Jeeps keep brother of Budding Serial Killer busy

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Crash, Mar 2, 2006.

  1. Crash

    Crash Guest

    Jeeps Keep Brother of a Budding Serial Killer Busy


    This is a true story.

    After graduating high school, I didn't know what to do with my life.
    I had a notion to attend Akron University in 1984, but that was soon
    squashed. Thankfully, it turns out for the good!

    My mother remarried in 1984 just after I graduated High School. She
    moved into her new husband's home. It was her 3rd marriage, not
    because of divorce, but rather she was widowed twice. Her first husband
    committed suicide in 1969, and her second died in 1982 from bad heath,
    and a very bad disposition I might add. I came from a family that had
    little hope for the future.

    My mother has issues - serious issues. It was common for me to hear
    the repeated phrase from her, "I wish I were just dead!" I was
    young and naive and didn't understand then, that my mother suffers a
    mental illness. Maybe part genetic, and certainly part circumstantial,
    but whatever the case, I certainly never heard a positive message from
    my mentors. I having red hair and being slightly smaller than the
    average person of my age didn't exactly foster the ideal environment
    for a good self image either.

    The 1984 & 1985 was a dizzying time. I'd hoped to move into my
    mother's new home until I found a way to get into and through
    college. Well, the invitation never came. So, I asked if I could move
    in. The reply was, that would be an inconvenience and they never
    planned for me such a place. So, I retracted the notion back in 1984
    and for the next year I scraped a living washing cars at local car
    dealerships in Ravenna.

    That year my mother began having problems in her marriage and home. She
    overdosed on medicine once and after I received a strange incoherent
    phone call from her, I rushed over and took her to the hospital not
    knowing what she had done. She was alright, aside from the fact that
    she was incessantly cursing her husband for no apparent reason. Hey -
    she definitely had issues that year. She was living with her husband in
    a home that had 6 people: she and her husband, his son, his daughter,
    and their spouses. That's a hard thing for my mother - she's a
    social recluse - has religious issues too, and is so judgmental it is
    hard to explain. Many occasions she has accused people of being demon
    possessed. Well, that kind of attitude doesn't make for a healthy
    social structure if you know what I mean.

    I was feed up with those circumstances and I decided that I'd make a
    career out of the military, so in 1985 I joined the US Air Force in
    hopes that a brighter future did actually exist. In the spring of 1987,
    several months after settling into my first assignment at Eielson AFB,
    Alaska, my mother showed up, looking for me to provide her a place to
    live, having left her husband for the Nth time. That lasted a week and
    just as I was to finalize where we were going to live and what to do
    for a practical car for her, off she went ... left me spinning in the
    dust cloud. She returned to Ohio.

    What was happening I've concluded was that one of my recently
    acquired step-brothers, by my mothers' last marriage, had harbored
    great feelings against her. A greater hatred than most people will
    know. He lived with her for a year and couldn't abide her
    "issues." Two families came together under one roof in 1984, and
    that set the stage for certain disaster.

    My step-brothers name is Glenn L. Benner II, and if you have seen Akron
    Ohio news, you'll know that Feb. 7th, 2006, he was put to death under
    Ohio laws. His rampage of hate I come to believe is a byproduct of many
    things: his mother had past away, he turned to drugs, alcohol,
    attempted suicide, and finally the addition of a judgmental step-mom
    with mental issues introduced into the family home. Hence spurred his
    rampage of hate and became a budding serial killer. So, he became
    caught, convicted, and the families tried to move on with their
    lives... well... make your own conclusion!

    In February 2004, I spoke my last words to my mother. This is going to
    be hard to believe, but God strike me down if it isn't true. I asked
    my mother and step-father if they still harbored the ring that they
    claimed to be from one of Glenn L. Benner II dead victims. You see 19
    years after the murders; they still had the jewelry they recovered from
    the family car - jewelry that Glenn L. Benner II hid there. My mother
    was awestruck for me to even speak of such a thing. My step father
    looked at my disturbed, paranoid mother and said, "It doesn't
    matter now - she's dead!"

    That was the last time I spoke to them.

    I've told this story to the Akron Beacon Newspaper reporter Stephanie
    Warsmith, channel 3 News reporter Vic Gideon, and the Captain of the
    police department in Akron - Captain Monchalow.

    Captain Monchalow has been on the case for 20 years, and has since paid
    a visit to the Benners'. He hoped that he could return the jewelry to
    the grieving victim's families. He asked the Benners' if they had
    such a ring that I spoke to him about. Can you guess what the Benners'
    reaction was? They weren't in any trouble by returning the ring, but
    they denied knowing anything about it. Typical.

    Glenn L. Benner II, convicted killer, is my step-brother. I didn't
    know him well, I'd only met him a couple times between summer 1984
    and 1985. My mother (Margaret A. Mansfield) married his father (Glenn
    Lee Benner) in 1984 just after I graduated from Rootstown High School.
    I really mean when I say "thank God that I was not involved!" You
    may say it was good fortune or some coincidence for the good, but if I
    have anything to say, then it would be that someone on high has smiled
    on me.


