Born in
Chelsea, Massachusetts, during 1931, DeSalvo was another
product of a violent and abusive home. Frank DeSalvo beat
his wife and children regularly, and was thrown in jail on
two occasions prior to the divorce that split the family in
1944. Fleeing a record of teenage arrests for breaking and
entering, Albert joined the army at age 17 and was stationed
in Germany. He married a German girl and brought her back to
the United States when he was transferred home.
Posted to Fort Dix, New Jersey, DeSalvo was charged with
molesting a nine-year-old girl in January 1955, but the
child's mother declined to press charges, and so he received
an honorable discharge in 1956. At the same time, he
experienced sexual problems with his wife, demanding
intercourse five or six times a day, regarding her as
"frigid" when she turned him down. Matters grew worse with
the birth of their first child, in 1958, with the new
shortage of cash driving DeSalvo back to a life of petty
crime. Arrested twice for breaking and entering, he received
suspended sentences each time.
During this same period, Massachusetts women began falling
prey to the "Measuring Man," a smooth-talking impostor who
posed as a talent scout for a modelling agency, wandering
door-to-door in an endless search for "new talent." Once
inside an apartment, the man would produce a measuring tape
and proceed to record the tenant's "vital statistics," often
fondling her intimately in the process. Some complained to
the police, but many others didn't, and detectives noted the
absence of any violent assault, ranking the case near the
bottom of their priority list.
On March 17, 1960, Cambridge police arrested DeSalvo on
suspicion of burglary, and he swiftly confessed to his role
as the "Measuring Man." Charged with assault and battery,
lewd conduct, and attempted breaking and entering, he was
convicted only on the latter charge, sentenced to two years
in prison. Paroled after eleven months, he was driven by
sexual frustration to adopt a more aggressive, violent role.
As the "Green Man" - so-called for his green work clothes -
DeSalvo launched a two-year campaign of sexual assaults that
claimed victims in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire
and Rhode Island. Police would later estimate that he had
raped at least 300 women, while DeSalvo placed the total
closer to 2,000. He once claimed a half-dozen victims in one
day, spread over four towns, with two of the rapes
unreported prior to his confession.
While police throughout New England sought the "Green Man,"
Boston homicide detectives were stalking an elusive killer,
blamed for the deaths of eleven women between June 1962 and
July 1964. In every case, the victims had been raped -
sometimes with foreign objects - and their bodies laid out
nude, as if on display for a pornographic snapshot. Death
was always due to strangulation, though the killer sometimes
also used a knife. The ligature - a stocking, pillow case,
whatever - was inevitably left around the victim's neck,
tied with an exaggerated, ornamental bow.
Anna Slessers, 55, had been the first to die, strangled with
the cord of her bathrobe on June 14, 1962. A nylon stocking
was used to kill 68-year-old Nina Nichols on June 30, and
Helen Blake, age 65, was found the same day, a stocking and
bra knotted around her neck. On August 19, 75-year-old Ida
Irga was manually strangled in her home, "decorated" with a
knotted pillow case, and 67-year-old Jane Sullivan had been
dead a week when she was found on August 20, strangled with
her own stockings, slumped over the edge of the bathtub with
her face submerged.
The killer seemed to break his pattern on December 5, 1962,
murdering a 20-year-old black, Sophie Clark. Another shift
was seen with 23-year-old Patricia Bissette, strangled on
her bed and covered with a blanket to her chin, in place of
the usual graphic display. With 23-year-old Beverly Samans,
killed on May 6, 1963, the slayer used a knife for the first
time, stabbing his victim 22 times before looping the
traditional nylon stocking around her neck. Evelyn Corbin,
58, seemed to restore the pattern on September 8, strangled
and violated by an "unnatural" assault, but the killer went
back to young victims on November 23, strangling 23-
year-old Joann Graff, leaving teethmarks in her breast. The
final victim, 19-year-old Mary Sullivan, was found on
January 4, 1964, strangled with a scarf, the shaft of a
broomstick protruding from her vagina.
Ten months later, on November 3, DeSalvo was hauled in for
questioning on rape charges, after one of the "Green Man's"
victims gave police a description strongly resembling the
"Measuring Man." DeSalvo's confession to a long series of
rapes landed him in the Bridgewater State Hospital,
committed for observation, and where he was befriended by
George Nassar, a convicted murderer facing trial in his
second robbery- slaying since 1948. Their private
discussions were interspersed with visits from police,
ultimately leading to DeSalvo's full confession in the
"Boston strangler" crimes.
In his confession, Albert even tacked on two "new" victims,
never previously linked by the authorities. One, 85-year-old
Mary Mullen, was found dead at her home on June 28, 1962,
her passing attributed to heart failure. DeSalvo claimed
that Mullen had collapsed from shock when he invaded her
apartment, whereupon he left her body on the couch without
continuing the usual assault. Mary Brown, age 69, was
stabbed and beaten in her home on March 9, 1963, again
without a showing of the 66 stranglef's knot."
It seemed like an open-and-shut case, but numerous problems
remained. The strangler's sole surviving victim, assaulted
in February 1963, couldn't pick Albert out of a lineup, and
neither could witnesses who sighted a suspect near the Graff
and Sullivan murder scenes. Several detectives had focused
their aim on another 46 prime suspect," fingered by psychic
Peter Hurkos, but their man had voluntarily committed
himself to an asylum soon after the last murder. And if
Albert DeSalvo was driven by a mother-fixation, as
psychiatrists claimed, why had he chosen young women as five
of his last seven victims?
Some students of the case believe the answer may be found in
Bridgewater, where killer George Nassar conferred with
DeSalvo through long days and nights. It is possible,
critics maintain, that Nassar might have been the strangler,
briefing Albert on the details of his crimes in hope of
sending authorities off on a wild goose chase. DeSalvo,
already facing life imprisonment for countless rapes,
admittedly struck a cash bargain with Nassar, whereby Nassar
would pocket part of the outstanding reward for turning
DeSalvo in, afterward passing on most of the cash to
DeSalvo's wife. As a "clincher," the strangler's lone
survivor favored Nassar as a suspect, rather than DeSalvo.
Be that as it may, DeSalvo never came to trial for homicide
in Boston. Lawyer F. Lee Bailey managed to negotiate a deal
in 1967, whereby Albert drew a term of life imprisonment for
crimes committed as the "Green Man." Never charged in the
Boston stranglings, he was stabbed to death by a fellow
inmate at Walpole prison, in November 1973.
This bio was taken from "Hunting Humans," by
Michael Newton.
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