gein in A Sentence

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    Gein and his mother were now alone.

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    Gein 's property.

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    As for Ma' Gein, she died a year later in 1945.

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    The defense maintained that Gein was a slave to his deviant impulses and could not appreciate the consequences of his actions.

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    After extensive psychological and psychiatric testing, to no-one's great surprise it was established that Gein was not mentally fit to stand trial.

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    In the end, Ed Gein was found guilty of first degree murder and then subsequently deemed criminally insane at the time of the murder.

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    Ed Gein was a murderer who would keep the skin and bones of his victims and even dig up fresh graves for the same purpose.

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    When the last receipt filled out by Worden turned out to be for a gallon of antifreeze, Gein became the prime suspect in her disappearance.

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    Under questioning, Gein said that he went to three graveyards in the area and exhumed the recently buried bodies of nine women and brought them home.

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    What was up for debate was the question of Gein's sanity, specifically if he understood the wrongfulness of his deeds at the time of the incident.

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    Fortunately for all but two of Gein's known victims(tavern owner Mary Hogan in 1954 and Bernice Worden on November 16, 1957), they were already dead when Gein first encountered them.

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    Two experts testified at the trial that Gein suffered from a severe mental disorder rendering him unable to control his actions to live a life within the limits of the law.

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    Gein also claimed he went in a daze dozens of other times to the cemeteries with the intent of digging up freshly buried bodies, but“woke up” from his daze before doing the deed and instead went home.

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    When Bernice Worden's went missing with a trail of blood leading to the store's backdoor, her son reported to the police that Gein had been in the store the night before and said he would be returning the next morning, looking to buy some antifreeze.

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    A slight hiccup in the trial came about as the result of Sheriff Art Schley bashing Gein's head against a brick wall(among other violent interrogation techniques that required the intervention of other officers) to get him to confess, rendering Gein's confession inadmissible in court.

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