Yoo Young-chul

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Yoo Young-chul (born 18 April 1970) is a South Korean serial killer, sex offender, and self-confessed cannibal. After he admitted to the murders of multiple people, mostly prostitutes and wealthy old couples, the Seoul Central District Court convicted him of 20 murders, although one case was dismissed when it was identified as being committed by another serial killer, Jeong Nam-gyu. Yoo burned three and mutilated at least 11 of his victims and admitted that he ate the livers of some of them. He committed his crimes between September 2003 to July 2004 and was apprehended on 15 July 2004. Yoo explained his motives in front of a TV camera saying "Women shouldn't be sluts, and the rich should know what they've done."

Biography

Yoo was married in 1992 and had one son. Yoo was previously convicted 14 times of several different crimes, and served a total of seven years in prison prior to all the murders he committed.

Serial murders

From September to November 2003, Yoo killed several wealthy senior citizens by breaking into their houses and bludgeoning them with a hammer. To cover his tracks, Yoo made the scenes of his crime look like a robbery-homicide took place. However, no money was taken, which confused the police investigators. When the investigation started to intensify, Yoo switched to targeting female masseuses. In January 2004, Yoo was briefly arrested on a minor theft charge but was released two days later. Starting in March 2004, Yoo called prostitutes to his residence in western Seoul and bludgeoned them after having sex with them. His victims were dismembered and mutilated to hinder their identification. They were buried in the mountains surrounding the city. Police recovered 11 bodies from the mountain behind Bongwon Temple after Yoo's arrest. During initial interrogations, Yoo confessed to killing 19 people. On 18 July 2004, he admitted to an additional murder: the killing of a 44-year-old male street vendor. Yoo eventually confessed to killing 26 individuals on 19 July 2004, several days after his arrest, although no details were given. The list of purported victims included several individuals who did not match his prior pattern of wealthy seniors or masseuses. Friends of two of the masseuse victims, whose bodies had been recovered, claimed they were not involved in massage therapy, meaning that Yoo could have other, unreported victims. Although the "Rainy Thursday" murderer was also active starting in April 2004, stabbing multiple women late at night in southwest Seoul, police were unable to link Yoo to those murders. Several days later, Yoo also confessed to killing a young woman (a worker in a clothing store) on 6 February 2004 in Imun-dong after he suspected her of being a prostitute. Yoo had approached her for questioning by pretending to be a police officer. Approximately a month after his arrest, Yoo confessed to eating the flesh of his victims, although no evidence to prove this was available.

Arrest for murder

Yoo was taken into custody on 15 July 2004 and confessed to murdering as many as 19 people initially, specifically targeting affluent senior citizens and masseuses. Yoo had raised suspicions by calling a massage parlour where several employees had recently gone missing after receiving similar phone calls, so the owner of the massage parlour, accompanied by several employees and a single police officer, went to the agreed-upon meeting place. The police officer left before Yoo arrived, and Yoo was apprehended by the employees of the massage parlor. Another police officer put handcuffs on Yoo after he was detained by the massage parlor employees. While in custody, Yoo feigned epileptic symptoms and escaped from the police after his restraints were loosened. However, he was re-arrested 12 hours later. Yoo had attempted to escape after being arrested in 2002 for rape by faking an epileptic seizure. The mother of the Imun-dong murder victim rushed at Yoo with an umbrella when he was brought to the prosecutor's office later in July, screaming that her daughter would still be alive if the police had captured him earlier. A policeman kicked the mother in the chest to subdue her, claiming that his hands were occupied by holding Yoo.

Motives

Based on the contents of his apartment, searched after his arrest, there was some speculation that he patterned his killings after several movies, including Public Enemy, Very Bad Things, and Normal Life. Yoo later confessed to being inspired by serial killer Jeong Du-yeong, who had murdered nine wealthy people in Busan from 1999 to 2000. On the killing of wealthy older people, prosecutors stated that he killed them out of a hostility that originated from his childhood poverty. Regarding Yoo's killing of women, prosecutors said his resentment stemmed from a lover who betrayed him, and he targeted women with jobs similar to those of his previous lover in a bid to retaliate. Yoo also told police he killed women because he hated them. A psychologist who assessed Yoo concluded that he was not mentally ill, but exhibited the normal characteristics of anti-social disorder whereby a person creates their own belief system based on distrust of moral and social norms.

Trial and penalty

Police admitted they had little physical evidence linking Yoo to the murders. Yoo first appeared in court on 6 September 2004, refusing to defend himself, declaring his intention to boycott the remainder of the trial and apologizing to the victims. Yoo boasted that he had no intention of stopping. When forced to return two weeks later, he lunged at the three presiding judges and recanted his confession for the February 2004 Imun-dong murder. He refused to appear at the next court session on 4 October 2004 after attempting suicide the night before. Yoo again disrupted a hearing three weeks later when he tried to attack a spectator who cursed at him, which ended with Yoo signing a statement pledging not to cause further commotion. Prosecutors requested the death penalty, for which Yoo thanked them, and Yoo was sentenced to death on 13 December 2004 for 20 counts of murder (the count of murder for the woman in Imun-dong in February 2004 was thrown out). Prosecutors appealed the verdict to secure the 21st count of murder, but the lower court's sentence was upheld on 8 June 2005 by the Supreme Court. His case shocked the public and fueled a debate over capital punishment in South Korea. Although the death penalty is still permissible under law, it has not been employed since 1997. Support for capital punishment was so small prior to Yoo's arrest that it was on the verge of being outlawed, but support for the death penalty has grown since his crimes were made public. The Seoul Central District Court said, "Murders of as many as 20 people are unprecedented in the nation and constitute very serious crimes. The death penalty is inevitable for you in light of the enormous pains inflicted on the families concerned and on society." Yoo is detained at the Seoul Detention Center.

List of events and his crimes

Murders

In popular culture

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