    It helps greatly to understand the background of (not my step family)
    my real blood related extended family. Certainly, I do regret having
    spent so much of my time and effort into their well being. I am the
    youngest of 5 siblings and most fortunate. I've had the opportunity
    to observe and understand the fiasco-based nature of their conducts.

    Having done years a research into family history, I have discovered
    that our family suffers from a genetic-based mental illness. The
    afflicted can't see past cynicism and judgmentalism to understand
    acceptable ethical conduct. It naturally breeds anti-social personality
    disorder, bi-polar-ness, and even schizophrenia. Things that society
    looks upon as good, to the afflicted are a scourge. Good becomes bad to
    them, and the bad becomes good. The affliction, or should I say
    disease, produces a backwards philosophical nightmarish existence.

    How else would you explain these?

    · In January 8, 1969, my father is said to have committed suicide at
    the back door of his home in Cuyahoga Falls. Later that morning, my
    second oldest brother discovers a corps. (Personal comment: guns create
    awfully loud bang. Interesting isn't it that my mother didn't hear
    it being no more than 20ft away inside her bedroom? I've heard
    snippets of all the fighting that took place between my oldest brother
    and father and mother! Hmmm...)
    · Soon after, my oldest brother goes to prison for armed robbery.
    (Personal comment: I've heard my mother comment on the subject from
    time to time, most disturbing though is what she said, "...he got
    caught because his friends ratted him out..." Excuse me but isn't
    crime a punishable thing?)
    · Soon after that, my second oldest brother goes A.W.O.L. from the
    marines, comes home and destroys the house, and puts a hammer though
    the TV in the living room. He is diagnosed with a mental illness and
    deemed unable to cope with society and is put on disability welfare.
    (Personal comment: I remember the scene having only been a few years
    old. I have a photographic memory - I remember even my first
    birthday. I'm beginning to see a pattern here - one that has
    lasted from then up to the present.)
    · Long after, my older sister reveals to the family that she has
    slept with more boys than she can count on her two hands, twice over,
    before the age of 17. Holy cow Batman! That explains why you've had 6
    different husbands to date!
    · ... There is just too much to list ... it would grieve you out to
    hear all the destruction. All you have to do is research the public
    record of Portage and Summit counties to see.

    But here's something public records don't readily reveal:

    · Christmas 1991, I announced to my extended family that my wife was
    pregnant and we will be having a baby in August 1992. My mother left
    the room and went to the kitchen. Sarah and I went to see her hoping
    she would be joyous of the news only to be devastated to hear my mother
    say, "Don't get your hopes up." (Personal comment: Perhaps you
    don't know how devastatingly hurtful that comment was?)
    · August 5, 1991, my daughter was born and now all the plans that my
    mother made with my sister to come see us in Dayton, Ohio - I thought
    would be joyous, yet it was not. You see, when I called my mother to
    tell her the good news, she was depressed. She totally changed her mind
    and didn't want to see us. (Personal comment: I now realize my
    mothers' mental illness causes her to hate my nuclear family, and I
    have overlooked all that in the past but I can't help to see a
    pattern here. Sadly, she was mentally unfit to drive that day and in
    doing so it cost some ones life. My nephew lost his life when my mother
    ran her truck off the road. The death of a family member on my
    daughter's birthday? Who believes this to be an accident? Come on -
    is it so unclear? It was mental illness. She has never visited my
    daughter on her birthday - ever!).


    Fortunately there is hope and recovery with treatment; that is, if
    treatment is sought after. I was smart enough to have recognized it.
    While I have sought treatment, my afflicted extended family can not
    accept this. Peoples overpowering need to judge causes them to
    criticize. So rather, my philosophical ideologies on life are ones of
    'hope and a bright outlook for the future'. How people live with
    themselves under such circumstances and justify their actions is sad.

    This history is an extremely hard thing for me to accept - having
    helped other, gave, forgave and overlooked fiasco after grieving
    fiasco, year after year after year. Then having moved from Boston,
    Massachusetts, and leaving a very high profile career in Nuclear
    Missile Defense, just to help family only to witness their ever
    deteriorating state, well... It's hard. I'm not so naive these
    days. Matter of fact, having dealt with such far fetched wierdness;
    it's guaranteed that I ain't takin any more shit from no one these
    days. You have to grow-up and decide where your loyalties are and who
    your true friends are. After all, we are human beings able to make
    choices. Even the mentally ill can choose. Getting help is a choice. I
    did

    I keep busy these days... real busy. What ever it is I can find to
    occupy my time, then that I do. I build 4x4 Jeeps to help occupy that
    time. They are not pretty, cause any piece of steel left laying around
    just might get welded on if I think it could occupy me for an hour.
    Better just to keep busy. History shall record all our deeds. The
    Benners budding serial killer is in print everywhere. Public records
    clearly show much of the rest of my families past 40 years of
    mischievousness too. Perhaps this story will help you understand what
    it's like to wear my shoes, so-to-speak. I choose rather to be known
    by the good things I have accomplished. Integrity is important to me,
    it was important for my pioneering family ancestors, it was important
    for our Nations forefathers, it is important to a healthy society, and
    I dare venture to say it is important to the man upstairs. If it takes
    History to reveal that, then so be it. I can wait. Bravo!


    - Eric Warman
     
    Crash, Mar 2, 2006
    #1
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