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Sagsmappe

Albert Fish: The Gray Man Who Hunted Children

How a seemingly ordinary pensioner became one of America's most disturbing serial killers

A figure resembling Albert Fish stands outside a New York City apartment building in the 1930s, dressed in period attire.
BEVIS

Klassifikation:

Serial killer
Cannibalism
Children
Familicide
USA
New York
Washington
Psychopathy

Quick Facts

Gerningsmand(e)Hamilton Howard "Albert" Fish
Offer(e)Grace Budd, Billy Gaffney, Francis McDonnell
GerningsstedWestchester County, New York, USA
Gerningsdato1928-06-03
ForbrydelsestypeKidnapning, mord, kannibalisme
Trial
Sadism
Dismemberment
Unidentified body
Violence
Mental illness
Wrongful conviction
True Crime Podcast 2026
mordssag
domstol
vidner
mystisk dødsfald
uløste sager
politisk kriminalitet
kryptovaluta
finansiel svindel
justitsmordet
forensisk efterforskning
hvidvaskning
amerikanske drabssager
amerikanske kriminalsager
sundhedsbedrageri
vold mod kvinder
mordsager
seriedrab

Albert Fish, known as the Gray Man, the Brooklyn Vampire, and the Werewolf of Wisteria, stands among America's most notorious serial killers. Born Hamilton Howard Fish on May 19, 1870, he spent decades committing unspeakable crimes against children before his capture and execution in 1936.

Fish's documented criminal activity spans at least two decades. In 1910, he tortured a 19-year-old named Thomas Kedden for two weeks at a farmhouse in Wilmington, Delaware. Around 1919, he stabbed an intellectually disabled boy in Georgetown. But these crimes paled against what would follow.

Between July 1924 and June 1928, Fish murdered at least three children. Eight-year-old Francis McDonnell was strangled with suspenders; Fish attempted castration on the boy's corpse. Four-year-old Billy Gaffney fell victim to Fish's depravity, who later confessed to murdering and cannibalizing the child. The most infamous case involved 11-year-old Grace Budd, abducted in June 1928 from her home in New York. Fish dismembered her body and partially consumed her flesh before disposing of the remains at Wisteria Cottage in Westchester County.

Timeline

1 January 1870

Geburt von Albert Fish

Hamilton Howard Fish wird geboren, der später als einer der grausamsten Serienmörder Amerikas bekannt werden sollte.

1 June 1928

Entführung von Grace Budd

Albert Fish entführt die zehnjährige Grace Budd aus Irvington, New York, unter dem falschen Namen Frank Howard.

3 June 1928

Ermordung von Grace Budd

Fish bringt Grace zum Wisteria Cottage in Westchester County und ermordet sie durch Erdrosseln.

11 November 1934

Der entscheidende Brief

Fish schreibt einen detaillierten Geständnisbrief an die Eltern von Grace Budd, der zu seiner Identifizierung führt.

1 December 1934

Verhaftung von Albert Fish

Aufgrund des Briefes wird Fish von der Polizei aufgespürt und verhaftet.

1 March 1935

Prozessbeginn

Der elftägige Prozess gegen Albert Fish beginnt. Er gesteht die Morde an Grace Budd, Billy Gaffney und Francis McDonnell.

12 March 1935

Schuldspruch und Todesurteil

Das Gericht verurteilt Fish zum Tod auf dem elektrischen Stuhl. Der Antrag auf Freispruch wegen Unzurechnungsfähigkeit wird abgelehnt.

16 January 1936

Hinrichtung

Albert Fish wird im Sing Sing Gefängnis in New York auf dem elektrischen Stuhl hingerichtet.

For years, Fish evaded capture. The initial suspect was Charles Edward Pope, the superintendent at Grace Budd's apartment building. The real breakthrough came in 1934 when Fish, in a bizarre move, sent a letter to Grace's mother, Delia Budd. The letter provided investigators with the crucial evidence needed to identify and arrest him. On September 5, 1930, Fish was arrested following this correspondence.

At trial, which lasted ten days, Fish's defense centered on a plea of insanity. Psychiatrists examining him documented an extraordinary record of sexual abnormalities. Dr. Wertham diagnosed Fish with 18 different paraphilias—a catalog of deviance that astonished the medical establishment. Despite these findings, the court found him fit to stand trial and guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Grace Budd.

Fish's confessions painted a horrifying picture of a predator who operated across state lines. He claimed responsibility for attacking children in 23 different states and alleged he had killed over 100 victims. These claims remained largely unverified, with only his conviction for Grace Budd's murder confirmed. Yet the breadth of his confessions suggested a hunter of terrifying scope and duration.

The nature of Fish's crimes—the torture, cannibalism, and sexual mutilation—reflected deeply disturbed psychology. His actions were methodical, suggesting calculation rather than uncontrolled impulse. He stalked his victims, planned abductions, and disposed of evidence with deliberation. What made Fish particularly chilling was his appearance: elderly, frail, unremarkable. He could move through neighborhoods unnoticed, a gray figure blending into the urban landscape.