Three Most Disturbing Girls In History

2020-10-05 15:20:18 Written by Andrew Fennelly

Brenda Spencer

 

The 16-year-old student behind the Cleveland Elementary School Shooting in San Diego in 1979. Spencer came to a troubled environment and lived in almost absolute poverty. Neighbors said Spencer indicated opposition toward policemen, had spoken about the shooting, and had discussed doing something huge to get on TV.

 

Although Spencer showed outstanding skill in photography, winning first prize in a Humane Society competition, she was normally bored in school; one teacher remembered repeatedly asking if she was watchful in class. Later, during tests, while she was in custody, it was found that Spencer had a wound to the temporal lobe of her brain. It was referred to as an accident on her bicycle.

 

In early 1978, the staff at a facility for problem pupils, to which Spencer had been referred for truancy, notified her parents that she was suicidal. That summer, Spencer, who was known to hunt birds in the area, was arrested for firing out the windows of Cleveland Elementary with a BB gun, and burglary.

 

A psychiatric examination arranged by her probation officer approved Spencer to be admitted to a mental hospital for depression, but her father declined to give approval. For Christmas 1978, he provided her a Ruger 10/22 semi-automatic .22 caliber rifle with a telescopic eye and 500 rounds of ammunition.

 

This gift would later motivate Spencer to commit two counts of homicides, one count of assault with a fatal weapon, and injure 9 others from her home across the street from the school.

 

Tried as an adult, she pleaded guilty to all charges and was given an endless penalty. As of 2020, she stays incarcerated. Her popular goal for the shooting; “I don’t like Mondays” continues immortalized to this day in the song “I Don’t Like Mondays” by The Boomtown Rats.

 

Beth Thomas

People who lived through the ’80s might recall this incredible case that reverberated around the entire world. 

Remembered as “the psychopath little girl,” young Beth Thomas threatened her whole family. However, it began with a terrible motivation.

 

Everything that occurs during childhood leaves a mark on the child. That’s why it’s so valuable to have good emotional development in this constructive time. The difficulty is that sometimes this doesn’t happen, and troubles come out later.

 

That’s what happened to Beth. She went through shocking things, finally receiving herself the nickname, “the psychopath little girl”. The topic of the documentary “Child of Rage”, Thomas went through alarming child abuse from a very young age differing from physical to sexual abuse. The years of abuse resulted in her cruelly assaulting her adoptive brother and trying to stab her adoptive parents.

 

Through years of therapy, Thomas was able to express remorse for her efforts and was able to scream for the first time. She is now working as a nurse and gives talks on parenting.

 

 

Sharon Carr

 

She is recognized as one of the youngest female killers in Britain.

 

When Sharon was growing up, she saw her mama and her live-in partner wind up in the hospital due to a brutal fight they engaged in.

 

Publicly, she did not (initially) show any unusual attitude. Secretly, she began testing with killing neighborhood pets.

 

One time, her mother saw that Sharon was drawing alarming pictures illustrating violence. Later, her mother felt too overwhelmed to deal with Sharon and decided to put her in foster care. But turns out Sharon didn't do too good there, and after a short interval returned home feeling twice rejected and furious.

 

One night, Sharon was out cruising the roads, in the company of two boys. It was around 2 am. She was only 12 years old.

 

Maybe her mother hadn't set any limitations, or if she had, they were not executed. Or Sharon clearly didn't care to obey them.

 

On this night, Sharon spotted a young woman who looked distraught, walking home lonely. The woman was an 18-year-old beautician, Katie Rackliff. Sharon offered her a lift.

 

The following morning, Katie was found dead, with 30+ stab wounds. Her breasts and genitalia had been mutilated. Police believed it was a rape crime and the case went unsolved for 2 years.

 

On the same date as Katie's stabbing, two years later, Sharon stabbed a fellow school mate and was imprisoned for it. Police found Sharon's diaries, which made for horrific reading and revealed the truth about Katie's death.

 

Sharon had penned about Katie: “I wish I could murder her again…” She went on to review how the act of stabbing and murdering gave her a rush of sexual joy. The second entry read: “Oh damn. I've received a taste for redrum. And god do I wish to get drunk.” Did I mention she was just 12 years old when this murder occurred?

 

Sharon was accused, found guilty, and imprisoned for the homicide. In prison, she proved too hard for the prison team to handle. She was shifted to a high-security mental hospital. She has never shown remorse for what she did. When she was 21, she wedded a guy she met at Broadmoor (the high-security mental hospital she was being held in). Her spouse of choice had killed his own mother by gouging her eyes out.