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Descubre la historia de Albert Fish, el Ogro de Nueva York, uno de los criminales más infames y aterradores de la historia. Explora sus crímenes y el impacto que tuvo en la sociedad, con un análisis profundo de su perfil psicológico y las investigaciones criminales que llevaron a su captura. Este video ofrece un vistazo escalofriante a los oscuros recovecos de la mente de uno de los asesinos en serie más notorios. ¡No te pierdas esta historia real llena de horror y misterio!

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Celebridades
Transcripción
00:00...
00:00I greet you from my office.
00:19I'm browsing through the photographs in my archive as usual.
00:23How difficult it is for a criminal, for a psycho-killer,
00:27hide the evidence of his crime, right?
00:30It is very difficult for a psychopath to hide his victims.
00:35That is why they often resort to disintegration,
00:39They resort to destroying their victims, hiding them in some way.
00:44Here I am looking at Fritz Hartmann's photos.
00:47Fritz Hartmann, who was considered the cannibal of Hamburg,
00:52He tore his victims to pieces, mainly boys and girls,
00:56and then he would stuff them into sausages and eat them with chips.
01:01It was his main dish.
01:03It was his gastronomic exquisiteness.
01:05Human meat sausages.
01:07This is how he tried to hide his evidence.
01:09You know that when a criminal, a murderer, a psychopath, a psycho-killer,
01:14dismembers its victims, seeks, uh, has four purposes.
01:19One of them is simply to complicate the subsequent investigation.
01:22Trying to make investigators, detectives, not find even the slightest evidence.
01:30That would be the first ambition.
01:31Complicate everything.
01:33The second, to facilitate transportation.
01:36A dismembered victim is much easier to transport than one that is not.
01:42That is the second purpose.
01:44The third, that of revenge.
01:45This is very cruel.
01:46Because the psychopath thinks that murder is not enough.
01:51That he must take revenge.
01:52His hatred is such that it dismembers the victim.
01:55He dismembers her.
01:56As if he were bringing about a punishment even more atrocious than death itself.
02:02But the fourth and secret dark ambition is the sexual motive.
02:08The sexual pleasure that a psychopath acquires when he destroys an inert, barren victim.
02:16In the case of A. H. Fiss, I believe that all the factors were present.
02:23It is a creepy story, considered one of the ogres of New York.
02:28A story that took place at the beginning of the 20th century.
02:31And tonight, I'm going to tell you, from my huge office.
02:35Fiss was born in New York in 1870.
02:50He started acting when he was 40 years old.
02:52Therefore, in 1910.
02:55For 18 years, he unleashed a maelstrom of evil and terror.
02:58However, his tremendous and devastating actions went practically unnoticed by everyone.
03:07At that time, many children disappeared.
03:10Especially on the cold, desolate streets of a big city like New York.
03:16Hicks, was acting until 1928.
03:20Grace Wood was to become his latest, terrified victim.
03:25A little girl, not even a teenager.
03:29That was the main focus, that was the main attraction for this fool.
03:35For this crazy psychopath.
03:37This is the terrifying case of Fiss.
03:40The ogre of New York.
03:41Thanks to the actions of a detective.
03:43Of those New York detectives who acted in their trench coats and wide-brimmed hats.
03:48And with his insight, thanks to the performance of Inspector Wilkins.
03:51Well, the truth of a case that shook New York society was discovered.
03:56The case of the ogre.
03:57The Fiss case.
03:59A very gentle old man.
04:01A normal old man.
04:03Of life and average type.
04:05That did not make one think in the slightest that he could be a tremendous and dark criminal.
04:13He had six children.
04:14He had grandchildren.
04:15I adored them.
04:16He took care of them.
04:18He took them out for walks.
04:19He gave them all the treats he could.
04:22But until he was 60, he was killing other children.
04:25Who were not exactly from his family.
04:27They were not his grandchildren.
04:28Why did he do it?
04:29Let's try to delve into the personality of this cruel and ruthless psycho-chewer.
04:34Everything began to be known in that summer of 1928.
04:49Grace Wood was the latest victim.
04:51But no one could suspect Fiss.
04:56No one had the slightest suspicion about Fiss.
04:59And he showed up at the Woods' house ready to take charge, to look after little Grace.
05:05One day, Grace disappeared.
05:08I tell you that Fiss offered himself as a babysitter.
05:13He was a gentle old man.
05:15He didn't have the most abrupt gesture.
05:19The children went to him.
05:21The children were pleased with him.
05:23They hugged him, they kissed him.
05:24They let themselves be taken to the park.
05:26Accompany to the cinema.
05:28He was such a good-natured old man.
05:30How could the Woods have suspected?
05:32That that old man was going to end the life of his Grace.
05:36When Grace disappeared, they didn't even suspect him.
05:38The slightest suspicion about Fiss.
05:40Therefore, Fiss disappeared from their lives.
