A Chicken Coop Became a House of Horrors — and a Terrified Boy Was Forced to Do the Unthinkable
Before the Zodiac Killer and the Grim Sleeper terrorized California, there was the Chicken Coop Murderer, who preyed upon little boys and teens in 1920s Los Angeles, leaving a trail of pain and gore in his wake.
Gordon Stewart Northcott, 23, was hanged in San Quentin Prison in 1930 after being convicted the year before of kidnapping, sexually abusing and killing two boys and a teenager. Though he was only convicted of the three murders, Northcott is believed to have had as many as 20 victims.
Back then, residents of the burgeoning Los Angeles area had no idea a merciless killer was lurking in their midst until Feb. 2, 1928, when the headless, naked body of a teenage boy was found in a ditch on a dusty road near the sleepy suburb of La Puente.
The victim, Jose Gonzales, an 18-year-old whose mutilated remains were found covered with a chicken feed sack, had been fatally shot multiple times. He had been beheaded 'probably not more than twenty-four hours prior to the discovery of the body,' according to appellate court records from June 26, 1930.
Related: Serial Killer Stalked Los Angeles in 'Incredibly Calculated' Way Until Son's Arrest Helped Lead to Capture
His was the first of a string of disappearances of young boys and teens that began to plague the area.
One month later, in March 1928, Walter Collins, 9, of the Lincoln Heights section of Los Angeles, went missing after his mother gave him a dime to see a movie and he never returned home, according to a 2008 article in the Los Angeles Times. (Collins' story became the subject of frenzied media coverage, and was the focus of Clint Eastwood's 2008 film, Changeling, starring Angelina Jolie and John Malkovich.)
While authorities searched tirelessly for Collins, in May 1928, two more little boys vanished on their way home from a Model Yacht Club meeting in Pomona: Nelson and Lewis Winslow, 10 and 12.
Unbeknownst to authorities at the time, Northcott, who had moved from Canada to Los Angeles several years before, had kidnapped the brothers. He took them to his family's chicken farm in Mira Loma, in Riverside County, where he held them captive in a chicken coop. After raping the brothers over a period of ten days, he killed one of them with an ax.
Northcott forced his nephew, Sanford Clark, 11, to kill the other brother with an ax and help him bury the bodies on the property 'to insure his silence."
Related: Why Was the Zodiac Killer Never Caught? Examining the Infamous Cold Case and Potential Suspects — and What Police Are Still Trying to Decipher Today
The crimes might have gone unsolved were it not for Clark's sister, who was shocked at what her brother told her during a visit that September: that Northcott had been sexually abusing him and had killed four boys on the farm.She notified their mother in Canada, who called the authorities.
Northcott fled to Canada, but was arrested soon after.
In December 1928, Northcott was charged with murdering Gonzales, the Winslow brothers and Collins. He was convicted of killing all but Collins.
In a surprise move, his mother, Sarah Louise, who said she would 'do anything' for her son, confessed to murdering Collins, according to the Times. She was sentenced to life in prison.
Just before Northcott was executed, he cried and begged not to be taken to the gallows and was blindfolded at his request so he wouldn't see what was happening, the Healdsburg Tribune reported in 1930.
