram had very little formal education. After a trial, during which Panzram acted in his own defense, he was found guilty and sentenced to 25 years in prison to be served at Fort Leavenworth in Leavenworth, Kansas. When he arrived and was read the rules of the facility by the warden in his office, he told him ominously "I'll kill the first man that bothers me." Because he was believed to be too psychotic to be with the general prison population, he was assigned a job in the prison laundry which allowed him to work alone. On June 20, 1929, Panzram, took a heavy iron bar and savagely bludgeoned his supervisor, Robert Warnke, to death in front of the other inmates and then started attacking them too. Panzram went to trial on April 14, 1930, once again acting in his own defense. After a large group of witnesses gave their testimonies, Panzram was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging. He was apparently overjoyed to have received the sentence and even left the courtroom laughing hysterically. During the months leading up to the execution, a number of groups advocating the abolishment of the death penalty tried to get Panzram's sentence reduced, but he refused to let that happen and responded to them with death threats. On the morning of September 5, 1930, he was brought to the prison gallows. When the executioner asked whether he had any last words, Panzram, quite infamously, told him: "Yes, hurry it up, you Hoosier bastard! I could kill 10 men while you're fooling around!" At 6:18 a.m., he was pronounced dead. Since the body remained unclaimed, Panzram was laid to his final rest in the prison cemetery. Henry Lesser, who had kept the manuscript of Panzram's autobiography, spent the next four decades trying to find a publisher willing to print it. Because the story was thought to be too horrific, it wasn't until 1970 that it was finally published under the title Killer: A Journal of a Murder. The book was hailed as a great insight into the mind of a serial killer.

Modus Operandi
All of Panzram's victims were men of different ages, races and professions, some of them just children. Many of his murder victims were forcibly sodomized as a way to torture and humiliate them, as were a great number of men Panzram raped and didn't kill. Panzram obtained his victims in different ways; most of them he hired for some job (possibly by coincidence, always on a boat) and some he attacked at gunpoint or by drugging them beforehand. Most murder victims were killed either by being shot with a handgun or being beaten to death.

Pathology
Panzram was a full-hearted misanthrope whose life was marked by his consummate nihilism. He hated everyone, even himself, and often dreamed about killing on a mass scale. He raped his victims, all of whom were male, not necessarily because he was homosexual, but as a way to torture his victims. He was, by all accounts, incapable of remorse and was, most likely, a psychopath. Even though he had very little formal education, his journal text shows that he was quite intelligent. Panzram was something of a rarity among serial killers in the sense that he committed his murders while travelling, on several different continents and over the course of many years.

Known Victims
Panzram claimed responsibility for a total of 21 murders prior to killing Robert Warnke. Note that not all the killings were verified. This list covers both the ones he claimed responsibility for in his autobiography and the ones that were confirmed.
 * 1903-1905, the Minnesota State Training School: An unnamed 12-year old boy
 * 1908: An unnamed teacher
 * 1920, the summer: A total of 10 sailors over the course of three weeks
 * 1921, Africa:
 * Angola: An unnamed 11-12-year-old African boy
 * Near Lobito Bay: Six unnamed men
 * July 18, 1922, Salem, Massachusetts, U.S.: George Henry McMahon
 * New Haven, Connecticut:
 * June 27, 1923, near the Hudson River, U.S.: Unnamed man
 * August, 1927, Philadelphia, U.S.: Alexander Luszzock
 * July 26, 1928, Philadelphia, U.S.: Alexander Uszacke
 * June 20, 1929, Leavenworth, Kansas, U.S.: Robert Warnke
 * Notes: In addition to the aforementioned murders, Panzram was responsible for countless rapes, arsons, burglaries and robberies.

On Criminal Minds
Unfortunately, Panzram has not yet been referenced or mention on Criminal Minds. He does, however, have a few similarities to Billy Flynn (who was primarily based on Richard Ramirez) in the sense that both were serial killers/rapists who killed while travelling, killed most of their victims using handguns and committed several robberies.