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Caril Ann Fugate (born July 30, 1943) is the youngest female in United States history to have been tried and convicted of first-degree murder. [2] She was the adolescent girlfriend of spree killer Charles Starkweather, being just 14 years old when his murders took place in 1958. [3]
The 1974 book Caril is an unauthorized biography of Caril Ann Fugate written by Ninette Beaver. Liza Ward, the granddaughter of victims C. Lauer and Clara Ward, wrote the novel Outside Valentine (2004), based on the events of the Starkweather–Fugate murders.
It was based on the 1957–58 murder spree carried out by 19-year-old Charles Starkweather throughout Nebraska and Wyoming. Starkweather is played by Tim Roth. The first half of the miniseries covers the murders. The second half covers the trials of Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate, his 14-year-old girlfriend accomplice. Their increasingly ...
After this murder, Rogers fled to Mississippi, Louisiana, and Florida, killing a woman in each state. ... Robert Colvert, in Lincoln, Nebraska. His 14-year-old girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate ...
A Crime to Remember is an American documentary television series that airs on Investigation Discovery and premiered on November 12, 2013. It tells the stories of notorious crimes that captivated attention of the media and the public when they occurred, such as the United Airlines Flight 629 bombing from 1955.
The film is loosely based on the killing spree of Charles Starkweather and his girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate, as are the later films Badlands (1973) and Natural Born Killers (1994). [2] Starkweather and Fugate killed 11 people in Nebraska and Wyoming between November 1957 and January 1958, when Starkweather was 19 and Fugate was 14.
It's that of Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate, who were convicted of carrying out a murder spree that left 11 people, including Fugate's mother, stepfather and baby stepsister, dead in 1958.
"Nebraska" is sung as a first person narrative of Charles Starkweather, who along with his teenage girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate murdered 11 people over an eight-day period in 1958. Springsteen sings of 10 deaths, as Starkweather had already killed one man prior to their meeting. [3] [4] The song begins with Starkweather meeting Fugate: [5]