This seemingly harmless boy grew up to become one of America’s most evil men
He was a shy, quiet boy growing up in a small town, polite, seemingly normal, with a paper route and active in Scouts.
It’s almost unimaginable that the innocent-looking boy in this photo would one day become one of the most notorious criminals in history.
His sister was his mother
Even the most harmless-looking child can grow into something unrecognizable when early life is shaped by chaos, violence, and abandonment.
This boy, born in 1946 in Burlington, Vermont, had a turbulent start to life. Rumors swirled that he may have been the product of incest, and his father was never known. Born at a home for unwed mothers, he spent his first two months there before being sent to live with his grandparents.
His mother, Louise, reportedly considered giving him up for adoption, but her father, Sam, insisted the child remain in the family’s care in Philadelphia.
There, the boy grew up believing his mother was actually his sister. But some accounts suggest the boy saw through the lie fairly early on.
“Maybe I just figured out that there couldn’t be twenty years’ difference in age between a brother and a sister, and Louise always took care of me. I just grew up knowing that she was really my mother,” he later recalled.

For years, the truth about his origins lingered in the shadows, and even now, there are conflicting stories about how he finally discovered it. One version, shared by a psychologist who later interviewed him, suggests that as a teenager he stumbled upon his own birth certificate and froze when he saw the line for “Father” filled in with a single word: “Unknown.”
Another account paints an even earlier reckoning. In Phantom Prince, his longtime girlfriend Elizabeth describes how, as a preteen, he was mocked by a cousin who claimed he was illegitimate. When he protested, the cousin allegedly produced the birth certificate as proof.
Alarming behavior
During his early years, he lived in Philadelphia’s Roxborough neighborhood with his maternal grandparents, who were presented to him as his real parents. In later interviews, he spoke warmly of them.
Neighbors described the family as “really nice,” and the young man reportedly got along well with both his siblings and friends.
Yet even then, there were early signs that something was off.
His behavior could be alarming.
On one occasion, his aunt awoke to find her toddler nephew placing knives near her as she slept. She later told Vanity Fair, “I remember thinking at the time that I was the only one who thought it was strange. Nobody did anything.”
“There is no way…”
But in many ways, the boy had a fairly normal childhood — he loved to play, joined the Scouts, had friends, and was interested in girls.
“There is no way that the person I grew up with could have done the things they say he did. And there’s no way for me to reconcile the image of the mass murderer and the kid who came running to my back porch when the first snow fell in November, all excited to go skiing,” a childhood friend said, reflecting on the shocking revelations that stunned the nation.
Yet, other details have emerged suggesting that his childhood may not have been as idyllic as it sometimes seemed.
He was often teased for his speech impediment and struggled to keep up with other boys in the Scouts. He had a strong dislike for his second-grade teacher, who hit his knuckles after he poked another boy’s nose.
Despite being athletic, he never made the school basketball or baseball teams, a blow that weighed heavily on him. By the time he reached high school, he had become a loner, going on only a single date.
A chilling obsession
As he grew older, tension in the household escalated when Louise began dating a new man, who became a sort of stepfather to the boy.
The clash was immediate. The future serial killer was already materialistic, craving expensive clothes and luxuries that his working-class stepfather simply couldn’t provide. He even fantasized about being adopted by Western stars Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, believing they could give him the life he wanted.
As a young man, he moved across states, attending college and even working on a suicide prevention hotline, all while hiding a chilling obsession.

