• hace 4 meses
¡Estos asesinos nunca fueron capturados ni liberados, y deambulan por las calles hasta el día de hoy! Bienvenido a WatchMojo Español, y hoy veremos a asesinos en serie famosos que actualmente no están en prisión.

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00:00I can't prove this. Just because you can't prove it doesn't mean it's not true.
00:07Hey, hello and welcome to Watch Mojo Español. I am G and today we will see the murderers
00:12in famous series that are no longer in prison, as long as, theoretically, they are still alive.
00:18Canada's notorious schoolgirl killer is an occasional volunteer at a Montreal school.
00:24Stabbings happened over a nine-month period and police tell us it's all connected to one man.
00:54The fourth survived the attack and told the police that it was approached by a black man, tall, young and thin.
01:00A reward of $20,000 is offered for his capture, but nothing has been confirmed and an investigation is currently underway.
01:10There is a $20,000 reward offered by the Little Rock Police Department that leads to an arrest.
01:16And as you may know, Americans do not prosper in this part of the world.
01:40However, he was captured and imprisoned in 1976 and was in and out of prison until 2022.
01:49In December of that year, the Supreme Court of Nepal ordered his release after he turned 19 years of a life sentence.
01:57He was supposedly released for old age, as he was 78 years old at the time.
02:02Sobhraj was deported to France, where he is currently planning to make some films and is waiting to sue those who imprisoned him.
02:11I'm fed up of all the allegations and so I decided that I'm going to put forward my facts and let the people decide.
02:20Sammy the Bull is a serial murderer. He's a psychopath and a sociopath.
02:26The only reason why Sammy the Bull does not comply with the standard definition of serial killer is because he was in the mafia.
02:33Gravano, a high-ranking member of the Gambino criminal family, was involved in at least 19 murders during his time in the mafia.
02:41Among his victims was his own brother-in-law, his best friend Luis Milito, and the head of the Gambino family, Paul Castellano.
02:50The wave of crimes came to an end in 1991, when he decided to present state evidence and testify against the famous mobster John Gotti.
02:59In exchange for information, Gravano was sentenced to 5 years in prison.
03:04Later he was arrested for drug trafficking, but released in 2017.
03:09And now, of course, he has a YouTube channel.
03:12When we first started walking around, talking to people after Castellano hit, I was armed all the time.
03:23I will admit the others when you catch me, if you can.
03:29In Washington, D.C., at the beginning of the 1970s, the ghost of the highway had as its target young African-American women, and it was known that it had killed 6 people.
03:40Its best known victim was Brenda Crockett, a young woman who forced her to call her own family after kidnapping her, probably to give them inaccurate information and ruin the investigation.
03:52Despite a series of suspects, the murderer is still unidentified, and there are no solid clues that point to his whereabouts or current state.
04:00But given that these murders occurred in the early 1970s, it is very likely that he is still alive.
04:10The Ripper
04:22The Ripper, a unique murderer, earned his nickname because he generally drew his victims before killing them.
04:28In the mid-1970s, he met his victims in gay nightclubs, took them to a private place, drew them, and then stabbed them.
04:38It is believed that he killed between 6 and 16 people.
04:42Surprisingly, 3 survived, but were not sentenced because they were not willing to testify before the court.
04:49Because they did not want to openly declare themselves homosexual.
04:52Therefore, the Ripper is still unnamed.
04:56It was described that he was just over 20 years old, so if he were still alive, he would currently be just over 70 years old.
05:19David Rivey
05:24Also known as the Monster of Worcester, David Rivey committed one of the most shocking crimes in Great Britain in 1973.
05:33On the night of April 13, he was taking care of the three children of his friend Clive Rolfe.
05:38But when he and his wife Elsie returned home, David was no longer there, and neither were his children.
05:44After a new search in the area, the investigators found the bodies of the children in a neighbor's courtyard.
05:51MacRivey served more than four decades in prison, before controversially being released in 2018.
05:59The reason was that he had changed considerably while he was in prison.
06:15Arnfinn Nesset
06:26This modest man once appeared to be an honest citizen.
06:29After finishing school, Nesset quickly became a nurse in a Norwegian nursing home for the elderly.
06:36However, when the number of deaths became suspiciously high, the police intervened.
06:43It is suspected that Nesset may have been responsible for up to 138 deaths, but only admitted 27 when interrogated.
06:52In 1983 he was declared guilty of the murder of 22 patients and sentenced to 21 years in prison.
07:00The longest sentence possible in Norway until that moment.
07:04After only 12 years in prison, he was released for good conduct.
07:09And now he walks the streets under a pseudonym.
07:21Mitchell Johnson
07:22We were going outside to the back of the building and then all of a sudden we started hearing these big old loud sounds.
