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  2. Kenneth Allen McDuff (March 21, 1946 - November 17, 1998) was an American serial killer from Texas. In 1966, McDuff and an accomplice kidnapped and murdered three teenagers who were visiting from California. He was given three death sentences for these crimes but avoided execution after the 1972 U.S. Supreme Court ruling Furman v. Georgia.

  3. Sep 14, 2024 · Kenneth McDuff is an American serial killer responsible for as many as 14 murders across Texas from the 1960s to the 1990s.

  4. The six-foot-four inch McDuff would take his victims to the brink of death and revive them to resume his sadistic sexual tortures. McDuff’s name became synonymous with a revolving door prison system and triggered a major overhaul of the penal code in Texas.

  5. Kenneth McDuff was an American serial killer suspected of at least 14 murders, and served time on death row from 1968 to 1972 and again in the 1990’s. Born on March 21, 1946, he was from central Texas and had three siblings.

  6. www.texasmonthly.com › true-crime › free-to-kill-2Free to Kill – Texas Monthly

    • Aching to Prowl
    • Justice For Mcduff, Inc.
    • “My Family’S Got The Money”
    • “Please, Not Me!”

    The McDuffs weren’t the friendliest family in Rosebud when Kenneth was growing up—in fact, they were downright weird—but they weren’t white trash either. They worked hard, saved their money, and regularly attended the Assembly of God church. Kenneth’s father, J. A. McDuff, was a cement finisher who made a lot of money in the business during the bui...

    Two times in 1969 and again in April 1970, Kenneth McDuff came within a few days of his execution date, and each time he was granted stays. McDuff probably wasn’t sweating it. Only a handful of executions had taken place in the United States in the two years before he was convicted and none in the time he had been on death row. And the case of Furm...

    In his six years on death row and his seventeen years among the general prison population, Kenneth McDuff wasn’t necessarily a model prisoner, but he knew how to keep his shirt clean. Hard cases like McDuff are given maximum leeway: As long as they are not putting a knife into someone or openly smuggling drugs, they can do almost what they please. ...

    Sheriff Larry Pamplin and his friends in the U.S. marshal’s office in Waco, the McNamaras, sensed that McDuff was back on the prowl long before they could prove it. “The most frustrating part,” says Pamplin, “is that we knew he was going to kill someone. We just didn’t know when or where.” In any case, it wasn’t clear what they could do about it. U...

    • (512) 320-6900
  7. Jul 15, 1999 · In October of 1989, the State of Texas set Kenneth Allen McDuff, the Broomstick Murderer, free on parole. By choosing to murder again, McDuff became the architect of an extraordinarily intolerant atmosphere in Texas.

  8. Dec 14, 2020 · Investigative reporter Robert Riggs traced serial killer Kenneth McDuff’s footsteps from Texas’ Death Row to its Death Chamber at the Walls Unit in Huntsville, Texas. The day before McDuff’s execution, the prison system gave Riggs and his camera crew access to the Texas death chamber.

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