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Tony Costa

Antone Charles "Tony" Costa (August 2, 1944 – May 12, 1974) was an American active in , , during the late , best known for the brutal murders and dismemberments of young women in the Provincetown and areas. Convicted of two first-degree murders, he was suspected in up to eight killings, with evidence of and possible , though the latter remains unconfirmed and was fueled by sensationalized media reports. Often dubbed the "Cape Cod Vampire" or "Cape Cod Cannibal" due to the gruesome nature of his crimes, Costa presented as a charismatic and , masking his violent tendencies until his arrest in 1969. Born in , Costa grew up in a troubled environment and displayed early signs of sociopathy, including and as a teenager. By the late , he had relocated to Provincetown, where he operated as a marijuana dealer and cultivated a small following who viewed him as a cult-like figure, sometimes calling him "Lord Antone, Sire of All That Is True." His confirmed victims included 23-year-old Patricia H. Walsh and Mary Ann Wysocki, whom he lured, shot, dismembered, and sexually abused post-mortem on January 25, 1969, burying their remains in a shallow grave in woods. Other suspected victims were Susan E. Perry (1968), Sydney Lee Monzon (1968), and Bonnie Williams, with Costa confessing to at least one additional during . Costa's arrest stemmed from a routine traffic stop in March 1969, during which police discovered weapons and bloodstained tools in his vehicle, leading to the recovery of the victims' remains. A 1969 psychiatric evaluation diagnosed him with schizoid personality disorder and labeled him a "modern-day ‘Marquis de Sade’" due to his sexual sadism. Tried in Barnstable County in 1970, he was found guilty on both murder counts and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, as the jury recommended against the death penalty. The conviction was upheld by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in 1971, affirming no errors in the trial proceedings. Costa died by suicide via hanging in his cell at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Cedar Junction in Walpole on May 12, 1974, at age 29. His case drew national attention, inspiring books like Helltown by Casey Sherman (2022) and The Babysitter by Liza Rodman (2021), which explore the terror he inflicted on the Cape Cod community.

Early life

Childhood and family

Antone Charles "Tony" Costa was born on August 2, 1944, in , to a immigrant father and an mother of descent in a working-class household. His father, a U.S. carpenter's mate, died at sea on April 21, 1945, while serving in —when Costa was eight months old—leaving his mother to raise him primarily on her own as a homemaker. During his childhood, Costa attended local public schools in and Somerville, where he displayed an early fascination with and animals. He developed a hobby in , often collecting to skin, dissect, and stuff, including neighborhood pigeons and small pets, which neighbors later recalled as unsettling. In April 1963, at age 18, Costa married 14-year-old Avis in a ceremony in ; the couple had three children together before divorcing around 1967 amid Costa's increasing involvement with drugs and volatile behavior. In 1966, seeking better job prospects as a carpenter, he moved to , where he briefly lived before returning to in 1968.

Initial criminal involvement

Tony Costa's initial foray into criminal activity occurred in November 1961, when he was 17 years old. He broke into the apartment of a teenage neighbor in , and fled after she screamed; three days later, he returned and attempted to drag her downstairs, but neighbors intervened and detained him. Convicted of and , Costa received a one-year and three years of , avoiding incarceration. Following his probation, Costa engaged in petty thefts and began experimenting with drugs amid the emerging . He separated from his wife amid reports of and , and became immersed in the scene on , where he used and shared marijuana and with associates. His drug involvement escalated to growing marijuana in a hidden plot at Pine Grove Cemetery in . During this period, Costa maintained a peripatetic lifestyle in Provincetown and , taking odd jobs as a at the Royal Coachman Motor Lodge and as a babysitter for local families, including that of motel employee Betty Rodman. Known in the community for his charismatic yet unreliable demeanor, he attracted a following among young people in the scene, often leading groups for drug-fueled outings.

