Ed Gein was arrested for the murders of two women in 1957 after police discovered their remains and the body parts of other ...
Also known as the Plainfield Ghoul, Gein lived in Wisconsin during the 1950s, and is confirmed to have killed two women. He was also a suspect in other unsolved cases. It later emerged he had also dug ...
Monster: The Ed Gein Story, available on the platform from 3 October, delves into the life of Gein, a man suspected in multiple murder cases whose behind-closed-doors activities were even more ...
Henry Edward Gein was Ed Gein's older brother. It's unclear whether the pair had a particularly close relationship, but reports from the time suggest that Henry shared concerns with his brother about ...
Ed Gein is the subject of a new Netflix miniseries. Known as the Butcher of Plainfield, Gein's story includes a house of ...
Gein grew up on an isolated farm, where he lived with his father, mother, and older brother. In 1914, the family relocated from La Crosse, Wisconsin, to the two-story house on a 195-acre plot of land ...
Here’s everything to know about Ed Gein’s death, including when and how he died, and why he has an unmarked grave.
Despite Gein's admission of murdering Hogan and Worden, his lawyer entered a plea of “not guilty by reason of insanity.” As a result, and following a schizophrenia diagnosis, in January 1958 Gein was ...
The Ed Gein Story, the new Netflix series that recounts one of the darkest passages of criminal life in the United States, premiered. Centered on the serial killer who inspired several horror films, ...
Gein died at age 77 on July 26, 1984. His cause of death was respiratory failure related to lung cancer. After a judge ordered Gein committed to Central State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in ...