“He used to backhand me and knock me clean across the room just for practice. But then everybody knocked me around, my uncles, my other stepdaddies, and near about all the boys and girls I played with and went to school with.” -(Donald Gaskins and Wilton Earle, Final Truth: Autobiography of a Serial Killer (London: Mondo, 1993), 2.)
“Children who have experienced abuse and neglect are therefore at increased risk for a number of problematic developmental, health, and mental health outcomes, including learning problems (e.g., problems with inattention and deficits in executive functions), problems relating to peers (e.g., peer rejection), internalizing symptoms (e.g., depression, anxiety), externalizing symptoms (e.g., oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder, aggression), and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). As adults, these children continue to show increased risk for psychiatric disorders, substance use, serious medical illnesses, and lower economic productivity.” -(Petersen, Anne C. “Consequences of Child Abuse and Neglect,” New Directions in Child Abuse and Neglect Research., March 25, 2014,https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK195987/.)
“‘recurrent instances of psychopathic lying and stealing,’ escape attempts and violence; ‘We are … sure from our dealing with abnormal delinquents that this boy is anti-social, and there is something in his past development that is preying upon his mind … ‘We consider him dangerous and also believe that he has the homicidal tendencies peculiar to a paranoid type. We are requesting proper placement because we have been unable to adjust this boy to our group.’”-Margaret N. O’Shea, “A Life of Death: Gaskins’ Gruesome Deeds Embedded in State’s Memory,” The State, September 5, 1991, sec. Cover and page 8, 8.
“A coroner’s jury found … that Hazel Brazzell, South Carolina penitentiary inmate slain October 10, came to his death as the result of wounds inflicted by Arthur Wines. The jury further found that Junior (“Pee Wee”) Gaskins was an accessory to the act in that he handed the death weapon, a 6 or 7-inch knife, still unfound, to Wines. Both Wines and Gaskins are penitentiary inmates.”- (“Jury Finds Wines Dealt Fatal Knife Wounds to Pen Inmate,” The State, October 17, 1953.)
“Gaskins failed to return to his Williams Building dormitory about 8:30 Saturday night, and an alarm was put out shortly afterward. Ctp R. Fuller Goodman, head of the penitentiary guard, said last night he considered Gaskins ‘dangerous.’”- (“Dangerous Convict Flees State Hospital,” The State, November 7, 1955, Monday edition, 20.)
“‘One thing led to another … and I just shoved her right in the pond and grabbed her by her feet and held her under and then I went back and got the kid and done the same thing,’ read Summerford, who was called to testify by Anders. The people referred to were Doreen Dempsey, 23, and her 2-year-old daughter, Robin Michelle Dempsey. They were killed in June 1973. After the drownings Gaskins said he threw their bodies in the back of the hearse he drove and buried them. Testimony indicated the murder arose primarily from Gaskins’ hatred of racial mixing.”- (Howard Schneider, “Gaskins’ Murder of Six Read to Jurors,” The State, March 25, 1983, Friday edition, 37.)
“About the middle of September last year, Kim Ghelkins was classified by police as a routine teenage runaway, one of thousands who suddenly disappear from home each year. Any similarities between her disappearance and other routine cases quickly began to dissolve after authorities began looking for the 13-year-old North Charleston girl who hadn’t been in trouble before.”- (Carl Baab, “Kim Ghelkins: What Appeared to Be Routine Runaway Pre-School Turned into SC’s Worst Mass Murder,” The Columbia Record, December 23, 1976,25.)
“The State learned that the identification was made from a smile in a photograph. According to usually reliable sources, pathologists at the Medical University of South Carolina at Charleston had a blown-up photograph of Miss Ghelkins smiling and were able to match five specific points in the smile with the teeth of the body.”- (J. Duncan Hite, “Body is Identified as Kim Ghelkins,” The State, Dec. 23, 1976.Pg. 19)
“For four years, he lay awake nights, haunted by the shotgun murder of his parents, grocery store owners whose killer, he heard, laughed from Death Row as the courts ordered new trials and appeals dragged on and on. ‘I dreamed constantly about him laughing while my mother begged on her knees for her life,’ he reflects. ‘Plain as the TV, I kept seeing my mother and father lying in a pool of blood.’ So Tony Cimo, 36, a beefy bricklayer with a wife and two daughters, did what he believed he had to do. He brought down the Angel of Death. A man possessed by revenge, infuriated by plodding courts, he had the killer killed in prison. ‘I don't feel the good Lord holds nothing against me for this,’ said Cimo (pronounced see-moe), toasting his last day of freedom with a cold Budweiser among friends in his backyard here.”- (Art Harris, “The Seeds of Vengeance,” - (The Washington Post, June 23, 1983, https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1983/06/24/the-seeds-of-vengeance/c77f669f-278d-4011-a0f5-89d49bc81a04/.)
