AUSTIN -- The Texas Senate approved legislation Wednesday that would ban criminals from profiting from the sale of personal items such as letters or fingernails. The sale of such items, dubbed ...
Would you buy a serial killer's artwork? What about their hair? A new podcast investigates the gruesome world of true crime memorabilia. Sarah is CNET's senior copy editor in London. She's often found ...
Eddie Routh, the man who killed “American Sniper” Chris Kyle and his friend Chad Littlefield four years ago at a gun range in Erath County, is serving life in prison without the possibility of parole ...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – From sports jerseys to old TV show posters, owning some type of memorabilia is nothing unusual. "Murderabilia," however, is a different story. If you've never heard of it, it's ...
Andy Kahan has locks of Charles Manson’s hair, a personal letter from serial killer Edmund Kemper, and prison-issued socks worn by "Toolbox Killer" Lawrence Bittaker. Kahan became an “avid buyer” of ...
A form letter from Martha Stewart, written on her trademark Living stationery and sent to supporters during her prison stay, sells for $25. An envelope hand-addressed by jailed Panamanian General ...
Spurred in part by new controversy over the online offering of a letter written by convicted Fort Hood mass shooter Nidal Hasan, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn on Friday proposed legislation to block ...
FRESNO, Calif. These days, you can find virtually anything online. And for prices ranging from $5 dollars to $2,500 dollars, you can buy items such as artwork, signatures, and even underwear from ...
EBay Item 260051441470-- serial killer John Wayne Gacy souvenir 1978 from civic event. The item up for bid is a ballpoint pen with Gacy's name printed on the shaft -- one of presumably thousands of ...
I didn’t know much about the bizarre U.S. market in “murderabilia” until I became an unwitting part of it. But I now know more than I’d like to about the buying and selling of souvenirs linked to ...
Online auctioneer eBay has announced it no longer will accept listings on its popular Web site for crime memorabilia linked to famous murderers. In a notice posted on its Web site on Thursday, eBay ...