It’s chilling to remember that even the world’s worst killers were once innocent children.
The boy in this story would grow up to be Randy Steven Kraft, one of California’s most feared murderers — believed to have killed up to 51 young men between 1971 and 1983.
Born in 1945 in Long Beach, Kraft was the only son of a modest family chasing the postwar American dream. Intelligent and polite, he loved order and control — traits that later turned dark.
A model student and staunch conservative in high school, Kraft studied economics at Claremont Men’s College and joined campus politics. By 1969, after coming out as gay, he was discharged from the Air Force Reserve and began drifting through odd jobs across Southern California.
Behind his mild manner and high IQ, Kraft spiraled into drugs and alcohol. He frequented Long Beach gay bars, where he began hunting young men — Marines, hitchhikers, and runaways who vanished without trace.
In March 1970, police first suspected him in the assault of a 13-year-old boy, but a technicality freed him. Over the next decade, bodies began appearing along highways — victims drugged, tortured, and murdered with methodical precision.
The killings ended in 1983 when police stopped Kraft on the 405 Freeway and found a dead Marine in his passenger seat. Inside his car and home, investigators uncovered drugs, photographs of victims, and a handwritten “scorecard” — over 60 cryptic entries believed to represent murdered men.
Kraft was convicted in 1989 of 16 murders and sentenced to death. He has never confessed, denying all charges even decades later.
Detectives still believe there are many more victims tied to his coded list. To those who’ve met him, Kraft represents the “banality of evil” — ordinary on the surface, monstrous beneath.
As of 2025, Randy Steven Kraft remains on death row in California, unrepentant and silent.