Murders

Confirmed victims

Tony Costa is definitively linked to of four young women in the Provincetown area of , , between 1968 and early 1969. These were lured under the pretense of social encounters or rides, often involving drug use, before being killed, dismembered, and buried in a wooded area in nearby that Costa used for cultivating marijuana. His confessions during directly implicated him in all four killings, though he was only tried and convicted for two. Post-mortem examinations revealed consistent patterns of , including and removal of organs, alongside evidence of ; Costa claimed to have drugged the victims with barbiturates prior to death, though forensic evidence confirmed strangulation or shooting in some cases. Susan Perry, a 17-year-old from , disappeared in September 1968 after attending a party in where she had been spending time with Costa. She was last seen leaving the event with him, reportedly planning to continue their brief romantic involvement; Costa later confessed to killing her by overdose after administering barbiturates, followed by and burial in the Truro woods. Her remains, mutilated with the heart removed, were identified through dental records, confirming the link to Costa. Sydney Monzon, an 18-year-old local resident of Provincetown, vanished in after being seen entering a with Costa near her home. Costa admitted to drugging her with barbiturates, leading to her death by overdose or strangulation, after which he decapitated and dismembered her body, showing signs of before burying it in the same Truro site amid his marijuana plants. The discovery of her remains, also with the heart excised, tied directly to his . Patricia Walsh, 23, from , was abducted on January 25, 1969, while hitchhiking in Provincetown with her friend Mary Anne Wysocki; Costa offered them a ride in Walsh's and drove them toward . He confessed to shooting Walsh in the head with his .22-caliber after possibly drugging her, then dismembering her body into two pieces and burying it in the wooded area, with evidence of post-mortem . Costa was convicted of her first-degree murder in 1970 based on ballistic matches and his admissions. Mary Anne Wysocki, 23, from , disappeared alongside Walsh on the same day while during their weekend trip to Provincetown. Costa admitted to shooting her twice in the head with the same weapon after luring them, followed by severe mutilation—dismembering her into five pieces—and burial near the others, with indicated. Like Walsh, he was convicted of her first-degree in 1970, supported by his detailed and . Media reports at the time speculated on due to the organ removals and Costa's erratic behavior, but autopsies and investigations later debunked these claims as unfounded.

Discovery of remains

On February 8, 1969, a state trooper discovered the partial remains of a woman buried in a shallow grave near the Old Truro Cemetery in , during a search for two missing women, Walsh and Mary Anne Wysocki. The remains, consisting of dismembered body parts placed in three bags, were those of an unidentified female estimated to be 20 to 30 years old and buried for approximately one year. Subsequent identification through dental records and confirmed the as Susan , a 17-year-old who had disappeared in September 1968. Intensified searches in early March 1969 led to the unearthing of three additional sets of remains in shallow graves in a wooded area of , approximately 1.5 miles from the Perry site. The bodies, buried together, included those of Walsh and Wysocki, both 23, who had vanished on , 1969, and Sydney Monzon, an 18-year-old missing since May 1968; identification was achieved via dental records, clothing, and personal effects. The remains were severely mutilated and dismembered—Perry's body cut into eight pieces, with skulls separated from the others—and showed signs of post-mortem , stab wounds, and gunshot injuries, though autopsies revealed no evidence of despite initial rumors. Physical evidence at the site included a buried nearby, later matched to through , along with three expended .22 shells consistent with the wounds to Walsh and Wysocki. Shovels and other tools were recovered from the area, and the location was linked to 's known marijuana cultivation efforts, where plants were found growing over and near the graves. A belonging to was also discovered in proximity, further tying him to the burial site used for hiding the victims' bodies.

Investigation

Police efforts

In late 1968 and early 1969, reports of missing persons began to surface in the Provincetown area of , involving young women associated with the local scene. Sydney Monzon disappeared around May 1968, Susan Perry in September 1968, and Patricia Walsh and Mary Anne Wysocki in January 1969 while visiting from ; these cases were initially classified as runaways, reflecting law enforcement's common dismissal of disappearances among transient individuals at the time. The investigation escalated dramatically on February 8, 1969, when Trooper Tom Gunnery accidentally discovered dismembered remains in the woods near the Old Truro Cemetery during a routine patrol, later identified as Perry's. This prompted a coordinated multi-agency response involving the and the Provincetown Police Department, who launched extensive searches across potential burial sites and canvassed routes frequented by the victims, given the prevalence of in the community. The burial sites were identified as Costa's personal marijuana "garden," placing him under suspicion. Officers also began questioning Costa's known associates, as his reputation as a local drug dealer and charismatic figure placed him in proximity to the . Key breakthroughs emerged from interrogations of Costa's and , who described his erratic and suspicious , including unexplained absences and cryptic comments about the disappearances. A subsequent search of Costa's uncovered illegal drugs, of the victims, and bloodstained items like a and boots. Additionally, a routine in March 1969 revealed weapons and bloodstained tools in his vehicle. Ballistics tests linked a handgun found near the graves to evidence from the crime scenes. These findings, combined with mounting , led to Costa's on March 6, 1969, on suspicion of .

