Richard Speck (born December 6, 1941, Kirkwood, Illinois, U.S.—died December 5, 1991, Joliet) was an American mass murderer known for killing eight female nursing students in a Chicago town house in 1966.
Speck was the seventh of eight children. Soon after he was born, the family moved to Monmouth, Illinois. Speck’s father, to whom he had been deeply attached, died of a heart attack when Speck was six years old. Three years later, in 1950, his mother remarried and moved with her husband to Dallas, taking Speck and his younger sister with her. The children were frequently verbally and physically abused by their often-drunk stepfather. A poor student, Speck started drinking alcohol at a young age. He was arrested for the first time when he was 13 years old, and he left high school at 16. In 1962, Speck married a 15-year-old girl, Shirley Malone; their child, a girl, was born soon thereafter. The marriage ended in divorce in 1966.
In 1963, after numerous additional arrests, Speck was convicted of theft and check fraud and sentenced to three years in prison, but he was paroled after 16 months. In 1966, in order to avoid another arrest in Dallas, Speck returned to Monmouth. While there, he robbed and raped a 65-year-old woman, and he is thought to have beaten another woman to death.
After being questioned about the murder by police, he fled to Chicago, where he stayed with a sister. He eventually settled into a skid-row hotel near the National Maritime Union hiring hall, where he had applied for work as a merchant seaman. On the night of July 13, 1966, Speck gained entry to a town house in the vicinity of the hiring hall, which was shared by nine female nursing students. After binding the women’s hands and feet with strips of bedsheet, he murdered eight of them by stabbing, strangulation, or both; one of the victims was also raped. One of the women was able to escape by hiding under a bed; the next morning, hours after Speck had left the scene, she crawled out of a window and called for help.
After he committed the murders, Speck went into hiding and tried to commit suicide. Taken to a hospital, he was arrested there after an emergency room physician noticed a tattoo on Speck’s arm, “Born to Raise Hell,” which had been mentioned in newspaper reports of the crime based on the surviving student’s description. He was arrested on July 17, 1966.
Speck was originally sentenced to death in the electric chair. When the Supreme Court declared capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972, Speck’s sentence was changed to eight consecutive terms of 50 to 150 years. He was refused parole a number of times and died of a heart attack at age 49.