Read the original article on People
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
2 area men indicted after pursuit ending in wrong-way crash on I-75
Jun. 14—Two men have been indicted after they were accused of fleeing from police and causing a multi-vehicle crash on Interstate 75. James Robert Collins, 46, of Dayton and Thomas Russell Downey, 49, of Fairborn, were each indicted in Montgomery County Common Pleas Court on charges of failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer and obstructing official business. Collis was also indicted for one county of vehicular assault. According to the Montgomery County Prosecutor's Office, their charges stem from June 5, 2025. That evening, Collins was driving a GMC Sierra with no visible registration when a Perry Twp. police officer tried to pull the pickup truck over at Wolf Creek Pike and Diamond Mill Road, according to an affidavit filed in Montgomery County Municipal Court Western Division. Downey was riding in the truck bed, and there were two passengers in the truck, though the passengers are not facing charges. The pickup fled, but was tracked by an Ohio State Highway Patrol helicopter. During the pursuit, Downey started throwing lumber out of the bed of the truck, the affidavit said. The prosecutor's office said that law enforcement successfully deployed stop stick tire deflation devices on Little Richmond Road near Ohio 49. However, Collins managed to regain control while driving on rims, the affidavit said. He drove the pickup truck on the wrong side of the road on U.S. 35 West and on I-75 North, followed by deputies with lights and sirens activated, according to the sheriff's office. On I-75 at Dryden Road, the pickup truck crashed into another vehicle head-on, causing a crash that involved six vehicles. All four people in the pickup fled on foot but were taken into custody, the sheriff's office said. The prosecutor's office said that four people were injured and taken to the hospital, one of which was seriously hurt. They added that Collins' driver's license was suspended at the time. Collins and Downey are scheduled to be arraigned June 26.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations
During a week of protest, Los Angeles is the center stage of the national immigration debate, with pundits on both sides characterizing the fight through the lens of their respective viewpoints. Not everyone is pleased with the actions — there has been vandalism, destruction and injuries — isolated yet striking moments that have at times overshadowed peaceful demonstrations. But for many out in the demonstrations, there was a message that they wanted to be heard. During these demonstrations, Los Angeles Times reporters on the ground have interviewed protesters and asked them why they're demonstrating. Here's what they had to say: Read more: The 'Mexican Beverly Hills' reels from Trump immigration raids, forcing some to carry passports Alejandra Flores attended a protest in front of Westin LAX Friday with her daughter and her mother, who had recently become a U.S. citizen. "I have three generations of family here. We came for my family members who can't come out. We're able to speak out for them." Maritza Perez Huerta attended her first protest this week. She couldn't make it out to protests a couple of years ago because she was younger and her mother was afraid. "Now that I'm 23, I want to fight for something that I didn't fight for before, especially since this is part of me. I'm first gen." Priscilla Ramos spent her first day of protesting in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center this week, where Marines were expected to arrive. "I personally have close friends who have been impacted [by] their fear for their parents' lives, and they themselves have had to increase the amount of hours that they work just solely so their parents can stay home and not be out in the community ... I'm hear in solidarity with my friends." Cynthia Guardano was born in the United States in a mixed-status family. She was downtown demonstrating on Friday. "My parents are migrants from El Salvador, and so it's really personal to me, because it's U.S. imperialism that impacted our community. ... No one chooses to leave their home. No one willingly wants to leave." Jason Petty, a 46-year-old musician from Boyle Heights, told The Times he went to a rally because 'this is our community — immigration is us.' Petty, a former ninth-grade history teacher, said he was born and raised in Los Angeles and was here during the 1992 riots. He is Black, and his grandmother lived in Watts during the 1965 Watts riots. His father was a Black Panther. Petty said he has a daughter in fourth grade and that immigration agents recently came to the neighborhood near her school. He said he has had to have difficult conversations with her, assuring her she's safe, and why it was important to go to the rally. 'You don't have to worry about it, but mommy and daddy are sticking up for your friends.' Outside City Hall in Santa Ana this week, Alicia Rojas observed a protest from afar. The Colombian native had her amnesty application denied as a child. Now a U.S. citizen, Rojas grew up during the era of Proposition 187 and remembered all the racism against people like her at the time. "I feel rage inside, but this is the healthiest thing to do. More than anything. I'm here to look after the kids." Read more: MacArthur Park goes quiet amid ICE sweeps. 