This man had been particularly attractive, ‘smooth skinned and muscular’, “ the nicest looking man I had ever met, I think he was a model or something because he showed me some pictures of himself in professional poses.” Dahmer related to Kennedy that the man had seemed ‘more than willing’ to accept his offer of cocktails and sex. “ That’s why he looked so fresh.” Dahmer stored the heads in the fridge to prolong the time until they ‘no longer looked lifelike’. “I was starting to think you had forgotten about him." (p62)ĭahmer had met the man several days ago. Dahmer interrupted my thoughts “I suppose you’re wondering about the guy in the refrigerator?” There was feeling in his voice again and he looked at me with a slight smile. I couldn’t erase the picture in my mind of the head, staring back at me with that surprised look. By now, he had told me of fourteen homicides, and still no mention of it. I wrote without interruption, hoping that I could fill in the blanks later, but I kept wondering about the head in the refrigerator. He quickly rattled off several more homicides in a similar fashion, staring straight ahead as he spoke, motionless. Dahmer ‘ made the Halcyon drink for him and after he passed out, I made love to him and disposed of the body in the usual way.’ Kennedy writes:Īt this point, he became methodical in his descriptions and explanations, almost monotonous. After he passed out, I had oral and anal sex with him and killed him just like the others.” (pp61-2)ĭahmer had been waiting for a bus on Wisconsin Avenue a week afterwards, when he met ‘this guy’ who he offered $50 to come home for ‘sex and drinks’. I knew it couldn’t last, so I made him the Halcyon drink that night before we went to bed. “But then Sunday night came, he said he had a job in Chicago and would have to catch the bus in the morning. For a while, I thought that maybe this one would stay.” Dahmer lowered his head and sighed as he continued. We made love and went to the mall, shopped for food to make dinner and everything. “We spent the whole weekend together, almost like a real relationship Pat. Dahmer ‘convinced him' to take the bus back to Milwaukee. They conversed – the ‘personable, good-looking’ man told Dahmer that he was part-Jewish, part-Puerto Rican. So it was a month after his previous murder that Dahmer was sitting in a Chicago bar called Carol’s. Sometimes he took the bus there, after work on Fridays. I took up my pen again and he continued.ĭahmer discovered a certain area of Chicago known as Boys Town that featured many gay bars and clubs. How about you? Do you need a break? Are you hungry?” He shook his head no and opened the smokes. “Is everything alright?” he said looking at me with concern. When Kennedy returned from the phone-call with the Clerk, holding a fourth packet of smokes for Dahmer and yet more coffee for them both, ‘Dahmer was anxiously waiting’.
He has been in full support of the death penalty ever since that time. When he heard that snippet of the truth, within two minutes he became a sworn supporter of erasing such organisms as Bittaker. Glenn recalls that he had opposed death penalty all his life, until that very day. Glenn ran out of Douglas's office to cry and vomit afterwards, he asked Douglas "Why?". It was Bittaker's recording of the torture of Shirley Ledford. To that, Douglas laughed mirthlessly and took out an audio tape which he played without a word. Then he made the mistake - or possibly the right move - of thanking Douglas for allowing him to "be part of his world".
The actor Scott Glenn, who played the John Douglas-ish character of Crawford in "Lambs", recalls going to Douglas after his long stay in Quantico - research into what Crawford's character would be like - and thanking him profoundly for teaching him and giving him his knowledge. I'll repost my earlier message, which I posted a while ago: The full copy has not been released publicly.
not unlike anything else you've likely heard. There are a few seconds of the audio, about three.