- Ed Gein - Wikipedia
He also confessed to killing two women: tavern owner Mary Hogan in 1954, and hardware store owner Bernice Worden in 1957 Gein was initially found unfit to stand trial and confined to a mental health facility
- Victims Suspects - Edward Theodore Ed Gein
It took the police a total of three years to identify Ed Gein as Mary Hogans killer Because police hadn't found her body or any report of her missing they didn't think that her case was a murder Bernice Worden was a 58 year old women who worked at a hardware store in Plainfield
- Edward Gein | Murderpedia, the encyclopedia of murderers
Gein's first known murder victim was 54 year-old Mary Hogan, who disappeared from the tavern she ran in December 8, 1954 Gein apperently shot her with a 32 mauser pistol In November 17, 1957 during the investigation on Gein's property her face was found on one the skull caps that he converted
- Ed Gein: Biography, Murderer, Grave Robber, ‘Monster’ Season 3
Ed Gein, center, admitted to killing Bernice Worden and Mary Hogan In 1968, he was convicted of first-degree murder in Worden’s death but was also declared insane at the time of the killing
- Body of Ed Gein’s final victim, Bernice Worden, is found - HISTORY
In 1954, Gein shot and killed saloonkeeper Mary Hogan, piled the body onto a sled and dragged it home On November 16, Gein robbed Worden at the local hardware store she owned and killed
- Ed Gein: A Timeline of His Life and Crimes
Ed shoots Mary Hogan at her bar in the town of Bancroft and takes her body back to his farm Her disappearance remains unsolved until 1957 Hardware store owner goes missing on opening day of deer hunting season Police find her body in Ed Gein’s house that evening
- Murder Victims - Ed Gein
Ed Gein was linked to over ten missing persons cases, but was only convicted of killing two women: Bernice Worden and Mary Hogan Bernice Worden was a fifty-eight year old hardware store owner, and Mary Hogan was a fifty-four year old tavern owner
- Living a Nightmare: The Strange and Frightening True Story of Ed Gein . . .
Mary Hogan, a local bar owner disappeared on December 8, 1954 Hogan’s face was found in a paper bag at Gein’s house Gein was known to frequent her tavern which was seven miles from his house
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