

"Neither Susan or Allyn ever held Guy responsible for what he did.

In fact, Weber and his parents moved 18 times before he turned 16 - something he blames on his sisters, Susan and Allyn, who he says would always tell their brother of their whereabouts. Weber maintains that there is not much known about the Kempers because the family grew distant after the murders. I'm guessing he went to kill him but couldn't do it without hurting someone innocent." "When my parents found out it was Guy who did the killings of the girls, my dad disappeared for two or three days with his guns. I found out later that while she was pregnant with me and the reason he was sent to my grandparents was because he came to the house one day and started following her. Says Weber: "My mother passed away in 2009, she was terribly affected by personally.

He called his grandfather "senile" and transferred the hatred of his mother on to his grandmother, whom he shot in the back and head while she was home alone, then shot his grandfather upon his return in the driveway. When Kemper found out his dad had remarried a German immigrant, Elfriede, and had a son, David, he ran away from his home in Santa Cruz to find his dad in Los Angeles.īut Edmund II sent his son to his grandparents, whom Kemper hated. Maude was an extra in Gone With The Wind and a writer for Redbook McCall's. They're brothers through Kemper's father, Edmund II, who it's claimed walked out on the family when Kemper was only nine years old - something Weber denies - devastating his son, and was a catalyst for the killing of the elder Edmund's parents, Edmund I and Maude.
Coed killer victims serial#
Weber is now speaking out to break the myths surrounding his infamous sibling and denounce the celebrity status that serial killers have in society, to the point that he says people "fantasise" to be like Kemper. No one in the family has agreed to an interview before since Kemper's atrocities have always kept the family divided. If he came around to my family, I'd shoot him on sight." "All I know is that he gets to live better there than most people on the streets. I would suspect he is holding back a good 20 to 30 per cent of the truth about himself, his past, and how he thinks.

I think that he has never told anyone the truth about things he has done. When he was sentenced during his final statement, it's why he threatened to kill the judge and jury if he was ever let out. "But he's smart enough to know that he should never be released because he cannot stop himself from continuing where he left off. This is while feeling zero remorse for what he did. Mostly for killing my grandparents but also for hurting so many people while destroying our whole family unit. "There are several members of the extended family that have claimed they'd hunt Guy down and kill him if he ever got out. Related articlesĮdmund Kemper's cold-blooded murders are featured in the new Netflix crime drama Mindhunter, which is based on FBI agents who interview serial killers including Edmund Kemper. Rather than this be a comfort to the family, they still live in fear of the monster, who was known as "Guy" by his loved ones. On July 25, the California Parole Board quietly denied him parole and it was listed on the website that he wouldn't be eligible again for another seven years. Last year, lawyer Scott Currey - who represented Kemper during his previous parole hearing in 2007 - claimed that he was happy in prison and content to stay there for the rest of his life, saying: "His feeling is that - and this is his belief - no one's ever going to let him out and he's just happy, he's just as happy going about his life in prison." The 68-year-old, who stands at 6ft 9 inches (2.05m) and weighs over 250lbs (113kg), was given eight life sentences and is currently living with the normal prison population at the California Medical Facility in Vacaville.Īnd now, his chilling story has been depicted in the new Netflix crime drama, Mindhunter, which follows a group of FBI special agents as they interview imprisoned serial killers in an attempt to gain insight into the minds of cold-blooded murderers such as Jerry Brudos and Richard Speck. Kemper chopped up the corpses and had sex with every one, including his domineering mother, Clarnell Strandberg, whom he beheaded and used as a dartboard.
