Aileen Wuornos: From a Traumatic Childhood to America’s “Damsel of Death”
At first glance, Aileen Wuornos appeared to be an ordinary little girl—bright-eyed, blonde, and shy. But beneath that fragile surface lay a life marked by neglect, violence, and trauma that would one day make her one of America’s most infamous figures.
Born in 1956 in Michigan, Aileen’s early years were chaotic. Her 20-year-old mother abandoned her and her brother at age four, later calling it “the biggest mistake” of her life. Their father, imprisoned for assaulting a child, took his own life behind bars. The siblings went to live with their grandparents, but the home offered no safety.
Her grandmother battled alcoholism, while her grandfather was reportedly abusive. “We suffered a form of child abuse,” Aileen’s mother would later admit. “We were always told we were no good.”