Ed Gein was arrested for the murders of two women in 1957 after police discovered their remains and the body parts of other individuals in his Wisconsin home. Here's everything to know about what ...
Here's what happened to various Wisconsin sites associated with Ed Gein, the focus of season three of Netflix's "Monster" ...
Ed Gein's story is one of American criminal history's most notorious and deeply disturbing chapters. It influenced the horror ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Ed Gein, whose crimes are being explored in Netflix's 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story,' had one older brother named Henry. Here's everything to know about Ed Gein's brother.
Jenn Adams examines the frustrating representation of Adeline Wakins in Ryan Murphy’s ‘Monster: The Ed Gein Story’.
Speaking of babysitting, another murder that Gein is portrayed as committing in Monster: The Ed Gein Story is that of a ...
The Netflix serial killer series suggests that Ed Gein solved Ted Bundy's case for the FBI. Is there any truth to the matter?
Did Ed Gein help capture Ted Bundy, how many people did he kill? Here's what the Netflix series 'Monster' gets wrong about Ed ...