Kentucky Vampire Clan
2 deaths
On November 29, 1996, four teens and an adult from a self-described
"Vampire Clan" in Kentucky were arrested in Baton Rouge,
La., for bludgeoning to death a Florida couple. At first authorities
feared the daughter of the dead couple, had been abducted by her
parents' killers. Soon, they realized she too was a suspect, along
with her former boyfriend and three other vampire friends. Eventually,
authorities determined that Heather -- the daughter of the murdered
-- did not know of her parent's murder until she got in the car
with her buddies, and therefore was not a suspect in the case.
"They apparently like to suck blood. They cut each other's
arms and suck the blood. They cut up small animals and suck the
blood. They honestly believe they're vampires," a Murray, Kentucky.,
police detective told the media. The teens became attracted to vampires
because of a best-selling role-playing game. However, this crew
took their roles a little too seriously. Heather had told friends
she was a demon in past lives and had talked with spirits during
human blood-drinking rituals.
Rod Ferrell, 16, leader of the so-called Vampire Clan, told a friend
had become possessed with the idea of opening the Gates to Hell,
which meant he would have to kill a large, large number of people
in order to consume their souls. By doing this, Ferrell believed
he would obtain super powers. He also told friends that his sign
was a "V" with dots on each side signifying himself and
the members of his clan. Cigarette burns in the shape of a "V"
were scorched onto the body of the adult Wendorf, along with two
pairs of dots on each side of the letter.
Prosecutor Brad King said he wouldn't seek the death penalty against
Dana L. Cooper, 19, and Charity Lynn Keesee, the two female members
of the clan. However, he will seek the death penalty for Ferrell
and Scott Anderson, 17, who allegedly did the bludgeoning. After
defense attorneys requested separate trials, Circuit Judge Jerry
T. Lockett tentatively scheduled trials for Ferrell, Anderson and
Keesee in February 1998. Cooper has not waived her right to a speedy
trial and could be judged as early as May.
The afternoon of the killings, Heather Wendorf and Ferrell performed
a blood drinking ritual in a cemetery to induct, or "cross
over," her as a fellow vampire. "The person that gets
crossed over is like subject to whatever the sire wants... Like
the sire is boss basically. They have authority over you."
In the cemetery, investigators say, she and Ferrell talked about
their plans to leave town. Ferrell allegedly discussed killing her
parents, but she told him not to harm them.
Ferrell, Heather and others had plotted for seven months through
letters and phone conversations to run away together. Considered
misfits when they met at Eustis High School, the two found solace
in each other's company. When Ferrell later moved to Kentucky, they
stayed in touch.
Friends have described Ferrell as hostile and prone to animal torture.
He may have had a troubled family life as well. His mother, Sondra
Gibson, pleaded guilty in Kentucky last November to trying to entice
a 14-year-old boy into having sex as part of a vampire initiation
ritual.
John Goodman, a Kentucky cult member who didn't travel with Ferrell
to Florida, said his friend "had become possessed with opening
the Gates to Hell, which meant he would have to kill a large number
of people in order to consume their souls. By doing this, Ferrell
believed that he would obtain super powers."
When questioned by investigators, Heather said the only reason
she went with the group was because she had no place to go and feared
she would be blamed for the murders. She said she learned about
the murders during the trip and was distraught at hearing her parents
were dead. |