Writing the article earlier this week about women who killed
their own mothers made me wonder if there were any sisters who murdered
together. A couple, like Tasmiyah and Jasmiyah Whitehead and Sandra and
Elizabeth Andersen, we discussed already but I found a few more you may not
have heard about.
Delfina and MarÃa de
Jesús González
These girls were some real gangsters. Guinness Book said they were the most prolific murder team of all time. Delfina and MarÃa de
Jesús González, known as Las Poquianchis in the 1950s and ’60s, were sisters
who ran a huge prostitution ring near the city of San Francisco del Rincón in
Guanajuato, Mexico at Rancho El Angel. The sisters would regularly place job
advertisements in the newspaper for new recruits but kidnap those who
responded. The victims were tortured, sold into sexual slavery, and all too often
murdered.
The girls were force-fed drugs after being kidnapped by the
sisters and became addicted. They were sold to pimps and madams at cheap prices
and treated like prisoners. If they disobeyed, became ill or pregnant, or lost appeal,
they were murdered and buried on the premises.
In 1964, three of their victims escaped and alerted
authorities. The police searched the grounds of Rancho El Angel and discovered
the remains of more than 80 women, 11 men, and several fetuses. It was
eventually revealed that the sisters were also responsible for the deaths of numerous
migrant workers as well as wealthy customers in addition to their sex slaves.
The Gonzalez sisters briefly evaded police but were
eventually captured and placed on trial for their murderous deeds. The sisters
were found guilty and given a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison. Delfina
died in jail, while Maria served her sentence and disappeared. At their trial,
it was revealed that a large number of townspeople were connected with the
crimes.
Aged 17, 18 and 19,
these three Russian sisters killed their father for abusing them. Investigators
believe the 17-year-old, Maria, stabbed him about 35 times while her sisters -
Angelina (18) and Kristina (19) - struck his head repeatedly with a hammer and
squirted pepper spray in his face. The sisters say he stopped them from studying,
threatened them with weapons and kept them like slaves.
The 57-year-old, Mikhail had about 40 knife wounds. His body
was lying in the hallway of an apartment block. Friends and neighbors claimed
that Khachaturyan was a tyrannical father and husband, who had developed a
heroin habit and reportedly had connections with the criminal underworld.
Khachaturyan’s abusive behavior drove away his wife, the girls’ mother.
Khachaturyan’s son, in his 20s, also lives away from home.
Left at home with the three girls, Mikhail fitted the family
apartment with cameras to snoop on the girls while he was away, often forbidding
them from going to school, and subjected them to beatings if they dared to disobey
him. Khachaturyan would beat the girls savagely, but would avoid leaving
visible bruises, lest anyone find out the extent of his abuse. However, his
punishments were often more creatively sadistic than simple beatings.
Two sisters, Nicole and Misty Kornegay, 11-years-old and 15-years-old,
were arrested in Florida and charged with the murder of their 16-year-old
brother in 2015. The 15-year-old grabbed a handgun from her parents’ bedroom
and fatally shot her brother sometime before 10 p.m. The 11-year-old helped in
the crime. Both were charged with premeditated murder.
Officials learned of the killing after a police officer in
nearby White Springs ran into the two girls, who told the officer that there
had been a shooting at their home. The 15-year-old told the officer that her
brother had beaten her up earlier in the day, and investigators believe that
prompted the fatal shooting. Once investigations began, a sickening history of
incest and abuse in the family became clear. An uncle was already in prison for
molesting them and video taping it. Florida children’s services had been out
before for the older brother, Damien, having sex with the girls.
These sisters are a little older
than the rest, but I wouldn’t want to piss either of them off. Linda and Charlotte
Mulhall, 30 and 23, were cause of the most hotly covered murder cases in
Ireland's history. The women killed and dismembered their mother's boyfriend,
Farah Swaleh Noor, who they claim physically abused their mother.
Newspapers divulged details of the sisters' troubled
histories, which included prostitution, crime, and drug abuse. On the night of
the murder, the sisters allegedly took ecstasy pills with their mother and the
victim. An argument ensured. One sister hit him in the head with a hammer and
the other stabbed him to death. Afterward, all three women dismembered him.
They cut off his head and penis and burned it in a field and threw the rest in
the river.
The police were notified when part of the victim's leg with
a sock still on it was spotted floating down a river near Croke Park ten days
later. It wasn’t long before police figured out who was responsible. Several
books have been written about this case.
A court found Charlotte guilty of murder and Linda guilty of
manslaughter, and gave them life and 15 years, respectively. Their father, John
Mulhall, hanged himself in Dublin's Phoenix Park when he heard the
verdict.
The Papin sisters are probably the more well-known of all on
this list. They were live-in maids in 1930’s France. They murdered their
employer’s wife and daughter. They had an abusive childhood and spent time in institutions.
They kept to themselves and were only interested in each other. When the lady
of the house fell into a deep depression and started regularly beating the
girls, they decided to kill her. It happened one evening while the husband was
away. The sisters set upon the wife, beating her with a hammer and a pot. They
gouged her eyes out, which were later found in her scarf. When her adult
daughter came to her rescue, they did the same to her. The police later found
them naked in bed together.
The two girls were found guilty and Christine was sentenced
to death. Léa was given the lesser sentence of ten years imprisonment because
it was thought she was retarded and just doing what her sister told her.
Christine's death sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment, which was
common in the case of women. While in prison, she showed acute signs of madness
and an intense longing for her sister. Christine became severely depressed, and
frequently refused to eat. She was transferred to a mental asylum at Rennes,
where she died of cachexia ("wasting away") on 18 May, 1937. Léa
Papin was released from prison in 1943, her sentence having been reduced to
eight years because of good behaviour. She then lived in the town of Nantes,
where she was joined by her mother and earned her livelihood as a hotel maid by
assuming a fake identity.[4] She was believed to have died in 1982, but this
was questioned in 2000 by the French filmmaker Claude Ventura, who made a
documentary film, En Quête des Soeurs Papin (In Search of the Papin Sisters),
in which he claimed to have found Léa alive in a hospice in France. She was
partly paralyzed as the result of a stroke and could not speak, although she
was shown in the film. Ventura's film claimed that Léa died in 2001.
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