Jump to content

Ricky Kasso

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 172.222.62.35 (talk) at 18:32, 30 September 2018. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Ricky Kasso
Born
Richard Allan Kasso Jr.

(1967-03-29)March 29, 1967
DiedJuly 7, 1984(1984-07-07) (aged 17)
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
Other namesThe Acid King, The Say You Love Satan Killer
EducationHigh school dropout

Richard Allan "Ricky" Kasso Jr. (March 29, 1967 – July 7, 1984) murdered his 17-year-old friend Gary Lauwers in Northport, New York, on June 16, 1984. Two other teens, Jimmy Troiano and Albert Quinones, were present at the murder, which took place in the Aztakea Woods of Northport while all four were high on what they believed to be mescaline, but was most likely LSD.

The murder became sensational news in New York City and across the nation due to the torture of Lauwers and alleged Satanic ritualistic aspects of the murder. The murder took place during a period when there was much public concern[1][2][3] over the effects of Satanic and occult content in heavy metal music and in role-playing games. Kasso was wearing an AC/DC T-shirt at the time of his arrest and was a fan of groups such as Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and Ozzy Osbourne.

Biographical background

Kasso was the son of a local high school history teacher and football coach at affluent Cold Spring Harbor High School. Kasso was often thrown out of his home as a young teen and lived on the streets of suburban Northport, New York, usually sleeping in the local woods, or in the cars, garages, backyards and houses of friends. He often took drugs, mainly marijuana, hashish, LSD, PCP, and purple-microdots of what he believed to be mescaline, but was most likely low-grade LSD. He tended to consume all of his drugs, but had on occasion dealt drugs in Northport as well. Kasso dabbled in the occult and Satanism and was possibly acquainted with the members of a loosely organized group of friends who referred to themselves as the "Knights of the Black Circle". There are reports[citation needed] that he participated in Satanic ceremonies, mostly in Northport, and is said to have celebrated Walpurgisnacht at the infamous Amityville Horror house in 1984. Kasso also expressed to friends his interest in Anton LaVey's book The Satanic Bible. On at least one occasion, Ricky's parents admitted him to the South Oaks Psychiatric Hospital (formerly known as the Amityville Asylum) in Amityville, New York for drug rehabilitation and psychiatric care.

In the year prior to the murder, Kasso had been arrested for digging into a colonial-era grave inside a local cemetery. Less than a month after his arrest for this crime, Ricky contracted pneumonia and was treated at Long Island Jewish Hospital. During his hospital stay, his parents tried to convince the doctors to commit him for involuntary psychiatric care. However, the conclusion of the psychiatrists was that Kasso exhibited antisocial behavior but was neither psychotic nor a violent danger, and Kasso was released upon recovering from his bout with pneumonia.

Murder

The conflict between Kasso and Lauwers had started some time earlier when Lauwers stole 10 bags of PCP from Kasso's jacket, after he had passed out at a party. Kasso confronted him soon after the incident, prompting Lauwers to immediately return five of the ten bags of PCP. Lauwers also promised to repay Kasso $50 for the five bags of PCP that had been used. Kasso reportedly beat Lauwers on four separate occasions. On the night of the murder, Kasso visited the small gazebo in the new Cow Harbor park and borrowed a radio from a friend. He then invited Lauwers to get high with him, Troiano and Quinones. The group walked to Aztakea woods, set up camp and ingested several doses, or "hits", of what they believed to be mescaline. The drugs they ingested were tablets called "purple microdots", and while they were erroneously referred to as mescaline on the street, they were actually most likely LSD. The teens attempted to start a small fire, but all of the available firewood was too wet and would not ignite. Lauwers used his socks, as well as the sleeves from his denim jacket, as kindling to start the fire.