05:42Forever.
05:43Forever.
05:45But in 1934, it reappeared.
05:48And anonymously.
05:52In that year of 1934,
05:54A heartbreaking letter arrived at the Wood home.
05:59In that letter,
06:01a criminal, because he certainly was a criminal,
06:03he told in detail
06:05with all the details
06:07with all the most minute details you can imagine.
06:10How he had ended little Grace's life.
06:13He said the girl hugged him, kissed him,
06:17but that nothing else would be done,
06:20He grabbed her by the neck and strangled her.
06:22He ended his life.
06:23It was easy, he said.
06:24In a few minutes.
06:25I could have forced her, but I didn't.
06:28I just enjoyed the meat.
06:32I just wanted that.
06:35I started to break it down.
06:36I started to tear her apart.
06:38Slowly, progressively.
06:41For nine days I was eating it.
06:43That's what he stated in his letter.
06:45For nine days,
06:46was taking out little pieces of his body.
06:48He was preparing them with exquisite taste.
06:54More than a murderer, he seemed like an excellent gourmet.
06:57He really liked a kind of fried food he made with the girl's flesh.
07:01Carrot pieces, bacon.
07:04And some ingredients that he used.
07:07For nine days he ate it.
07:09You can imagine the situation for the parents.
07:16Reading that letter, they quickly notified the police.
07:19Fortunately for everyone, Inspector Wilkin appeared.
07:25Inspector Wilkin was a great guy.
07:27He was a formidable guy, worthy of a film noir.
07:31He quickly picked up the letter.
07:33And it was sent to the departments that investigate these things.
07:36within the New York police force.
07:39Researchers, experts, analysts, scientists,
07:42They worked hard on that letter.
07:45It was horrible what it was carrying, the content it carried.
07:48Some proof had to be produced.
07:50You had to look at what that writing was like.
07:52Compare it with others.
07:53It was necessary to search among all the criminals,
07:55among all the psychopaths in the city.
07:57The murderer of those children had to be located quickly.
08:00Because they began to suspect that Grace Wood had not been the only victim.
08:03That there were more, others more.
08:05Hundreds of children had disappeared in recent years.
08:08Was this it?
08:09Was he a serial killer?
08:11They would soon find out.
08:14One of the analysts noticed a small detail.
08:18A mark, a sign on the letter.
08:22The prospecting began, the research began.
08:26Wilkin left no stone unturned.
08:30He compared that brand with other letterheads from different departments in New York City.
08:35And finally he came to the certainty that this letter came from none other than
08:41that of a kind of brotherhood, a kind of confraternity, a kind of society
08:47where the New York drivers were protected.
08:51A New York chauffeur insurance company.
08:56Wilkin began questioning all the members of that brotherhood, of that insurance company.
09:02I'm asking you one by one.
09:05Finally, he found the key.
09:08One of the employees, named Lee Siskoski, had stolen material from that insurance company.
09:17Seeing what was coming, Siskoski confessed.
09:19Yes, I have stolen material, but I have not done anything wrong.
09:21Quickly, the detective asked him,
09:25Where is this material?
09:26Where is?
09:26Where did you leave it?
09:27Where is?
09:29Siskoski began to sing.
09:30He sang in a clamorous manner.
09:32One part in my house, and the other part in a boarding house on 52nd Street.
09:38At 200 52nd Street, there was indeed a boarding house.
09:42And there was the material.
09:43Wilkin had ruled out the possibility that Siskoski was the culprit.
09:49Therefore, he decided to take shelter in that boarding house.
09:52It was installed.
09:53There he took a room and waited patiently for three weeks.
09:58He investigated and observed everyone who lived in that boarding house.
10:01Soon, he noticed a very peaceful old man with a kind expression.
10:10There he had rented a room.
10:13Inspector Wilkin entered that room.
10:17And he discovered with horror what was before him.
10:22A trunk, full of newspaper clippings.
10:27About many missing children.
10:29And above all, a catalogue with all the photographs, with all the clippings, with all the comments,
10:34All articles dedicated to the great cannibal of Hamburg.
10:38To Fritz Hartmann.
10:40The one who stuffed children and ate them like sausages.
10:45He also discovered an old Bible in that chest.
10:50Wilkin just had to wait.
10:53When Fiss appeared, Wilkin interrogated him, very harshly.
10:59Fiss broke down.
11:01And in two minutes he confessed everything.
11:03Indeed, he had been.
11:05Everyone wanted to investigate Fiss.
11:11Everyone wanted to know what had been going on in the mind of that psycho-killer.
11:16How many boys, how many girls had he torn to pieces, how many boys, how many girls had he eaten.
11:22Fiss started with the stories.
11:24Because these psychopaths always sing.
11:26In the end, it's as if they were very proud of what they've done.
11:29He began to describe, in great detail, all his actions.
