Henry Lee Lucas
The Whopper

of a Serial Killer
After admitting that he had killed, Lucas was charged with the murders of Kate Rich and Frieda "Becky" Powell. He gave the authorities plenty of evidence, including the decomposed pieces of Becky, and at his June 21 arraignment in the Montague County courtroom, Lucas stated that he'd stabbed Kate Rich to death. But then he went on, waiving his right to an attorney, to say that he'd had sex with the body, cut it into pieces and burned it in a wood stove behind his cabin. "I killed Kate Rich," he told a courtroom full of curious cops and reporters, "and at least a hundred more."

The reaction was a stunned silence. One hundred! Either this guy was an out-and-out liar or he was about to officially become the most proficient serial killer in American history. The judge asked Lucas if he'd ever been diagnosed by a psychiatrist and he said he had not (he was lying, since he'd had several assessments during stints in prison). Yet he added, "I know it ain't normal for a person to go out and kill girls just to have sex with them." In response to the judge's next question, Lucas believed he was competent to stand trial, so he was granted a public defender, Don Maxfield, to represent him. When the judge entered a plea of not guilty for Lucas, the drifter asked, "Will I still be able to go on helping find bodies?" He was urged to discuss it with his attorney.
By June 22, thanks to a front page story, Henry Lee Lucas had become a nationally famous serial killer.


- Some Bad Things
- The Whopper
- Lucas Elaborates
- Lucas in Court
- Ottis
- Meeting of Deviant Minds
- Killing Mom
- Taking Becky
- The House of Prayer
- Kate
- Reunion
- World's Most Dangerous Killer
- Orange Socks
- Handling Lucas
- Whisper of Demons
- The Game
- Shapeshifter
- False Confessions
- Love in Prison
- Legal Challenge
- Bush's Only Commutation
- Final Words
- Bibliography






