At some point during the night, the situation escalated into violence. Kasso scuffled with Lauwers, bit him on the neck and stabbed him in the chest. Kasso continued his assault on Lauwers, and Quinones later claimed that Troiano helped Kasso and held Lauwers during the attack. During subsequent testimony he provided under immunity, Quinones later claimed that Troiano did not assist Kasso. Lauwers was stabbed somewhere between 17 and 36 times and his eyeballs had been sliced out during the stabbing. During the attack, Kasso allegedly commanded Lauwers to "Say you love Satan", but Lauwers is said to have instead replied "I love my mother". After the attack, Kasso and Troiano covered Lauwers' body with leaves and small branches.

Aftermath

In the aftermath, Kasso bragged about the murder to friends. Kasso claimed Satan manifested in the form of a black crow after killing Lauwers, and that the crow had cawed; something he interpreted as Satan's approval of the murder. Kasso even brought several disbelieving teens to view Lauwers' decomposing body before he and Troiano returned to the woods to bury the decomposing remains in a shallow grave. However, it wasn't until two weeks went by, on July 1, that the murder was reported to the police via an anonymous tip. On July 4, 1984, police used dogs to search Aztakea woods and recovered the decomposing and mutilated body of Gary Lauwers. Kasso and Troiano were arrested the next day. On July 7, Kasso committed suicide by hanging himself in his jail cell.

Jimmy Troiano signed two confessions that he later recanted. Quinones gave witness account that Troiano helped Kasso during the murder, but later denied this during his testimony at Troiano's trial. Due to Quinones' drugged state at the time of the killing, his testimony was brought into question and Troiano was acquitted of second-degree murder in a trial by jury in April 1985.

Books, films and musical recordings about the murder

Books

  • Say You Love Satan (published October 1, 1987 by Dell Books; ISBN 0-440-17574-7) by David St. Clair, a heavily fictionalized telling of the events that is no longer in print. For his book, St. Clair plagiarized several portions of "Kids in the Dark", an article by David Breskin for Rolling Stone, and Breskin considered legal action.[4]

Documentaries

  • The Devil Worshippers (1985, TV), episode of ABC news program 20/20, featuring the Lauwers murder
  • Devil Worship: Exposing Satan's Underground (1988, TV), prime-time episode of Geraldo narrated by Geraldo Rivera, also featuring the Lauwers murder[5][6]
  • Satan in the Suburbs (2000, TV), directed by Scott Hillier
  • Killer Kids (2012, TV), episode "Occult Killers", directed by Jean Leclerc for The Biography Channel, featuring the Lauwers murder

Films

  • Where Evil Dwells (1985), directed by Tommy Turner and David Wojnarowicz. Kasso is portrayed by Scott Werner.
  • My Sweet Satan (1994), directed by Jim Van Bebber. He plays "Ricky Kasslin", a character based on Kasso.
  • Black Circle Boys (1997), directed by Matthew Carnahan. It was very loosely based on the events in Northport. "Shane Carver", the character very loosely based on Kasso, is played by Eric Mabius.
  • Ricky 6 (2000), also known as Ricky Six, Ricky 666 and Say You Love Satan, directed by Peter Filardi. "Ricky Cowen", the character based on Kasso, is portrayed by Vincent Kartheiser.
  • Under Surveillance, aka Dark Chamber (2006), directed by Dave Campfield. It was very loosely based on the events in Northport.

