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John Edward Robinson is a convicted serial killer, kidnapper and con artist sometimes called as the Internet's first serial killer because he found many of his victims online.

Background
The third of five children, Robinson was born in Cicero, Illinois. His father was an alcoholic and his mother a disciplinarian. By the age of 13, he was an Eagle Scout. At the same age, he also enrolled in a Catholic preparatory seminary, claiming he desired to become a priest, but dropped out at the end of his freshman year due to poor grades and disciplinary issues. Instead, he started attending trade school to study radiology. Though he only spent two years there and didn't finish his training, he was still able to get a job as an x-ray technician at a children's hospital in Kansas City, Missouri by forging credentials. Around the same time, aged 21, he got married to a woman named Nancy Jo Lynch, with whom he had a son and a pair of fraternal twins. In 1966, after being fired for his incompetence, Robinson got a similar job at a medical practice from which he stole tens of thousands of dollars. He also had sexual affairs with both staff and patients. In 1969, after being caught, he was sentenced to three years' probation. He violated it in within only a year by returning to Chicago.

Though Robertson was convicted of theft, fraud and embezzlement several times between 1969 and 1991, he was able to work for charitable organizations and as a civic leader. In 1977, working for a handicapped service organization, he managed to get on its board of directors and created a "Man of the Year" award as his first action and awarded it to himself. When it was covered by the media, several people whose recommendations Robertson had forged read about him. The press spent two weeks exposing Robertson as the fraud he was, though only his wife and children seemed to suffer. Robertson is suspected to have committed his first murder in 1984, when he hired 19-year-old Paula Godfrey to work as a sales representative for two shell companies he had made to fake credentials for himself. After Robertson allegedly sent her away for some training, she was never seen again. Her family received a type-written letter with her signature in which she claimed to be okay and that she didn't want to see them. Because she was of legal age and there were no signs of foul play, no investigation was carried out.

Killings, Arrest and Incarceration
In 1983, Robertson's crimes escalated. His brother, Don Robertson, and his wife, Helen, had unsuccessfully been trying to conceive and formally adopt a child. Claiming to have connections in the adoption business, Robertson started looking for single pregnant women who could provide a child, presumably planning to enter the black adoption market. Because he wasn't able to get any referrals from social services, he went directly to the source and approached 19-year-old Lisa Stasi, the single mother of a four-month-old baby, Tiffany, at a battered women's shelter in January of 1985. Using the name "Josh Osborne", he convinced her that he would take her into a training program in Texas that included daycare and job training. On January 9, he came to the home of Stasi's sister and picked up Tiffany. The next day, Stasi's family got a phone call in which a terrified-sounding Stasi said "they" had deemed her an unfit mother and that her mother, Betty, had said she wanted the baby. The last her family heard of her were the words "here they come" over the phone before it was disconnected. That was the last sign of life of Lisa. Two days later, Robertson handed Tiffany over to his brother along with forged legal documents about the adoption, claiming that the child's mother had committed suicide. The same day, Stasi's family filed missing persons reports.

When Robinson was investigated on suspicion of violating the Mann Act, which originally prohibited white slavery and transportation of women across state lines for "immoral purposes" but was changed so "immoral" was narrowed down to prostitution and other illegal sexual acts, by sending Stasi and Godfrey over state lines for work, his probation was reevaluated. He turned out to be a major player in the underground sex industry involved in S&M-related prostitution. The FBI sent in a female undercover agent to pose as a potential prostitute for Robertson, but when they became afraid that her life was endangered, they pulled her out. An important witness in Robertson's trial for violating his probation was a prostitute working for him, Teresa, who also was his mistress and whom he had threatened by sticking the barrel of a loaded gun into her vagina after displeasing a client. Unfortunately, she was taken into safe custody and Robertson was unable to face his accuser, ending the proceedings in his favor. Not long afterwards, in 1987, he went to prison on a theft conviction and wasn't released until 1993.

After his release, Robinson discovered the Internet, which gave him access to all kinds of BDSM-related chat rooms and contact pages. Using the nickname "Slavemaster", he used the technology to gain access to many of his victims, leading to him later being dubbed as the first serial killer to use the Internet to hunt for victims. His first victim during this period was Beverly Bonner, a prison librarian, whom Robinson seduced and convinced to leave her husband. After their divorce, Robinson got her to move to Olathe, promising to give her a job at one of his ventures. She disappeared almost immediately, but not before signing over her alimony checks to Robinson. Over the following years, he kept cashing them in, having told the ex that she had moved to Australia. In 1994, he made contact with Sheila Faith, whose daughter, Debbie, had been confined to a wheelchair, at a social networking site. Promising to give her work and provide medical care for her daughter, Robinson convinced her to move to Kansas City, where he killed them both. He then started cashing in Faith's pension checks. In 1997, Robinson met Polish immigrant Izabela Lewicka at a BDSM contact site and she agreed to become a submissive for him and to became an intern at a non-existing publishing business he ran. After dropping out of community college, she moved in with him and signed a 115-year slave contract signing over all of her belongings, including her bank accounts, to him. In 1999, she was killed by him and disappeared. Robinson's last known victim was Suzette Trouten, another submissive at a BDSM site who worked as a nurse in her day life, and convinced her to work for him as a caregiver for his elderly father. After moving to Kansas, she disappeared. To cover it up, Robinson sent her mother several type-written letters, all of which were post-marked in Kansas and written with much better spelling than Suzette normally used.

Modus Operandi
Robertson killed primarily for financial reasons. Using elaborate ruses such as promising them work at high salaries, he targeted women of different ages; during his post-1993 killings, he used the Internet to do so. After getting them to sign over money or some other assets to him, he would kill them with blunt force trauma to the head using some sort of weapon such as a hammer and dispose of their bodies by stuffing them in chemical barrels. At least, that is how he disposed of his last six victims; how he got rid of the first two is unknown since neither has been found.

Known Victims

 * 1984: Paula Godfrey, 19
 * January, 1985:
 * Lisa Stasi, 19
 * Tifffany Stasi, four months
 * 1987: Catherine Clampitt, 27
 * 1993: Beverly Bonner, 49
 * 1994: Sheila and Debbie Faith
 * Sheila Faith, 45
 * Debbie Faith, 15
 * 1999:
 * Izabela Lewicka, 21
 * Suzette Trouten, 27
 * 2000:
 * Vickie
 * Jeanna

On Criminal Minds
Robinson was mentioned in Profiling 101 along with David Parker Ray and Efren Saldivar as an example of old serial killer cases that have been forgotten due to new cases occuring.