Wuornos claimed she killed in self-defense, but later retracted
Following her arrest in January 1991, Wuornos confessed to killing her victims in a phone conversation with her girlfriend, Tyria Moore, and later on police videotape.
During trial for the murder of her first victim, 51-year-old Richard Mallory, Wuornos argued she killed in self-defense and testified that Mallory had assaulted and raped her—contradicting her police confession. While Mallory did have a criminal history—previously serving prison time for attempted sexual assault—it was not entered into court as evidence.
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Investigators hold up photographs of Aileen Wuornos and her first victim, Richard Mallory.
“I have to say it. I killed them all because they got violent with me and I decided to defend myself,” Wuornos explained of her victims, according to Mary Hart’s book Fatal Women: Lesbian Sexuality and the Mark of Aggression. “I’m sure if after the fightin’ they found I had a weapon, they would’ve shot me. So I just shot them.”
Wuornos was convicted of first-degree murder in Mallory’s killing and sentenced to death, and she later pleaded no contest to the murders of David Spears, Troy Burress, and Charles “Dick” Humphreys and submitted guilty pleas for two others.
Eventually, Wuornos retracted her claims of self-defense. She was executed by lethal injection at age 46 on October 9, 2002, in Starke, Florida.
Wuornos’ story is the subject of notable Hollywood adaptations
No matter her actual motivations for murder, Wuornos remains at the forefront of true and fictional crime media through notable screen portrayals.
In addition to Theron’s starring role in Monster, which earned the actor an Academy Award, Lily Rabe played Wuornos in season 5 of TV’s American Horror Story. Another full-length movie, Aileen Wuornos: American Boogeywoman (2021), was inspired by Wuornos’ ill-fated marriage to Lewis Fell. Now, her real story is the subject of Netflix’s documentary, Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers.
And with Netflix already confirming Lizzie Borden as the next subject of its Monster anthology series, it’s apparent that interest in female killers—alleged or otherwise—remains strong.
Watch Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers starting Oct. 30
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Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers begins streaming Thursday, October 30, on Netflix and is produced by BBC Studios in collaboration with NBC News Studios.
According to Tudum, the Netflix documentary “explores the circumstances that shaped her life and crimes, and examines the broader questions surrounding her motivations and the judicial system’s response.”