Media coverage

Initial media coverage of the disappearances linked to Tony Costa in late 1968 and early 1969 was limited and framed them within the context of typical youth runaways amid the era's movement on , with local outlets like the Cape Cod Standard-Times reporting them as non-suspicious incidents involving transient hippies in Provincetown. This perception shifted dramatically following the February 8, 1969, discovery of dismembered remains in the woods near the Old Truro Cemetery, prompting more urgent local reporting on the potential foul play. Sensationalism escalated on March 6, 1969, when Bristol County District Attorney Edmund Dinis held a press conference at the State Police barracks in South Yarmouth, where he described the victims' bodies as cut into multiple pieces at the joints, with hearts removed and absent from the graves, and alleged teeth marks on the remains—claims later debunked as misinterpretations of autopsy reports. These graphic details, which implied possible cannibalism and necrophilia though never substantiated, were amplified by national media, including The New York Times, which helped popularize the "Cape Cod Vampire" moniker for Costa and fueled a "Cape Cod Butcher" narrative portraying him as a monstrous figure. Coverage in outlets like Life magazine, featuring Kurt Vonnegut's July 25, 1969, article "There’s a Maniac Loose Out There," further sensationalized the case by contrasting Costa's charismatic, long-haired hippie persona with the brutality of the crimes, drawing parallels to contemporary horrors like the Manson murders. The intense media spotlight had a profound public impact, instilling widespread fear in Provincetown's tourist-dependent and vibrant hippie communities, where young women felt particularly vulnerable amid the influx of summer visitors and transient youths. Reports highlighted how Costa's outward charm as a local and leader clashed with emerging details of his actions, eroding trust within the close-knit scene and leading to local nicknames like "Tony Chop-Chop" that reflected communal horror. Media challenges during the investigation included significant interference, as aggressive reporting scared off potential witnesses in the tight-lipped circles and generated false leads from rampant rumors, such as unverified tales that diverted resources. National attention, while overshadowed by events like the and updates, nonetheless complicated efforts to conduct discreet interviews in Provincetown's insular environment.

Trial

Court proceedings

On June 12, 1969, Antone Charles Costa was arraigned in Barnstable County Superior Court on two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Patricia Walsh and Mary Anne Wysocki; charges related to Sydney Monzon and Susan Perry were not pursued due to insufficient linking him directly to those killings. Costa's trial commenced on May 6, 1970, in Barnstable County Superior Court. The prosecution, led by Assistant Richard C. Paull and Philip A. Rollins, presented a case built on circumstantial and forensic , including witness testimonies from Costa's associates who described his erratic behavior and admissions during drug-fueled conversations. Key forensic elements included ballistics tests confirming that bullets recovered from Walsh's and Wysocki's bodies matched those fired from a .22-caliber buried by Costa in the Truro woods near the burial site, as well as timeline placing him with the victims on the night of their disappearance in January 1969. The defense, represented by attorney Maurice M. Goldman, argued that Costa's actions were influenced by chronic drug abuse, including and amphetamines, rendering him temporarily insane and incapable of forming premeditated intent. Psychiatric experts testified on regarding Costa's , with the prosecution's witness asserting that despite drug use, Costa understood the wrongfulness of his conduct, while the highlighted his hallucinatory episodes and delusional beliefs. The trial lasted several weeks, featuring graphic descriptions of the victims' mutilated remains to establish premeditation and extreme atrocity. After closing arguments, the jury deliberated for three days before reaching a on May 22, 1970. Costa was convicted of two counts of first-degree under the felony-murder rule and extreme atrocity provisions. On May 29, 1970, he was sentenced to two consecutive life terms without at Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Walpole. The conviction was upheld by the in 1971.

