Aileen Wuornos: America's Deadliest Female Serial Killer
How a Florida highway prostitute became one of the most notorious murderers in U.S. history

How a Florida highway prostitute became one of the most notorious murderers in U.S. history

Between late November 1989 and November 19, 1990, Aileen Carol Wuornos systematically hunted, shot, robbed, and murdered at least seven middle-aged men along Florida highways. Her execution on October 9, 2002, at age 46, marked the end of one of America's most shocking serial killer cases—and the story of a woman whose childhood trauma and violence would define her lethal adult years.
Wuornos was born on February 29, 1956, in Rochester, Michigan. Her early life was marked by severe dysfunction and exploitation. By age 11, she was already offering sexual favors for payment or cigarettes. At 14, she became pregnant after an assault she initially claimed was rape; she gave birth to a boy in March 1971 who was given up for adoption. Her explanations for the pregnancy would later shift, complicating her own narrative about victimhood.
By the time she reached adulthood, Wuornos had accumulated an extensive criminal record including DUIs, assault, illegal firearm possession, forgery, and disorderly conduct. In 1976, she married 69-year-old Lewis Fell in what would become a cautionary tale: the marriage lasted weeks before he filed a restraining order, alleging she had beaten him with a cane. That same year, she was accused of assault after throwing a cue ball at a bartender's head.
Geburt in Michigan
Aileen Carol Wuornos wird in Rochester, Michigan, geboren.
Erster Mord
Richard Charles Mallory, Inhaber eines Elektronikgeschäfts, wird zum ersten bekannten Opfer.
Ende der Mordserie
Nach mindestens sieben Morden endet Wuornos' Tötungsserie in Florida.
Festnahme
Aileen Wuornos wird in Florida verhaftet.
Verurteilung
Wuornos wird für schuldig befunden und zum Tode verurteilt.
Hinrichtung
Aileen Wuornos wird im Staatsgefängnis von Florida durch Giftinjektion hingerichtet.
In the late 1980s, Wuornos worked as a street prostitute soliciting clients along Florida's highways. Her hunting ground became the roadsides where vulnerable men picked up women they assumed were sex workers. Her first confirmed victim was Richard Charles Mallory, a 51-year-old electronics store owner from Clearwater, Florida, murdered on November 30 or December 1, 1989. Wuornos would later claim Mallory beat, raped, and sodomized her in an abandoned area—a self-defense justification that would evolve considerably during her arrest and trials.
Over the following year, she killed at least six more men. The victims included a construction worker, rodeo worker, trucker, retired police chief, and others. She shot them, stole their vehicles, and robbed their valuables. One victim, Peter Siems, was never found; Wuornos was never tried for his death. Her modus operandi was consistent: she would accept rides, shoot her victims, and disappear into Florida's criminal underworld.
Wuornos was arrested in January 1991 after pawning items belonging to victims Mallory and Antonio using an alias. Fingerprints on pawn shop cards identified her. She initially confessed to six or seven killings and claimed self-defense against sexual assault, but later admitted she killed for money and profit.
Her first trial, held January 14–27, 1992, focused on Richard Mallory's murder. The prosecution used Florida's Williams Rule to introduce of her other crimes, a strategy that painted a damning portrait of a rather than a desperate woman acting in self-defense. Testimony from her girlfriend Tyria Moore proved crucial. On January 27, 1992, she was found guilty of first-degree . Four days later, she received a death sentence.