Albums and songs

See also

Notes

  1. ^ There were two famous suicidal deaths in the 1980s that led to trials in U.S. courts, one involving Judas Priest and a second involving Ozzy Osbourne.
  2. ^ Several political groups advocated censorship and/or ratings for rock music, most notably Tipper Gore's Parents Music Resource Center and Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority.
  3. ^ A history of music censorship is given in Deflem, Mathieu. 1993. "Rap, Rock, and Censorship: Popular Culture and the Technologies of Justice." Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Chicago, May 27–30, 1993. Another reference is Lynxwiler, John and Gay, David, 'Moral boundaries and deviant music: public attitudes toward heavy metal and rap', Deviant Behavior, 21:1, 63 - 85.
  4. ^ http://davidbreskin.com/magazines/3-features/kids-in-the-dark/
  5. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/1988/10/26/business/program-on-satan-worship-spurs-controversy-at-nbc.html
  6. ^ /
  7. ^ Schenectady Gazette - May 1, 1987
  8. ^ Browne, David (2008). Goodbye 20th Century: A Biography of Sonic Youth (First ed.). Da Capo Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-306-81515-7.
  9. ^ http://foetus.org/content/discography/releases/wiseblood-dirtdish
  10. ^ https://www.facebook.com/ehc44/posts/567412979949485
  11. ^ http://www.tonedeaf.com.au/186410/wheatus.htm
  12. ^ http://www.verbicidemagazine.com/2011/01/27/interview-wheatus/
  13. ^ Hatton, Leslie (1 August 2016). Satanic Panic: Pop-Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s. FAB Press. p. 143. ISBN 1903254868.
  14. ^ https://www.straight.com/article-329393/vancouver/kids-are-not-all-right
  15. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOT0BNPqHFI
  16. ^ http://thequietus.com/articles/16296-electric-wizard-time-to-die-review-2
  17. ^ http://www.hornsup.fr/a-7632/chronique/ranger
  18. ^ "FISTULA: Ohio Kings Of Sludge-Fueled Miserycore To Release Longing For Infection Full-Length; New Track Streaming + Preorders Available | Earsplit Compound". www.earsplitcompound.com. Retrieved 2016-07-18.

Further reading

In Rolling Stone magazine:

  • "Kids in the Dark" by David Breskin (November 22, 1984)[1]
  • "Kids in the Dark" by David Breskin (June 11, 1992)[2]

In Newsday (Long Island, New York):

  • "A Shared Secret: Murder in Northport" by Thomas Maier and Rex Smith (August 12, 1984)
  • "The Murder They'd Rather Forget" by Joshua Quittner (April 16, 1987)
  • "The Theater of Suburban Rage" by Joseph C. Koenenn (April 16, 1987)
  • "Upstate Suspect Has LI Past" by Monte R. Young (January 16, 1993)

In the Toronto Sun:

  • "The Acid King" by Max Haines (July 17, 1988)[3]

In the Philadelphia Daily News (Pennsylvania):

  • "Satanic Slaying Rocks a Village" by Bill Reinecke (July 11, 1984)

Chronology of the trial in the New York Times (available online)

  • "Youth Found Hanged in L.I. Cell After His Arrest in Ritual Killing" by Robert D. Mcfadden (July 8, 1984)
  • "Teenager Indicted on L.I. in Ritual Slaying of Youth" by Michael Norman (July 12, 1984)
  • "'Satanic Ritual' Is Now Ruled Out in June Slaying of Youth in L.I. Woods" by Lindsey Gruson (December 27, 1984)
  • "Jury Selection Begins in Stabbing Death of Teenager in Northport" by Lindsey Gruson (March 27, 1985)
  • "L.I. Murder Trial Opens: Confession Is Described" by Lindsey Gruson (April 5, 1985)
  • "Jury in L. I. Case Is Given Details of Ritual Death" byy Lindsey Gruson (April 9, 1985)
  • "Trial Makes Young Visitors Uneasy" by Lindsey Gruson (April 11, 1985)
  • "L.I. Youth Called Lucid on Stabbing" (April 17, 1985)
  • "Defense Lawyer in L.I. Trial Loves a Good Murder Case" by Lindsey Gruson (April 18, 1985)
  • "Story of Murder May Be Illusion, Expert Testifies" by Lindsey Gruson (April 19, 1985)
  • "Closing Arguments Made in Trial of Youth Accused in Drug-Induced Slaying on L.I." by Lindsey Gruson (April 23, 1985)
  • "Jury in L.I. Slaying Meets for 7 Hours" (April 25, 1985)
  • "L.I. Jury Acquits Defendant in Killing of Youth in Woods" (April 26, 1985)