Notorious female serial killer Aileen Wuornos took the lives of her victims as violent revenge for the horrific sexual abuse she suffered as a child, a new documentary claims.
Wuornos, a prostitute, was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of six men who she picked up on the highways of Florida in 1989 and 1990, each of whom she shot multiple times before dumping their bodies.
Police believe she was also responsible for the deaths of two further male victims.
The murderer, dubbed the Damsel of Death, initially claimed she had acted in self-defence, but later admitted she did it simply because she hated men and wanted to steal their money.
Now criminal experts have re-examined audio recordings of Wuornos to offer fresh insight into the motives for her crimes.
Speaking on CBS documentary Voice Of A Serial Killer, they explain how they believe Wuornos was ‘projecting’ on to her victims the sense of ‘anger’ she had harboured since she was abused by her grandfather as a young girl.
Sordid: Prostitute Aileen Wuornos, pictured, was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of six men who she picked up on the highways of Florida in 1989 and 1990
Traumatic: Wuornos (pictured as a child) was sexually abused by her grandfather, who pimped out his pre-pubescent granddaughter to his friends. She started selling herself for sex aged 11
Wuornos was born to an unstable mother and a child molester father who spent much of his life in prison, before being sent to live with her grandparents, where she was sexually abused and pimped out by her grandfather.
Commenting on how her ‘disturbing’ early experiences shaped the rest of her life, forensic psychologist Mike Berry explained: ‘I think without a doubt she projected on to these men her sense of betrayal, her anger, at being abused.
‘They were the men, the [men in their] 50s and 60s, they were the age group who abused her earlier in her life. Whether they actually abused her or not is debatable, but we’re looking at her perception.
‘Her perception was that these are abusers: ”I need to protect myself” and at the same time, get revenge on society for what society’s allowed to happen to her as a child.’
Chilling: Wuornos was executed by lethal injection in a Florida prison in October 2002
Wuornos became one of America’s first known female serial killers when she was convicted of the murders of six men – Richard Mallory, David Spears, Charles Carskaddon, Peter Siems, Troy Burress, Charles Humprheys and Walter Jeno Antonio – across Florida between December 1989 and November 1990.
Each of the men were shot multiple times and their bodies dumped. Police believe she might have been responsible for the deaths of two more men.
At the time Wuornos was working as a prostitute to support herself and girlfriend Tyria Moore.
Remorseless: Wuornos (pictured on trial in 1992) initially claimed the murders were carried out in self-defence but later admitted she simply had a deep-rooted hatred of men
Hollywood film: Charlize Theron won an Oscar for her portrayal of Wuornos in 2004’s Monster
Wuornos, dubbed the Damsel of Death by tabloids, first claimed she had killed all of her victims in self-defence after they assaulted her, but later admitted she lied. Her only motive was robbery and a loathing of men, she said.
She was put to death by lethal injection in October 2002 after volunteering for execution and waiving all appeals. Her story was told in 2003 film Monster, for which Charlize Theron won the Academy Award for her portrayal of Wuornos.
The new documentary explains how Wuornos was abused by her father from early childhood.
She and her siblings were abandoned by her mother when she was just four-years-old, and sent to live with their grandparents. Her father took his own life in prison.
Wuornos’ grandfather was also sexually abusive and even ‘rented’ her out to his friends.
Aged just 10 or 11 Wuronos started to prostitute herself to local boys for money to buy cigarettes, which led to her becoming pregnant and giving her child up into care.
Confession: Girlfriend Tyria Moore, pictured, testified against Wuornos in 1992
Wuornos, seen testifying in Florida in 1992, lost track of her ‘moral compass’, experts say
Speaking on the documentary, criminologist Wensley Clarkson claims these horrific early experienced led to Wuronos having a ‘warped’ sense of morality.
Clarkson explains in the show: ‘It’s horrific stuff and very disturbing for a child, and without doubt it warped her mentality.
‘It made her lose track [of] any moral compass whatsoever, and possibly with reality because her life was horrendous.’
After her grandfather kicked her out of home as a teenager Wuornos moved to Florida, where she met Tyria Moore, and went on to kill.
Voice of a Serial Killer continues on Wednesday on CBS