Costa's statements

Following his arrest in March 1969, Costa provided police with three mutually inconsistent accounts of his final interactions with victims Patricia Walsh and Mary Ann Wysocki, including how he came into possession of their vehicle. In one version, he claimed the women had given him the car as a gift before traveling to ; in another, he implicated unrelated acquaintances before retracting the statements. On , 1969, during interrogation, Costa confessed to ending Wysocki's life with a after she had been shot, but he attributed the initial acts of violence against Walsh and Wysocki to a supposed named "Carl," influenced by and Dilaudid. He further claimed that the deaths of Susan Perry and Monzon resulted from drug overdoses, with "Carl" responsible for any subsequent , which Costa described in his unpublished Resurrection as a means of handling the bodies post-mortem. While incarcerated, Costa authored Resurrection, a self-serving written that portrayed the killings as occurring under the influence of his split personality, incorporating delusional elements such as childhood visions of his deceased father appearing in his room and a schizoid from . The manuscript detailed how the victims had "betrayed" him through perceived romantic entanglements, fueling a narrative of rage and jealousy, though it minimized his direct role and omitted any admission of necrophilic acts suggested by evidence. No verified letters from jail explicitly referencing influences have been documented, but Costa's writings reflected paranoid ideation consistent with psychiatric evaluations of his . At his from May 6 to 29, 1970, Costa entered a of not guilty by reason of , with his defense arguing that chronic drug use—including amphetamines, , and barbiturates—induced blackouts and diminished his capacity to understand the criminality of his actions or conform to the . Two psychiatrists testified to his schizophrenic tendencies exacerbated by , supporting claims of drug-fueled during the crimes, while Costa himself affirmed general involvement but invoked these episodes to explain lapses in and intent. The prosecution's experts countered with a diagnosis of , emphasizing premeditation over . Costa's accounts exhibited notable discrepancies, shifting between motives of romantic —such as perceived betrayals by the women—and impulsive during highs, while he consistently denied personal responsibility for the most gruesome elements. Although initial reports from prosecutor Eric Dinis suggested possible based on bite marks on remains, Costa rejected these implications, and subsequent forensic analysis found no supporting evidence, attributing marks to animal scavenging or postmortem damage. In , he framed not as sadistic but as a practical "preservation" akin to , aligning with his expressed fascination with from earlier years.

Imprisonment and death

Prison sentence

Following his conviction on two counts of first-degree murder, Antone Charles Costa was sentenced to without parole on May 29, 1970, and assigned to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Walpole, a maximum-security facility known for housing high-risk inmates. The reviewed and affirmed the judgments under G. L. c. 278, § 33E on November 1, 1971, with no further appeals granted. Costa served approximately four years in Walpole's maximum-security unit, where prisoners were subjected to strict routines including menial labor assignments as part of daily correctional activities.

Final days

Antone Charles "Tony" Costa died on May 12, 1974, at the age of 29, while serving a life sentence at the Correctional Institution in Walpole. He was found hanging in his cell by a tied to the bars, and the official cause of death was ruled by asphyxiation. The circumstances of Costa's death occurred amid his ongoing incarceration for the 1969 murders of Mary Anne Wysocki and Patricia Walsh, for which he had been convicted and sentenced to without parole. Prison officials reported no prior indications of suicidal intent, though Costa had been isolated due to his high-profile status as a convicted . His notoriety within the facility stemmed from the gruesome nature of his crimes, including mutilation and burial of victims in the dunes of . In the days leading up to his death, Costa typed out portions of an unpublished manuscript detailing his life and crimes. Following the ruling of suicide, no further official investigation was pursued by authorities, as the evidence supported self-inflicted death. Costa's body was released to his family and buried in an unmarked grave adjacent to his mother's at St. Peter the Apostle Cemetery in . The event closed the chapter on his life but left lingering questions about additional unsolved murders linked to him in accounts.