11:35It will never be known how many children he killed.
11:39Between 1910 and 1928, there is an arc that varies in numbers.
11:44From the 15 he initially confessed to, to the 400 he assumed.
11:50Between 15 and 400 children were victims of the horrible Fiss.
11:57Wilkin had hunted one of New York City's top ogres.
12:01Soon, psychiatrists wanted to know more.
12:06And they began to delve into the personality of that psychopath.
12:12The teacher's work is worthy of praise...
12:16...Waderman.
12:17Waderman was a typical psychiatrist.
12:20The typical specialist in these psycho-killers.
12:23These were difficult times for the United States.
12:25There were many cases to investigate.
12:27The experts, in truth, had plenty of material.
12:31They had specialized.
12:32Waderman was one of those men.
12:34A strange man.
12:35A man who is always, always, always reserved, silent.
12:38With the eyes of Sherlock Holmes.
12:43Within a few days, he realized that he was dealing with a disturbed man.
12:48In the face of a disturbed mentality.
12:49And he went so far as to say that Fiss was undoubtedly a sadomasochist.
12:56He liked pain.
12:58He felt pleasure when he experienced pain in his flesh.
13:04Fiss confessed that one of his favorite hobbies was soaking small cotton balls.
13:11Burn them and insert them into the anus of their victims.
13:13He did it to himself too.
13:17Imagine what that could be like.
13:19A cotton ball soaked in alcohol, lit and inserted into a person's anus.
13:26Well, that's what he did to himself and his victims.
13:29He also inserted needles between the nails and the flesh.
13:35Between the nails and the fingertips.
13:37He said he didn't like it that much because it caused him too much pain.
13:41The horrible thing about the case was when they put Fiss in for a deep medical study.
13:46In one of the x-rays they observed, very surprised,
13:49subsequently concussed, as in Fiss's testicles,
13:53There were no less than 29 rusty needles.
13:58The greatest pleasure for this man was inserting needles into his testicles.
14:04I was 29.
14:05Horror swept through the streets of New York.
14:13It was the year 1934.
14:16And Fiss, of course, was going to be subjected to a tremendous trial.
14:22As you can imagine, many parents who had lost their sons or daughters,
14:28For they immediately crowded at the doors of the courts.
14:31They wanted justice, they wanted to know if their children had been victims of that thief.
14:36It was impossible to catalogue everything Fiss did in those years.
14:42It was impossible to deduce, given the mental complexity of this man,
14:46How many victims had fallen under his arms, under his hands, under his mind.
14:53I tell you, between 15 and 400.
15:01Fiss was delighted.
15:03I was having a really good time.
15:04Because it was beginning to become clear that the punishment he was going to receive was nothing more and nothing less than the electric chair.
15:12Those days were tremendous, exhausting.
15:16Fiss, very ujano, commented.
15:18If I am sentenced to the electric chair, it will be the greatest pleasure of my life.
15:23I had never faced a situation of such enjoyment.
15:30It will be the best day of my life.
15:32I'm going to have a really good time.
15:33Nothing better than the electric chair.
15:36That's what he claimed.
15:39The court, the jury, came to the same conclusion.
15:43He is sick, yes, he is mentally ill, but he also deserves to die.
15:49The psychiatrists supported the position of admitting him, of continuing to study him.
15:56But New York demanded an experiment.
16:00The sentence finally arrived.
16:03Indeed, Fiss was sentenced to die in the electric chair.
16:08A very common practice in the 1930s.
16:15A small detail.
16:17The 29 rusty needles were not removed.
16:21They were not extracted from that body.
16:25Fiss, anxious, nervous, awaited the sentence.
16:30I waited for the sentence, I waited for the final moment.
16:33I was almost looking forward to it.
16:37Finally, in January 1936, about to turn 66,
16:44Fiss was led to the chamber where the lethal chair was located.
16:49His last words were,
16:52How is it possible that I got here?
16:55That was the last thing he said, How did I get here?
17:00You can imagine that his children were stupefied.
17:03They didn't even tell their grandchildren.
17:07The first volley arrived.
17:08But he didn't die.
17:15Experts say that those rusty needles may have caused a short circuit.
17:20The truth is that the first shock didn't work, he didn't die.
17:23Thinking about him, one can imagine that he had a great time, that he was short, with so much pleasure and so much joy.
17:33But the prison authorities were determined to put an end to it once and for all.
17:37And they applied a second and more energetic discharge.
17:42Fiss's body convulsed.
17:46Smoke began to come out of his head.
17:48Finally it was all over.
17:51The ogre of New York was dead forever and his nightmare had gone with him.
17:57Extreme cases, tremendous cases.
18:00Cases that mark humanity in some way.
18:04Good and evil.
18:06That gentle old man.
18:08That little old man with such a good-natured expression.
18:11It had been one of the worst dreams for New York City.
18:18May God forgive him.
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