New Interview Footage of Ed Gein Confessing to His Victims LEAKS | HO~

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Plainfield, Wisconsin — Nearly seven decades after Ed Gein’s gruesome crimes shocked the world and inspired a generation of horror films, new interview footage has surfaced—revealing the infamous “Butcher of Plainfield” calmly confessing to his victims and providing chilling details about his motivations, his methods, and his unthinkable life of secrecy.

The leaked tapes, reportedly recorded during Gein’s initial interrogations in late 1957, offer a rare, unfiltered look at the mind of one of America’s most notorious killers. For true crime historians, the footage fills in long-missing gaps and forces a new reckoning with the legacy of a man whose actions have haunted popular culture for generations.

The Horror Begins: A Town in Shock

On November 16, 1957, Plainfield’s 600 residents awoke to a nightmare. Bernice Warden, a well-known hardware store owner, had vanished. Her son, Frank, returned from deer hunting to find the store unlocked, the cash register open, and a trail of blood leading out the back door. The last receipt was made out to Ed Gein, a local handyman known for his shy demeanor and odd habits.

Police arrived at Gein’s isolated farmhouse just outside town. What they discovered would traumatize even veteran law enforcement. In a shed behind the house, Bernice Warden’s body was found hanging upside down from an overhead pulley, gutted like a deer, decapitated, and drained of blood. The horror only deepened as investigators searched the house.

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Inside, they found a scene straight out of a nightmare: human skulls turned into soup bowls, chairs upholstered in human skin, lampshades crafted from flesh, a belt made from women’s nipples, boxes of severed noses, and a collection of dried genitalia. On the walls, the skinned faces of nine women were displayed as macabre decorations. Human organs were stored in the refrigerator, with a heart sitting on the stove. The remains of at least 15 bodies were scattered throughout the home.

The Interview: Gein’s Chilling Calm

The newly leaked footage shows Ed Gein sitting across from investigators, his posture relaxed, his voice almost childlike. When asked about the nails found in Bernice Warden’s severed head, Gein explains, “I was going to hang her head on the wall as decoration.” He describes his collection of body parts matter-of-factly, as if discussing antiques rather than evidence of murder.

In the footage, Gein details how he selected his victims—often women who reminded him of his mother, Augusta. He explains his grave-robbing technique, noting that the skin from long-dead bodies was “too dry and hard to work with,” forcing him to seek “fresh material.” Gein’s confessions are devoid of emotion, delivered with the same calm he used to babysit neighborhood children and perform odd jobs around town.

When asked about his infamous “woman suit”—a full-body outfit stitched together from tanned human skin—Gein admits he would wear it at night, “pretending to be my mother.” He describes walking around the house and even outside, dressed in the suit, channeling the presence of Augusta, the woman who dominated his life and warped his sense of reality.

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Roots of a Monster: Family, Isolation, and Obsession

The leaked interviews also shed light on Gein’s upbringing—a toxic mix of abuse, religious fanaticism, and isolation. Born in 1906, Ed Gein grew up on a remote farm with his brother Henry, alcoholic father George, and his domineering mother Augusta. Augusta’s strict Lutheran beliefs were weaponized against her sons, teaching them that all women (except herself) were “vessels of sin and temptation.”

Augusta isolated the family from the outside world, homeschooling the boys and forbidding friendships. Daily Bible studies focused on divine retribution and the inherent evil of sexuality. Ed, shy and awkward, became utterly dependent on his mother, describing her as his “first love and best friend.” After his father’s death in 1940 and the suspicious death of his brother Henry in 1944, Ed was left alone with Augusta, who suffered a debilitating stroke and died in 1945.

Gein’s reaction to his mother’s death was catastrophic. He walled off her bedroom and sitting room, preserving them as shrines, while the rest of the house fell into squalor. He began visiting cemeteries at night, exhuming bodies of women who resembled Augusta, bringing home skin, bones, and organs. The interviews reveal Gein’s attempts to “keep his mother alive,” transforming his grief into grotesque acts of reverence.

From Grave Robber to Killer

Gein’s grave-robbing spanned from 1946 to 1957, but eventually, the need for “fresh skin” led him to murder. In December 1954, Gein killed Mary Hogan, a tavern owner, and brought her remains back to his farmhouse. He joked to locals about her whereabouts, but no one suspected the truth.

The footage captures Gein’s confession: “I needed new skin. The old bodies were too dried out.” He describes the murder of Bernice Warden in similar terms, focusing on the practical difficulties of his “projects” rather than the horror of his actions. Gein’s detachment is striking—he seems genuinely confused by the outrage his crimes provoked.

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When asked if he had sexual relations with the corpses, Gein flatly denies it, citing “the smell” as the deterrent. He mentions a friend named Gus, who allegedly helped him dig graves, though investigators never confirmed the existence of this accomplice.

The Fallout: A Town Forever Changed

The news of Gein’s arrest and the discoveries at his farm spread rapidly, turning Plainfield into the epicenter of national horror. Residents who had known Gein as a harmless eccentric were shattered by the revelations. The farmhouse became a grim tourist attraction until it mysteriously burned down in 1958—an act of arson most locals welcomed.

Gein was charged with first-degree murder for Bernice Warden’s killing. He pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, and unlike many defendants, he genuinely qualified. Deemed unfit to stand trial, Gein was committed to Central State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. After a decade of psychiatric treatment, he was finally declared competent in 1968. The trial lasted just a week; Gein was found guilty but legally insane, and he was returned to psychiatric care.

Throughout his institutionalization, Gein was described as a model patient—polite, quiet, and engaged in crafts. Whether he truly understood the nature of his crimes remains unclear. He died in 1984 at age 77, buried in Plainfield Cemetery beside the family members whose deaths had shaped his life and madness.

Legacy: The Real-Life Boogeyman

The leaked interview footage has reignited public fascination with Ed Gein, reminding Americans that the roots of horror fiction are often found in real life. Gein’s story inspired classics like “Psycho,” “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” and “The Silence of the Lambs.” But the reality is darker and more complex than any film.

Experts who have reviewed the footage say it provides crucial insights into Gein’s psyche—a man shaped by abuse, isolation, and obsession, who transformed grief into a campaign of desecration and murder. The tapes reveal a chilling disconnect between Gein’s actions and his understanding of them, a man who saw his crimes as “projects” rather than atrocities.

For the town of Plainfield, the legacy of Ed Gein remains a wound that never fully healed. For the rest of America, his leaked confessions serve as a haunting reminder: sometimes, the real monsters are not found in fiction, but in the quiet, lonely houses on the edge of town.