Marybeth Tinning

In this week’s blog, I will be discussing Marybeth Tinning. 

Marybeth Roe Tinning was born September 11, 1942, in New York State. Despite her childhood, Tinning had a history of mental health issues from a young age. Her father fought in World War II, and that was a significant part of her youth. Her mother worked and she was often passed from relative to relative. Marybeth had an older brother, and many relatives would often compare them, saying that she was an accident and they only wanted her brother. Tinning was beaten by her father and was locked in a room when she cried. She lacked any sort of positive attention and craved it, which is important to the later story. Marybeth was always angry, but beneath that, she was so unhappy and had several suicide attempts as a child. Her grades were not good enough for her to go to college, even though she wanted to. Tinning longed to feel wanted and have any sort of attention, and when she met Joe Tinning, her dreams came true. Marybeth and Joe met on a blind date and two years later, they were married and had two children, Barbara and Joe Jr. Marybeth’s father passed away shortly after her son was born. His death took a huge toll on Tinning’s mental health. 

To outsiders, Marybeth was a good mother. They thought that it was deeply upsetting that her children kept passing away, one after the other. The couple had a third child, Jennifer, who had complications in the womb and died a week after birth. A few weeks after Jennifer’s death, Joe Jr. a now two-year-old suffered from a seizure. Doctors could not find a cause for this seizure, so they sent him home. Marybeth and Joe returned to the hospital soon after when Joe Jr. fell into cardiac arrest and then died. Their only living child, Barbara, was sent to the hospital for convulsions, which doctors believed was from an extremely rare brain disease. It may seem suspicious that all three of Marybeth’s children died in a row, but no one wanted to say anything to a grieving mother. 

On November 22, 1973, Tinning had a fourth child, Timothy, who was found dead in his crib at one-month-old. She had another son named Nathan, who died in her car while she was driving. Everyone in her town felt so sorry for her, as she had five children who all died at a young age. The couple then adopted a baby named Michael, and everything seemed normal until they gave birth to another daughter, Mary Frances. Mary Frances died with the same conditions as their son, Joe Jr. There was one more son after Mary Frances who also passed away. People thought that Tinning’s children just had a genetic condition that caused them all to die so young, until Michael, their adopted son, passed away suddenly. 

A total of 9 children died in Marybeth’s care. The doctors suspected foul play, but the police played all of them off as having Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). The police eventually got autopsy reports. However, this was still considered circumstantial evidence unless she confessed. At first, she took no responsibility, but she eventually confessed to killing three of the children and said that she had nothing to do with the other ones. She was sentenced to murder in the second degree due to the lack of clarity of the evidence. 

Marybeth Tinning enjoyed the attention she received when each of her children passed, making up for the attention she did not get as a child. In 1987, Tinning was sentenced to 20 years in prison. She and her husband are still married and he believes that she is completely innocent. 

Sources:

https://people.com/crime/9-little-kids-9-strange-deaths-tragedy-seemed-to-follow-marybeth-tinning-then-she-confessed-to-murder/

https://www.grunge.com/670646/where-is-convicted-killer-marybeth-tinning-today/

https://tiegrabber.com/podcasts/all-her-children-the-victims-of-marybeth-tinning/

Photo Sources in Order:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12503/barbara-ann-tinning

https://www.pinterest.com/pin/544443042438468977/

https://www.shared.com/marybeth-tinning-parole/

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/marybeth-tinning-mom-killed-daughter-tami-lynne-1985-parole-seventh-try/

Judy Buenoano

In this week’s blog, I will be discussing Judy Buenoano. 

Known as the “black widow,” Judy Buenoano was known for killing people close to her for insurance money. She was born Judias Welty on April 4, 1943, in Quanah, Texas. At the age of four, her mother passed away so she was sent to live with some other family members. She was passed around between family members and ended up living in foster homes for the majority of her childhood. In these foster homes, Judy claimed to be sexually assaulted and abused. With this childhood, she still graduated from a reform school in New Mexico in 1959. 

At the age of 17, she became pregnant. She gave birth to her son Michael in 1961 and later met a man named James Goodyear, who was an Air Force Sergeant. The two got married in 1962 and had two more children, James and Kimberly. The new family moved to Orlando, Florida in the late 1960s to follow Goodyear’s station. James spent time-fighting in the Vietnam War and returned in 1971.

When he returned, he was completely healthy. Over time he started having unknown symptoms and illness and he passed away in September of 1971. Following her husband’s death, Judy collected over $90,000 in insurance and Veterans Administration benefits. 

After her husband’s death, she decided to move to Pensacola, Florida, with her three children. Here she met a man named Bobby Morris and started a relationship with him. Morris moved to Colorado, and Judy and her children moved as well. In Colorado, Morris started to develop the same symptoms that James had, and he died in 1978. 

