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Phillip Ronald Paske [a] (June 11, 1953 – November 9, 1998) [1] was an American criminal, murderer, and child pornographer from Chicago, Illinois.He was the closest associate and personal friend of sex trafficker John David Norman [2] [3] and was briefly an employee of serial killer John Wayne Gacy.
Finally, in July 1978, the state's attorney's office filed a charge of battery against Gacy, but he was permitted to remain free. Rignall's case was never resolved in court. The battery charge was still pending in December 1978 when 15-year-old Robert Piest vanished in Des Plaines, Illinois, after encountering Gacy at the pharmacy where Piest ...
In an exclusive excerpt from ‘Postmortem: What Survives The John Wayne Gacy Murders,’ Courtney Lund O’Neil details her mother’s friendship with Robert Piest, Gacy’s final victim
McCoy encountered Gacy at Chicago's Greyhound bus terminal in the early hours of January 3, 1972, while he waited for a connecting bus to his father's home in Nebraska due the following noon; he was lured to Gacy's home and subsequently stabbed to death. His body was later buried in the crawl space beneath the property, and was only recovered ...
Gacy, who buried the bodies of his victims in the crawl space below his home, was convicted in 1980 for the murders of his known victims, with several still in the process of being identified to ...
Gacy was eventually charged with the murder of 33 young men, 26 of whose remains were found buried on his property. He was executed by lethal injection on May 19, 1994.
Gacy implicated Paske, Norman and two other PDM employees as his accomplices in murder. He described Paske as dangerous and stated that he "pimped girls, boys, for sex or movies." [28] [29] In a 1992 interview, Gacy claimed Norman and the Delta Project were producing snuff films of young boys, possibly including some of Gacy's victims. [23]
Meanwhile, Gacy himself begins a sadistic game of cat-and-mouse as he tries in every way to manipulate and outwit the police. After eventually achieving two search warrants, Kozenczak finds a large amount of incriminating evidence, and later 29 bodies buried throughout John Gacy's property; the remaining four are found dumped in a nearby river ...