“‘He was like a rabid dog that needed to be done away with.’ He says he sleeps well now, has no regrets and would do the same thing again. It will be costly for him: eight years in prison, out of a possible twenty, for contracting for execution, a sentence he began serving yesterday after a tearful farewell beneath a pecan tree. He kissed his wife and family goodbye, grabbed a beer, and climbed into a friend's pickup for the 175-mile drive to Columbia, where he turned himself in to state prison officials. He will be eligible for parole in 2 1/2 years and for work release, perhaps sooner. ‘I'm going to prison, but I'll sleep better knowing he's dead,’ Cimo said. ‘Two judges and two juries in two different counties sentenced him to die and set an execution date. I was just helping 'em along."- (Art Harris, “The Seeds of Vengeance,” The Washington Post, June 23, 1983, https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1983/06/24/the-seeds-of-vengeance/c77f669f-278d-4011-a0f5-89d49bc81a04/.)
“That this is one of the most malicious, most cold bloodedest, premeditatest, murders that there is. It can’t be no worse than if I was to sit down and plan to kill someone.”- (Associated Press, “Gaskins Numb about Approaching Execution,” The Florence Morning News, August 19, 1991, 1.)
“deliberately suppressing evidence that could lead to a real killer’ … King charged authorities had obtained confessions from Pierce ‘by torture and the evidence of physical maltreatment may secured from existing medical records.’ King refused to release his evidence to reporters. ... King said his investigation, prompted by a letter from Pierce, had proven that two of Pierce’s confessions could not be true because records showed that he was in prison at the time of the crimes. ‘With Overwhelming documentation supported by four witnesses, our investigation reveals that William “Junior” Pierce could not have killed “Peg” Cuttino,’ said the attorney. ‘Pierce was legitimately employed on that day and the owner-supervisor and foreman of the firm employed him verified that.’ Said King”- (Richard Beene, “Lawyer Says His Evidence Proves Innocence of Convicted Killer,” The State, December 21, 1978, 32.)
“Peg Burleson, spokeswoman for the group, contended in a letter she said had been sent to Gov. James B. Edwards and the US Justice Department that the sheriff’s department improperly handled missing persons reports on the three teenagers. They were Janice Kirby, Patricia Alsbrook, and Marth Ann ‘Clyde’ Dicks. Miss Alsbrook disappeared on Nov. 11, 1970, and was found in a septic tank in December. She was reportedly last seen with Miss Kirby, Gaskins’ niece, who is still missing. The Alsbrook girls’ remains were found about a mile from a drainage ditch where authorities found bones two weeks ago. That location was near where Gaskins said he had buried a woman he killed. Miss Dicks, who disappeared in March 1972, was known by the nickname Gaskins used in telling a trial of one of his victims. The Citizens’ group questioned what Mrs. Burleson called a ‘gross difference’ in police investigations of the disappearances of Margaret ‘Peg’ Cuttino in December 1970 and the disappearances of the other three.”- (Associated Press, “Law and Judicial Systems Could Be Investigated,” The Gaffney Ledger, May 11, 1977, 12A.)
“he backed his department’s handling of the three missing persons reports. He said no formal search parties were organized for the three because the department didn’t know they were missing.”- (Associated Press, “Law and Judicial Systems Could Be Investigated,” The Gaffney Ledger, May 11, 1977, 12A.)
“Unlike serial homicide, which is manifested in a number of separate events, mass murder is a one-time event that involves the killing of multiple people at one location. In a mass murder, the victims may be either randomly selected, or targeted for a specific reason, such as retaliation or revenge by the killer.”- (Dr. Scott A. Bonn, “Origin of the Term ‘Serial Killer,’” Psychology Today, June9, 2014,https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/wicked-deeds/201406/origin-the-term-serial-killer.)
“Rather than being satisfied when they murder, serial killers are instead agitated toward repeating their killings in an unending ‘serial’ cycle.” (Vronsky, P. 2004. Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. New York: Berkley Books)
“Each county shall provide to every school in the county the forms and ink pads necessary to record each pupil's fingerprints in kindergarten and grades one through twelve. The State Law Enforcement Division and all local law enforcement agencies are instructed and authorized to assist local school authorities in the fingerprinting of school children in kindergarten and grades one through twelve when the parent of a child requests in writing that his child be fingerprinted for identification purposes for the protection of the child. The fingerprints must be given to the student's parents or guardian. The implementation of this section is a local responsibility, and it must be implemented as the local school board determines appropriate. HISTORY: 1962 Code Section21-756; 1971 (57) 998; 1984 Act No. 512, Part II, Section 9, Division II, Subdivision A, Subpart 2, Section 3; 1985 Act No. 201, Part II, Section 9(J);1986 Act No. 355, Section 1.”
“The majority of serial killers are not reclusive, social misfits who live alone. They are not monsters and may not appear strange. Many serial killers hide in plain sight within their communities. Serial murderers often have families and homes, are gainfully employed, and appear to be normal members of the community. Because many serial murderers can blend in so effortlessly, they are often times overlooked by law enforcement and the public.”- ( “SerialMurder,” FBI, May 21, 2010,https://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/serial-murder#ncavc.)