Daniel Rakowitz

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Daniel Paul Rakowitz is an American murderer and possible cannibal. He was born in 1960 in Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, where his father was a criminal investigator for the U.S. Army. The Rakowitz family moved to Rockport, Texas sometime in the late 1970s. Although it is commonly reported that Rakowitz graduated from Rockport-Fulton High School in 1980, he actually attended and graduated from high school in Refugio, Texas.[citation needed]

He moved to New York City around 1985.[citation needed] An eccentric well known to his East Village neighbors as a marijuana dealer and owner of a pet rooster, Rakowitz founded his own religion - the Church of 966.[1]

In 1989, he walked around Tompkins Square Park in the East Village bragging to some of the people he believed were his disciples that he had killed the woman he believed to be his live-in girlfriend. Monika Beerle, actually a roommate of Rakowitz's, was a Swiss student at the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, and a dancer at Billy's Topless. Several of Rakowitz's friends disputed the notion that Monika was his girlfriend. Nevertheless, by his own confession, he dismembered her body in the bathtub, boiled the parts, and served some of her remains in the form of a soup to the homeless in Tompkins Square Park.[2][3] He said that he had boiled her head and made soup from her brain. He had tasted it, liked it, and thereafter referred to himself as a cannibal. At least one of the people to whom he had told his tale went to police.[citation needed] Rakowitz was arrested shortly thereafter, and led the police to the Port Authority Bus Terminal storage area, where he had stored her skull and teeth.[4]

On February 22, 1991, a New York jury found Rakowitz, then 31 years old, not guilty by reason of insanity for the killing of Monika Beerle on August 19, 1989.[5] In 2004, a jury found Rakowitz no longer dangerous but decided that he is still mentally ill and should remain at the Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center on New York City's Wards Island.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Steiger, Brad. Real Monsters, Gruesome Critters, and Beasts from the Darkside. Visible Ink Press, 2010, page 70
  2. ^ Cantor, Max (10 October 1989). "The Untold Story of the Tompkins Square Murder". The Village Voice. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  3. ^ Myonihan, Colin (June 15, 2004). "Hearing Revisits East Village Killing and Dismemberment". New York Times. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  4. ^ Al Aronowitz (June 1, 2002). "Column 72 - The Strange Case of Max Cantor". The Blacklisted Reporter.
  5. ^ Sullivan, Ronald (February 23, 1991). "Man Acquitted of Killing and Boiling Roommate". New York Times. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  6. ^ "Jury Finds Insane Killer Not Dangerous". New York Times. July 21, 2004. Retrieved 27 February 2022.