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Gein's Gruesome Legacy: Unraveling the Twisted Secrets of a Notorious Killer
6 Oct
Summary
- Ed Gein confessed to killing two women and robbing graves
- Gein used human body parts to make household items and face masks
- Psychiatrists say Gein's crimes were driven by his complicated relationship with his mother

In the wake of the new season of Netflix's true-crime drama series "Monster," the case of Ed Gein has once again captured public attention. Gein, a quiet and reserved farmer from Plainfield, Wisconsin, gained notoriety in the 1950s as the "Butcher of Plainfield" after authorities uncovered the grisly details of his crimes.
Gein confessed to killing two women and robbing numerous graves to obtain body parts, which he then used to create a disturbing collection of household items and face masks. Psychiatrists have suggested that Gein's complicated relationship with his mother, who died in 1945, played a significant role in his twisted actions. They believe Gein's development was "arrested" and that he continued to perceive people as mere objects, driven by a desire to "bring [his mother] back to life and have her with him always, and to destroy her as the cause of his frustration."
While Gein was found not guilty by reason of insanity and confined to a mental health institute, his legacy continues to haunt the public's imagination. The Netflix series has reignited questions about whether Gein was also a cannibal, but multiple reports have previously cleared up this lingering mystery, stating that Gein "practiced neither cannibalism nor necrophilia, but preserved the remains just to look at."




