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Tony Ciagli Serial Killers

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Fifteen-year-old Tony Ciaglia had everything a teenager could want until he suffered a horrific head injury at summer camp. When he emerged from a coma, his right side was paralyzed, he had to relearn how to walk and talk, and he needed countless pills to control his emotions. Abandoned and shunned by his friends, he began writing to serial killers on a whim and discovered that the same traumatic brain injury that made him an outcast to his peers now enabled him to connect emotionally with notorious murderers. Soon many of America’s most dangerous psychopaths were revealing to him heinous details about their crimes—even those they’d never been convicted of. Tony despaired as he found himself inescapably drawn into their violent worlds of …show more content…

It’s like when you’re a kid in the dark and you think of all of the scary movies you’ve seen and you can picture what’s under the bed. But part of you hopes that’s not what there and part of you knows that’s not what’s there, but you don’t look. Just in case. Well, the images formed from the words of these killers is what’s under the bed. They are there, they don’t care, and they can’t be fixed. Hopefully that made sense. A teenager gets into a serious accident at summer camp and nearly dies. Upon awakening, he has changed. He needs to relearn absolutely everything, including how to eat, how to walk, how to live life again. He has an uncontrollable rage, managed only by intense medication. He loses all his friends, and retreats to books and the internet. There, he becomes obsessed with serial killers, and on a whim, he writes one a letter. They reply This isn't fiction. Tony Ciaglia really found himself in exactly this position, and placed himself as the only friend to some of the US's worst killers. Over the course of his correspondence, he tries to draw out more information about their crimes, and even tries to elicit more confessions, information and locations of undiscovered victims. He even goes to visit some of these killers in prison, and discovers that not all of them are as friendly as they seem. (They are killers, after all. Who'd have

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