Sunday, July 23, 2023

The Ypsilanti Ripper on This Day in History


This day in history: The seventh and last of the "Co-ed Murders" took place on this day in 1969. The Michigan Murders were a series of highly publicized killings of young women committed between 1967 and 1969 in the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area of Southeastern Michigan by an individual known as the Ypsilanti Ripper, the Michigan Murderer, and the Co-Ed Killer. All of the victims were young female students in southeastern Michigan. In 1967 and 1968, two students at Eastern Michigan University (EMU) had been killed in a similar fashion. From March 20, 1969, two girls and three college students were killed. Karen Sue Beineman, like three of the others killed, had been an EMU student in Ypsilanti. On August 1, another EMU student, a 22-year-old Canadian, would be arrested and charged with Beineman's murder. Though suspected by police in the other murders, he would only be tried and convicted for Beineman's killing and would be sentenced to life imprisonment.

The Investigation Discovery channel has broadcast an episode focusing upon the Michigan Murders. This episode, A New Kind of Monster, was first broadcast December 10, 2013 as part of the series A Crime to Remember.


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