Judy claimed to be Morris’ “common-law wife” so she collected all of his insurance and moved back to Pensacola. She decided to change her last name to “Buenoano,” a Spanish version of “Goodyear.” 

Her son Michael was now grown and enlisted in the Army. Strangely, he began developing symptoms that both of Judy’s husbands had. Unlike the two men before who died of “heart attacks,” Michael was diagnosed with arsenic poisoning that affected his arms and legs. He needed to wear heavy metal braces on his legs. In 1980, Buenoano decided to take her son on a canoe trip, where the canoe flipped. Judy was able to swim to safety, but her son drowned because of his heavy braces. His death was ruled an accidental drowning, but his mother quietly collected his insurance and benefits. 

She got away with her first three kills but then had a slip-up the next time. After her son’s death, she met a new man named John Gentry. They started a relationship and Judy convinced him to take out life insurance policies on each other. If Gentry passed away, Buenoano would collect $500,000.

Judy initially tried to kill him with “Vitamin C” pills when Gentry got a cold. The pills made him deathly ill, and when he started getting symptoms he went to the hospital. When he was discharged from the hospital and started feeling better, his car mysteriously blew up with him in it. He returned to the hospital and survived. When authorities heard about what happened, they became suspicious of Buenoano.

Investigators dug into her past and it was later revealed that Goodyear, Morris, and her son all died of arsenic poisoning. She was arrested and tried for the attempted murder of Gentry. There was undeniable evidence of these murders, and Judy pled not guilty to all of them. She was given the death penalty in Florida and was the first woman to be executed in Florida since 1848. 

She killed three people in 12 years and was given the nickname “Black Widow” because like black widow spiders, she prayed on her mates and young. She collected over $240,000 in insurance and benefits from her kills. On March 30,1998, she was executed in the electric chair. 

 

Sources: 

https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/famous-murders/judy-buenoano/

https://www.insider.com/most-notorious-female-serial-killers-2018-6#judy-buenoano-2

https://www.flmd.uscourts.gov/black-widow

Photo Sources in Order:

https://thecinemaholic.com/is-judy-buenoano-dead-or-alive/

https://badmarriages.net/judy-buenoano-goodyear/

https://badmarriages.net/judy-buenoano-goodyear/

https://www.flmd.uscourts.gov/black-widow

Rosemary West

In this week’s blog, I will be discussing Rosemary West. 

Rosemary West killed ten women and children over 25 years in her home in Gloucester, England. Some say that West was born doomed. She was born on November 29, 1953, in Northam, United Kingdom to Bill and Daisy Letts. Daisy, her mother, was known to be depressed and often was treated with electric shock therapy. Even though it was never tested, many experts say that the electrotherapy damaged Rosemary’s psyche in utero. Bill, Rosemary’s father, was a former Naval Officer and often beat his wife and children. He was schizophrenic, had other psychological issues, and sexually assaulted his kids. During their childhood, Rosemary West molested her own brother when he was 12 years old and also harassed boys in their neighborhood. 

At age 15, Rosemary met a man named Fred West at a bus stop. He was 27 years old at the time and was searching for his stepdaughter Charmaine. Fred and Rosemary married and at age 17, she became a stepmother to 8-year-old Charmaine and Anne Marie. Rosemary West grew a hatred for Charmaine, and she went missing in the summer of 1971. Charmaine’s mother, Rena, came to the house asking about the child, and Rena went missing as well. 

In 1971, the West couple started a killing spree in Gloucester, England. They would offer rides to women walking alone and take them to their house, where they would likely never leave. Rosemary had three biological children, two daughters, and one son. These children would be whipped, beaten, and raped. In 1992, the daughters told a friend that their father was raping them, and confessed what was going on in the house. They were briefly removed from the household  but were too scared to testify in court so they were returned.

In 1987, the couple’s eldest child, Heather, went missing. Rosemary said the 16-year-old went to live her own life, but when abuse allegations started spreading, social workers were told by the other children that they “did not want to end up like Heather.”

In 1994, the police searched the West household. They discovered a cellar filled with bodies. They found the bodies of Charmaine, Heather, and Rena, as well as 8 other bodies. They were both arrested and in the beginning, Fred took the blame for all of the murders, while Rosemary pretended not to know anything. Obviously, that was not the case and both were sentenced to life in prison in 1995. Rosemary West is still alive and is living in New Hall Prison in Wakefield.

Sources:

https://www.city-journal.org/html/horror-story-12312.html

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-57182844

https://www.crimeandinvestigation.co.uk/crime-files/rosemary-west

Photo Sources in Order:

https://www.stayathomemum.com.au/true-crime-series/rosemary-west-a-true-sick-fck-excuse-for-a-mother/

https://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/how-rose-west-became-monster-23745131

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-57182844

https://www.biography.com/crime-figure/rosemary-west