Biography
Little is known of Baldi's background. Born on January 16, 1941, in the Richmond Hill section of Queens, he became a petty criminal from a young age, frequently burglarizing various homes. He displayed signs of mental illness, for which he was treated at theMurder of Areti Koularmanis
On September 19, 1970, Baldi was searching for an apartment, choosing one at 144-96 88th Avenue in Jamaica. After going into a back alley and climbing through the window, he found himself in the bedroom of 23-year-old Greek- Canadian Areti Koularmanis, who was visiting her husband's parents together with her children. To prevent her from screaming, Baldi took out a knife and stabbed her in the throat, causing Koularmanis to stagger out of the room and wake her husband, before collapsing on the floor. She was driven to the Mary Immaculate Hospital, where she subsequently succumbed to her injuries, Baldi managed to escape and avoid arrest. Despite the police's best efforts, they were unable to find a clue to the killer's identity.Attempted murder, imprisonment and release
After Koularmanis's murder, Baldi continued breaking into ground-floor apartments around the Richmond Hill and Woodhaven areas. In the early hours of September 5, 1971, a resident of Woodhaven reported seeing a man climbing through a neighbor's window. Officers, John Hamberger and Frank Mobileo, were sent to investigate, and after briefly patrolling of the area, they caught up with Baldi and went to question him. As they were about to do so, Baldi whipped out a .22 revolver from his hip holster and attempted to shoot Hamberger, but the gun misfired. Before he could fire again, the officers apprehended him. While examining the detainee's belongings, they found a stolen driver's license. When the owner of the license was contacted, she said that someone had burgled into her apartment and had stolen both her driver's license and money from her purse. For these crimes, Baldi was charged with attempted murder, burglary, theft and illegal possession of weaponry. Due to his history of mental illness, Baldi was remanded to the Mid-Hudson Psychiatric Hospital in Beacon to undergo treatment while awaiting his trial. He stayed there until November 30, when he was moved back to Creedmoor. In December 1971, he was officially indicted for the aforementioned charges by a grand jury in Queens, but because the attorney's office was not notified of his transfer to Creedmoor and the subsequent failure of that institution to be notified of his indictment, he was released a little over a month later on January 21, 1972.New murders and arrest
Less than two months after his release, Baldi resumed his criminal activities, escalating the violence of his attacks. On March 18, he entered an apartment in Jamaica through a first-story window, going into the bedroom of 17-year-old Camille Perniola. A mentally disabled teenager who lived with her parents, Perniola was stabbed to death in her sleep, and her assailant fled before her parents could catch a glimpse of him. On April 13, Baldi broke into the ground-floor apartment of 21-year-old secretary Clara Toriello, who had recently been engaged to a policeman. Despite the fact that she shared the apartment with three family members, Baldi managed to stab her four times in the back and neck after he found her lying in her bed. After killing her, he tore off her bra and panties and then slashed them to shreds. The final attack came on June 17, when Baldi entered an apartment near his rooming house in Jamaica, stabbing 15-year-old Deborah "Debbie" Januszko in the chest. The girl staggered into her parents' bedroom, exclaiming that she had just been stabbed, but before help could arrive, she succumbed to her injuries. A few days after her murder, some of Januszko's classmates reported to police that they had been stalked by a tall, thin, dark-haired man, matching the description of other women who had reported similar incidents. On June 21, two detectives from the Queens Homicide Squad, Donald Parker and Michael Walsh, stopped a man matching that description while he was walking down the street. The man, Joseph Baldi, agreed to accompany them to the police station, and not long after, he told that he "might have hurt" Januszko. Further inquiries uncovered that Baldi was also wanted for an attempted murder of a police officer. He was eventually charged with the other three murders, to which he had made passing references in some of his confessions.Confessions, trial and impact
In light of his crimes, it was decided that Baldi would first be brought to trial for the attempted murder of Officer Hamberger, to which he pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. At the court hearings for the case, Baldi's attorney, Sidney Sparrow, argued that his client was a schizophrenic suffering from dissociative identity disorder (then called "multiple personality disorder") and was thus not legally liable for his crimes. On the prosecution's side, Dr. Daniel J. Schwartz, then-director for the Kings County Hospital's Psychiatric Unit, testified that after conducting an exam on the defendant, he deduced that he was aware of his actions when he attacked the officer. After an 8-day long trial, Baldi was convicted of the attempted murder charge and sentenced to 25 years imprisonment, allowing the prosecutors to move forward with the murder charges. In lieu of the upcoming trial, an agreement between Sparrow and the prosecutors was made that prohibited Baldi's "reenactments" of his murders, during which he walked around opening imaginary doors and wiping blood off imaginary knives in a trance-like state, to be used as evidence. In contrast, prosecutors produced a 45-minute police tape to the court, in which Baldi confessed to the four murders. However,See also
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References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Baldi, Joseph 1941 births 2009 deaths 20th-century American criminals American male criminals American murderers of children American people convicted of attempted murder American people convicted of murder American prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment American serial killers Criminals from Queens, New York People convicted of murder by New York (state) People from Richmond Hill, Queens Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by New York (state) Serial killers from New York (state) Serial killers who died in prison custody Violence against women in New York (state)