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Kenneth Bianchi
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Kenneth Alessio Bianchi (born May 22, 1951) is an American serial killer. Bianchi and his cousin Angelo Buono, Jr., together are known as the Hillside Stranglers. He is serving a term of life imprisonment in Washington.
Early life Bianchi was born in Rochester, New York to an alcoholic prostitute who gave him up for adoption two weeks after he was born. He was adopted at three months by Frances Scioliono and her husband Nicholas Bianchi in Rochester.
Bianchi was deeply troubled from a young age, and his adoptive mother described him as being "a compulsive liar who had risen from the cradle dissembling." He often worried Frances with his penchant for trance-like daydreams. Despite having above-average intelligence, he was an underachiever who was quick to lose his temper.

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Kenneth Alessio Bianchi (born May 22, 1951) is an American serial killer. Bianchi and his cousin Angelo Buono, Jr., together are known as the Hillside Stranglers. He is serving a term of life imprisonment in Washington.
Early life Bianchi was born in Rochester, New York to an alcoholic prostitute who gave him up for adoption two weeks after he was born. He was adopted at three months by Frances Scioliono and her husband Nicholas Bianchi in Rochester.
Bianchi was deeply troubled from a young age, and his adoptive mother described him as being "a compulsive liar who had risen from the cradle dissembling." He often worried Frances with his penchant for trance-like daydreams. Despite having above-average intelligence, he was an underachiever who was quick to lose his temper. He was diagnosed with petit mal seizures when he was five years old and passive-aggressive disorder when he was ten. After Nicholas' death from pneumonia in 1964, Frances had to work while her son attended high school.
Shortly after Bianchi graduated from Gates-Chili High School in 1971, he had pursued a brief marriage with his high school sweetheart that ended after only eight months. Supposedly, she left him without an explanation. As an adult, he dropped out of college after one semester, and drifted through a series of menial jobs, finally ending up as a security guard at a jewelry store. This gave him a great opportunity to steal valuables, which Bianchi often gave to girlfriends or prostitutes to buy their loyalty.
Because of many petty thefts, Bianchi was constantly on the move. It was when he finally arrived in Los Angeles in 1977 that he started spending time with his older cousin Angelo Buono, who was impressed with Bianchi's fancy clothes, jewelry, and stories of getting any women he wanted and "putting them in their place". Before long, they worked together as pimps, and, by late 1977, had escalated to murder. They had raped and murdered 10 women by the time they were arrested in early 1979.
The Killings Bianchi and Buono would usually cruise around Los Angeles in Buono's car and use fake badges to persuade girls that they were undercover cops. Their victims were women and girls aged 12 to 28 from various walks of life. They would then order the girls into Buono's unmarked police car and drive them home to torture and murder them.
- October 17, 1977; Yolanda Washington, 19
- October 31, 1977; Judith Ann Miller, 15
- November 6, 1977; Lissa Kastin, 21
- November 10, 1977; Jane King, 28
- November 13, 1977; Delores Cepeda, 12
- November 13, 1977; Sonja Johnson, 14
- November 20, 1977; Kristina Weckler, 20
- November 29, 1977; Lauren Wagner, 18
- December 9, 1977; Kimberley Martin, 17
- February 16, 1978; Cindy Lee Hudspeth, 20
Committed by Bianchi only:
- January 11, 1979; Karen Mandic, 22
- January 11, 1979; Diane Wilder, 27
After being abused by both men, the girls would be strangled. Other methods of killing such as lethal injection, electric shock, and carbon monoxide poisoning had been tried by the killers but would ultimately be rejected in favor of strangling.
Even while the girls were being killed, Bianchi applied for a job with the Los Angeles Police Department and had even been taken for several rides with police officers while they were searching for the Hillside Strangler.
One night, shortly after they botched their would-be eleventh murder, Bianchi revealed to Buono he had attended LAPD police ride alongs, and that he was currently being questioned about the strangler case. After hearing this, Buono erupted in a fit of rage. An argument ensued at one point during which Buono threatened to kill Bianchi if he did not flee to Bellingham, Washington.
In May 1978 he did flee to Bellingham, joining his girlfriend and son currently living there. On January 11, 1979, Bianchi lured two female Western Washington University students into a house he was guarding. He forced the first student down the stairs in front of him and then strangled her. He murdered the second young girl in a similar fashion. Without the aid from his partner, he left many clues and police apprehended him the next day. A Californian driver's license and a routine background check linked him to the addresses of two Hillside Strangler victims.
Trial At his trial, Bianchi pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, claiming that another personality, one "Steve Walker", had committed the crimes. Bianchi even managed to convince a few expert psychiatrists that he indeed suffered from multiple personality disorder, but investigators brought in their own psychiatrists, mainly the psychiatrist Martin Orne, to pick Bianchi's story apart. When one of the new psychiatrists (Orne) mentioned to Bianchi that in genuine cases of the disorder, there tend to be three or more personalities, Bianchi promptly created another alias, "Billy". Eventually, investigators discovered that the very name "Steven Walker" came from a student whose identity Bianchi had previously attempted to steal for the purpose of fraudulently practicing psychology. Police also found a small library of books in Bianchi's home on topics of modern psychology, further indicating his ability to fake his claimed disorder.
Once his claims were subjected to this scrutiny, Bianchi eventually admitted that he had been faking the disorder. To acquire leniency for himself, he agreed to testify against Buono. However, in actually giving his testimony, Bianchi made every effort to be as uncooperative and self-contradictory as possible, apparently hoping to avoid being the ultimate cause of Buono being convicted. In the end, Bianchi's efforts were unsuccessful, as Buono was in fact convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.
In 1980, Bianchi began a relationship with Veronica Compton, a woman he met while in prison. During his trial, she testified for the defense, telling the jury a false, vague tale about the crimes in an attempt to exculpate Bianchi and also admitting to wanting to buy a mortuary with another convicted murderer for the purpose of having sexual relations with dead bodies. She was later convicted and imprisoned for attempting to strangle a woman she had lured to a motel in an attempt to have authorities believe that the Hillside Strangler was still on the loose and the wrong man was imprisoned. Bianchi had given her some smuggled semen to use to make it look like a rape/murder committed by the Hillside Strangler.
Bianchi is serving his sentence at Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla, Washington.
Connection to other unsolved crimes Bianchi is also a suspect in the Alphabet murders, an unsolved serial murder case from 1971 to 1973 in his home city of Rochester.
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