The John Wayne Gacy murders
A body is recovered from John Wayne Gacy’s house in 1979 and transferred to a sheriff’s van.
(Sally Good/Chicago Tribune)Chicago Tribune
During the chilly nighttime hours on Dec. 22, 1978, police began one of the grisliest excavations in the history of American crime. For weeks to come, Chicago and the nation watched in horror as the crawl space under the home of 36-year-old John Wayne Gacy, a onetime children’s clown, was revealed to be a makeshift tomb. The bodies of 29 young men were eventually recovered from the home in unincorporated Norwood Park Township. Four others were found in Illinois rivers. The first victim died in 1972, the last in 1978, only 10 days before Gacy’s arrest. For decades, authorities could not identify eight of the victims.
A photo from March 19, 1979, shows that the backyard structures at John Wayne Gacy’s home in unincorporated Norwood Park Township have been demolished
(Walter Kale / Chicago Tribune)At the Des Plaines police station, John Wayne Gacy covers his face with his manacled hands as he emerges after an all-night questioning session on Dec. 22, 1978.
(Roy Hall / Chicago Tribune)The medical examiner’s truck is backed up to John Wayne Gacy’s house in unincorporated Norwood Park Township and bags of remains are loaded for transport to the Cook County morgue on Dec. 22, 1978.
(Frank Hanes / Chicago Tribune)John Wayne Gacy, 36, is removed from the Des Plaines police station to be taken to a hospital for evaluation on Dec. 23, 1978.
(William Yates / Chicago Tribune)John Wayne Gacy, 36, is taken from the Des Plaines police station to a hospital for evaluation on Dec. 23, 1978.
(William Yates / Chicago Tribune)John Wayne Gacy’s house at 8213 W. Summerdale Ave. in unincorporated Norwood Park Township at the time of his arrest on Dec. 21, 1978.
(William Yates/Chicago Tribune)Sheriff’s officers remove another body from the home of John Wayne Gacy, 36, on Dec. 23, 1978, in unincorporated Norwood Park Township.
(Karen Engstrom / Chicago Tribune)Workmen who extricated more bodies from the crawl space beneath the home of John Wayne Gacy emerge on Dec. 27, 1978, in their mud-caked high boots.
(Sally Good/Chicago Tribune)A large crowd of curiosity-seekers gathers outside the home of John Wayne Gacy, where more bodies were found Dec. 28, 1978.
(James Mayo / Chicago Tribune)John Wayne Gacy, 36, is taken from the Des Plaines police station to a hospital for evaluation on Dec. 23, 1978.
(William Yates/Chicago Tribune)Sheriff’s officers remove another body from the home of John Wayne Gacy, 36, on Dec. 23, 1978.
(Karen Engstrom/Chicago Tribune)Marko Butkovich and his wife, Terezia, talk with reporters in their Lombard home on Dec. 30, 1978, after learning that the remains of their son, John, had been found beneath the home of John Wayne Gacy. Terezia is holding a photo of John.
(George Quinn / Chicago Tribune)The parents of Robert Piest, Harold and Elizabeth, leave the Des Plaines Circuit Court on Dec. 29, 1978. John Wayne Gacy is charged with the murder of their son.
(Walter Kale / Chicago Tribune)More bodies are removed from the home of John Wayne Gacy on Dec. 28, 1978.
(Karen Engstrom / Chicago Tribune)Cook County Chief Medical Examiner Robert Stein examines a case tag of a John Wayne Gacy victim in Crypt No. 1, which was set aside for the victims in the case in 1978.
(Gerald West/Chicago Tribune)Firefighters from the Channahon Fire Department search for bodies in the John Wayne Gacy case on Dec. 23, 1978, on the Des Plaines River near Morris.
(Frank Hanes / Chicago Tribune)Investigators carry the remains of a body found beneath the garage floor of the home of
Sheriff’s officers use air hammers in 1979 to break up the remaining concrete floor of
Harold and Elizabeth Piest enter the funeral for their son Robert at Our Lady of Hope Church in Rosemont on April 18, 1979. Robert Piest was killed by John Wayne Gacy.
(William Yates / Chicago Tribune)A police car carrying John Wayne Gacy (second from right) arrives in Rockford on Jan. 26, 1980, where the accused murderer was transferred for jury selection in his trial.
(Val Mazzenga / Chicago Tribune)The jury en route to court at 26th and California in Chicago on Feb. 8, 1980, for the John Wayne Gacy trial.
(Karen Engstrom/Chicago Tribune)One of John Wayne Gacy’s attorneys, Sam Amirante, center, arrives at for the first day of the trial on Feb. 6, 1980.
(Michael Burdys / Chicago Tribune)Marion Gacy, mother of
Eugenia Godzik, center, mother of victim Gregory Godzik, speaks briefly to the media after John Wayne Gacy was convicted March 12, 1980.
(Donald Casper / Chicago Tribune)Workers demolish John Wayne Gacy’s house on April 10, 1979.
(Arthur Walker/Chicago Tribune)The lot where
Personal effects seized from the home of
Cook County Chief Medical Examiner Robert Stein and sculptor Betty Pat Gatliff speak during a news conference July 14, 1980. Gatliff made facial reconstructions for each of the nine unidentified victims of convicted mass murderer John Wayne Gacy.
(Walter Kale/Chicago Tribune)Eugenia Godzik, left, with her daughter, Eugenia, center, leave a hearing in which John Wayne Gacy was sentenced to death on March 13, 1980. Godzik is the mother of Gacy murder victim Gregory Godzik.
(James Mayo / Chicago Tribune)Services are held for the nine remaining unidentified victims of convicted mass murderer John Wayne Gacy at the Abbey Chapel in Oak Ridge-Glenoak Cemetery in Hillside on June 12, 1981, more than two years after their remains were pulled from the crawl space of Gacy’s home.
(James Mayo/Chicago Tribune)Summerdale Avenue, where John Wayne Gacy’s ranch home once stood, is a weed-choked lot on June 5, 1984.
(Jerry Tomaselli/Chicago Tribune)