07:30Today it seems as if there was a violent shooting every month, but that was not the case in 1998,
07:37when high school students Mitchell Johnson and Andrew Golden shocked the nation.
07:43On March 24, 1998, 10 people were injured and 5 were killed after activating the fire alarm at Arkansas High School.
07:52Then they shot at the students and teachers evacuating the place.
07:57They were found guilty of 5 murder charges and imprisoned until they turned 21, which was the maximum according to Arkansas law.
08:05After serving 7 and 9 years respectively, they were released.
08:10Johnson remains free, while Golden died in a car accident in 2019.
08:24The Florence Monster
08:26That is the Duomo seen from the Belvedere.
08:31Do you know Florence?
08:32Between 1968 and 1985, 16 people died in 8 double homicides in the metropolitan area of Florence.
08:42The victims were couples who had ventured into remote areas to have intimacy.
08:47Despite the first murder in 1968, it was not until 1981 that the police realized they were connected,
08:56and an investigation led them to two men, Mario Vanni and Giancarlo Lotti.
09:02These men were supposedly part of a larger gang of murderers, but were only convicted of 4 of the 8 double homicides.
09:11In addition, many experts have questioned and questioned their guilt.
09:15The other members of the alleged gang, including the leader, have never been captured.
09:20Well, if there really was a gang.
09:32Wolfgang Abel and Marco Furlan
09:34Let's start with Wolfgang Abel. Good evening, Mr. Abel.
09:37Abel is...
09:38Good evening.
09:39Good evening.
09:40Between 1977 and 1984, Abel and Furlan murdered several homeless people, homosexuals,
09:49sex workers, people with substance abuse disorders, and priests who they considered sinful.
09:56In each scene of the crime, there was a pamphlet with Nazi images that stated that the victims had been murdered by, according to them, infrahuman beings.
10:05After an initial 30-year sentence, they were released as a result of an appeal process,
10:11during which time Furlan fled the country. After his recapture, both were sentenced to 27 years.
10:18Furlan was released in 2009 and Abel in 2013.
10:23Louis Van Squar
10:25I've read a lot of newspaper articles where they've called me a serial killer, a mass murderer. I don't agree with it.
10:33Louis Van Squar, also known as the murderer of Albert Heide,
10:37was a security guard who worked in South African companies in the mid-1980s.
10:44It is suspected that he shot more than 100 people and killed 39 while working as a security guard.
10:51While he was in service, he approached the businesses where a silent alarm had been activated and shot the alleged thieves,
10:59almost exclusively people of color. He claims that his murders had no racial motivations,
11:05and he likes to refer to himself as a fighter against crime.
11:10Regardless of what he considers, he was sentenced to 20 years in prison for 7 murder charges,
11:17and was released after 12 years.
11:20Some people told me I must get out of the business while I can. What for? I haven't done anything wrong.
11:26The band Smiley Face
11:28They are hundreds of young men from all across the country. Their deaths labeled as accidental drownings.
11:34Now these retired detectives say it's murder.
11:38If we believe the retired detectives of the New York Police, Kevin Gannon and Anthony Duarte,
11:44then there is a series of murders unresolved in the Middle East of the United States.
11:49They theorize that one or more serial killers were active in the area from the late 90s to the 2010s,
11:58and claimed the lives of more than 45 people.
12:02According to local police agencies and the FBI, these murders were attributed to drownings related to alcohol.
12:09But Gannon and Duarte are convinced that they are related.
12:14This hypothesis is supported by the Professor of Criminal Justice, Dr. Lee Gilbertson,
12:19who publicly supported the theory in Larry King Live in 2009.
12:24If his assumptions are correct, then not a single person has been arrested in relation to the alleged murders.
12:39Mika Muranen
12:40The role of the army in any country should be to keep the nation and its citizens safe.
12:46However, in 1994, the military man Mika Muranen led the war in Cocta, Finland.
12:53Dressed in his uniform, he took a crossbow out of his house and shot two of his neighbors.
12:59The next day, with an assault rifle that he had stolen from his military base,
13:03he shot a postman, before fleeing to the forest while shooting houses at random.
13:09After his capture, he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
13:12But after four attempts, he was finally granted parole in September 2014.
13:20Charlene Gallego
13:28Charlene Gallego, along with her husband Gerald, were serial killers who killed ten people,
13:34mostly teenagers, in the west of the United States between 1978 and 1980.
13:41They kidnapped people in the streets, assaulted and murdered them,
13:45so they earned the nickname of the Love Slave Killers.
13:48After Charlene was captured, they offered her a guilty plea in exchange for testifying against Gerald,
13:55and then she was sentenced to 16 years and 8 months in prison.
14:00While Gerald finally died in prison while awaiting his execution, she was released in July 1997.
