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Kenneth Bianchi has lost his latest bid for freedom, and will remain inside a California prison, where he’s been incarcerated since 1983.
Buono, a Glendale upholsterer, was convicted after a two-year trial of nine of the Hillside Strangler killings in late 1983.
Kenneth Bianchi, the Los Angeles-based serial killer known as the "Hillside Strangler," lost his latest bid for parole after serving more than four decades in prison ...
Bianchi pleaded guilty to five killings in the LA area, committed with his cousin Angelo Buono Jr. He’s still seeking parole ...
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Former FBI agent explains why Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi, now known as Anthony D'Amato, faces significant obstacles ...
Kenneth A. Bianchi, one of the two men convicted in the "Hillside Strangler" murders, was recently denied parole in ...
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KFI AM 640 on MSNParole Denied for One of So-Called Hillside StranglersOne of the so-called "Hillside Strangler" defendants who terrorized the Los Angeles area with a string of killings in the 1970s lost his latest bid for parole Thursday.
The tragic 1979 murders of Bellingham students Karen Mandic and Diane Wilder remain etched in history, as serial killer ...
Kenneth Bianchi, a Rochester native and one-half of the notorious Hillside Strangler pair, is no longer. He has changed his name.
Bianchi’s capture — and excuse for killing In 1979, Kenneth Bianchi, who had left L.A. with his common-law wife and child, became the prime suspect in a double murder in Washington state.
Sheryl Kellison was 17-years-old when she began dating Hillside Strangler Killer Ken Bianchi It was the late 1970s in Southern California. Seventeen-year-old Sheryl Kellison and her friend, Lisa ...
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