'They're targeting people that look like me' Michelle Hernandez, 19, marched at the federal building with a Mexican flag draped over her shoulders. A daughter of Mexican immigrants, she said she had been worried about family members and friends during the ICE raids. "[I want] to be a voice for those who cannot speak." Franchesca Olivas drove two hours alone from Hemet to attend the anti-ICE demonstration this week outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles. She was carrying an upside-down American flag attached to the Mexican flag because she's half-white and half-Mexican. "I have my American flag upside down because we are in distress. We're gonna take that flag back." Aaron Fontan, 24, said he also has participated in Black Lives Matter protests and felt familiar police pushback and militance this time around. However, he felt that not as many people are willing to show up to anti-ICE protests. "Being in L.A., where such historical protests have begun, we had the Chicano movement here, the Rodney King riots. That's what shapes the community, that's what shapes policies here." Beyond the protests, some civic leaders have also voiced their opposition to the escalation in immigration enforcement. Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Alberto Carvalho, the son of immigrants, has been outspoken about his mission to protect students: 'I've spoken with parents who've told me that their daughter would be the first in their family to graduate high school, and they're not going to be there to witness it, because they have a fear of the place of graduation being targeted. What nation are we becoming?' Service Employees International Union California President David Huerta was injured and detained while documenting an immigration enforcement raid in downtown L.A. last week. 'This is about how we as a community stand together and resist the injustice that's happening. Hard-working people, and members of our family and our community, are being treated like criminals. We all collectively have to object to this madness because this is not justice.' Times staff writers Christopher Buchanan and Annie Goodykoontz contributed to this report. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
20 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations
During a week of protest, Los Angeles is the center stage of the national immigration debate, with pundits on both sides characterizing the fight through the lens of their respective viewpoints. Not everyone is pleased with the actions — there has been vandalism, destruction and injuries — isolated yet striking moments that have at times overshadowed peaceful demonstrations. But for many out in the demonstrations, there was a message that they wanted to be heard. During these demonstrations, Los Angeles Times reporters on the ground have interviewed protesters and asked them why they're demonstrating. Here's what they had to say: Alejandra Flores attended a protest in front of Westin LAX Friday with her daughter and her mother, who had recently become a U.S. citizen. Maritza Perez Huerta attended her first protest this week. She couldn't make it out to protests a couple of years ago because she was younger and her mother was afraid. Priscilla Ramos spent her first day of protesting in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center this week, where Marines were expected to arrive. Cynthia Guardano was born in the United States in a mixed-status family. She was downtown demonstrating on Friday. Jason Petty, a 46-year-old musician from Boyle Heights, told The Times he went to a rally because 'this is our community — immigration is us.' Petty, a former ninth-grade history teacher, said he was born and raised in Los Angeles and was here during the 1992 riots. He is Black, and his grandmother lived in Watts during the 1965 Watts riots. His father was a Black Panther. Petty said he has a daughter in fourth grade and that immigration agents recently came to the neighborhood near her school. He said he has had to have difficult conversations with her, assuring her she's safe, and why it was important to go to the rally. Outside City Hall in Santa Ana this week, Alicia Rojas observed a protest from afar. The Colombian native had her amnesty application denied as a child. Now a U.S. citizen, Rojas grew up during the era of Proposition 187 and remembered all the racism against people like her at the time. Michelle Hernandez, 19, marched at the federal building with a Mexican flag draped over her shoulders. A daughter of Mexican immigrants, she said she had been worried about family members and friends during the ICE raids. Franchesca Olivas drove two hours alone from Hemet to attend the anti-ICE demonstration this week outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles. She was carrying an upside-down American flag attached to the Mexican flag because she's half-white and half-Mexican. Aaron Fontan, 24, said he also has participated in Black Lives Matter protests and felt familiar police pushback and militance this time around. However, he felt that not as many people are willing to show up to anti-ICE protests. Beyond the protests, some civic leaders have also voiced their opposition to the escalation in immigration enforcement. Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Alberto Carvalho, the son of immigrants, has been outspoken about his mission to protect students: Service Employees International Union California President David Huerta was injured and detained while documenting an immigration enforcement raid in downtown L.A. last week. Times staff writers Christopher Buchanan and Annie Goodykoontz contributed to this report.