14:16Alexander Rubel
14:18From September 1997 to June 1998, Rubel, who was then a teenager,
14:26murdered 6 to 8 people while he was under the effects of gasoline vapors.
14:31According to the reports, his first victim, a disabled neighbor,
14:35was murdered simply because Rubel had an uncontrollable need to kill someone.
14:41Once he acquired the taste for this crime, he proceeded to kill several more people.
14:47Other murders of his include stabbing a girl
14:51and attacking a random passerby with an ax after asking him for money.
14:56He was sentenced to 8 years, the maximum allowed for a minor,
15:01and now supposedly lives in Ukraine.
15:04The Tears Highway Killer
15:07I remember once counting the number of side roads
15:10that a killer could drive off to dispose of a body in an hour,
15:15and there were, you know, a hundred or more.
15:19This is the name of a long stretch of the British Columbia Highway 16 in the United States,
15:24which has witnessed many disappearances and murders of local indigenous women.
15:30The exact number of victims is still unknown, but some estimates believe they are more than 80.
15:36Worse still, these attacks have continued to happen without obstacles since 1970.
15:42Several arrests have been made, but most remain unsolved.
15:47Unfortunately, there are many factors that influence the high number of missing women,
15:52including the remote location of Highway 16
15:56and the prevalence of those who ask for a ride in the area
15:59due to systemic poverty and lack of public transport.
16:03I did learn some things today. I think it went well.
16:06What did you learn?
16:08I don't want to say, but I have.
16:11I've learned some things which in the future are going to help me.
16:14Karla Homolka
16:16Can I talk to you for a second?
16:17No, you can't.
16:18Since September, Homolka has been a regular fixture at Greaves Adventist Academy.
16:23Among the most notorious serial killers in Canada,
16:25Karla Homolka and her husband Paul Bernardo
16:28were responsible for assaulting and murdering three women,
16:31including Homolka's sister, Tammy, whom they drugged and assaulted.
16:36Then they kidnapped two more minors in the street and did the same to them.
16:40When she was captured, Homolka reached an agreement to testify against Bernardo,
16:45claiming a reduced role in the murders.
16:48But later it was discovered that this was a lie.
16:51She was sentenced to 12 years and released in 2005.
16:56She recently caused a stir for volunteering at her daughter's elementary school in Quebec.
17:02City News has learned that Karla Homolka has been in the classroom and on a field trip.
17:06Dominic Fazioli tells us why the school didn't do a background check.
17:10Los Ángeles de la Muerte de Lines
17:13During the 1980s, Los Ángeles de la Muerte de Lines worked as nursing assistants in Austria.
17:20After one of them killed a patient with a morphine overdose,
17:25he discovered his thirst for power and convinced his friends to join his crimes.
17:30For years, they supposedly killed more than 200 patients by covering their noses
17:35and filling their mouths with water until they drowned.
17:39After being surprised to hear about his last murder in a bar,
17:43they confessed 49 homicides.
17:46Their sentences ranged from 15 years to life imprisonment,
17:50but since 2008, they have all been released.
17:54Pedro López
18:02López was a mass murderer who claims to have assaulted and murdered approximately 300 girls in Colombia, Peru and Ecuador
18:10at the end of the 1970s.
18:12He claimed to have killed around three a week and confessed to having more than 300 victims.
18:18He was found guilty of 110 murder charges and sentenced to 16 years in prison,
18:25which was the highest form of punishment in Ecuador.
18:28After being admitted to a mental health center, he was released on bail in 1998 and disappeared.
18:36While he could have been recaptured, he could also be free or even dead.
18:42Nobody knows, and that's even worse.
18:49Pedro Alonso López
18:51His mother believes he has managed to avoid being killed by the families of his victims.
18:56We have not reached the end yet.
18:58Remember to subscribe to our channel and activate the bell to receive notifications of our latest videos.
19:05Very well, let's see the number one position.
19:09The Zodiac Killer
19:19And here we come to a legendary serial killer who has captured the attention of the United States for decades.
19:25The Zodiac is still a figure of pop culture since its wave of crimes at the end of the 60s,
19:31which left at least five people dead.
19:34The case has many famous aspects, including the exchange of correspondence of the killer
19:39with the media and the cryptograms he published through local newspapers.
19:43Of course, there is another aspect that has allowed the story to remain so popular.
19:48He was never caught.
19:50The witnesses have given very different ages for the Zodiac, but many have placed him at 30 years old.
19:58Although he would currently be very old, it is possible that he is still alive, and somewhere.
20:14Do you think any of these killers keeps you awake at night?
20:22Do you agree with our choices?
20:24Tell us in the comments and don't miss these other videos of WatchMojo Español.

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