Legacy

Cultural depictions

The case of Tony Costa garnered significant attention in true crime literature and periodical media during the late 1960s and 1980s, often framing his crimes within the backdrop of Provincetown's vibrant . Jr. contributed an early prominent depiction in his July 1969 Life magazine article "There’s a Maniac Loose Out There," which covered Costa's trial and portrayed him as a disturbing figure amid the era's free-spirited youth scene, likening him to while noting the shock to the local community. This piece, later reprinted in Vonnegut's 1976 essay collection Wampeters, Foma & Granfalloons, emphasized the contrast between Costa's charismatic, long-haired persona and the brutality of his acts, establishing him as an archetype of deviance. In 1981, investigative journalist Leo Damore published In His Garden: The Anatomy of a Murderer, a detailed true-crime account based on extensive interviews with investigators, witnesses, and Costa's associates, reconstructing the murders and his marijuana garden where remains were discovered. Damore's narrative highlighted Costa's immersion in 1960s Provincetown's bohemian lifestyle—marked by drug use and communal living—turning awry into horror, and it became a seminal work on the case, influencing subsequent portrayals of the "hippie killer" trope in true crime genres. Norman Mailer drew loose inspiration from Costa's story for his 1984 novel Tough Guys Don't Dance, a noir thriller set in Provincetown that incorporated elements of dismemberment, hidden graves, and moral decay reflective of the killer's crimes. Mailer, a Provincetown resident fascinated by the case, used it to explore themes of 1960s excess unraveling into violence, with the protagonist's dark secrets echoing Costa's dual life as a seemingly affable handyman. The novel's 1987 film adaptation, directed by Mailer, further embedded these motifs in visual media, though it amplified the fictional intrigue over factual retelling. Costa's crimes also appeared in 1970s periodicals, such as various that sensationalized the "Cape Cod Vampire" narrative, often tying his long hair, sideburns, and drug involvement to fears of countercultural peril. These depictions indirectly shaped set in , contributing to atmospheric tales of idyllic beaches hiding macabre secrets, as seen in regional short stories and novels evoking the era's shattered innocence without direct reference to Costa.

Recent interest

In the and , interest in Tony Costa's crimes has surged alongside the broader genre's popularity, prompting new analyses of his psychological profile and the societal backdrop of Provincetown. This renewed focus has highlighted previously underexplored aspects, including potential additional victims and forensic reevaluations, while sparking local debates over the case's impact on and . Liza Rodman's 2021 memoir The Babysitter: My Summers with a Serial Killer, co-authored with Jennifer Jordan, offers a unique personal perspective, recounting Rodman's experiences as a child who knew Costa as her babysitter during summers on Cape Cod in the late 1960s. The book interweaves Rodman's recollections of Costa's charismatic yet unsettling demeanor with investigative details of his murders, emphasizing how his charm masked his violence. Similarly, Casey Sherman's 2022 book Helltown: The Untold Story of a Serial Killer on Cape Cod examines the cultural and countercultural context of Provincetown in 1969, linking Costa's crimes to the era's social upheavals and the presence of figures like writers Kurt Vonnegut and Norman Mailer. Sherman argues that Costa may have claimed up to eight victims, drawing connections to unsolved disappearances in the region, though these remain speculative without conclusive evidence. Documentary coverage has also contributed to this revival, with the 2014 episode "Tony Costa" from Investigation Discovery's series Born to Kill? profiling his early life, criminal acts, and possible innate predispositions to violence through expert psychological analysis. In 2022, the Cape Cod Times published articles revisiting the case in light of Sherman's and Rodman's books, including discussions of how renewed publicity has stirred controversy among locals and victims' families, with some book events canceled due to concerns over glorifying the crimes. Ongoing debates center on unresolved elements of Costa's case, such as links to four to eight unsolved disappearances in during the late , fueled by Sherman's research but lacking definitive proof. Recent podcasts, including episodes from True Crime New England in 2023, have speculated on DNA re-examination of from Costa's scenes—such as remains and items—to potentially identify more or clarify victim counts, though no official tests have been confirmed or conducted. Additionally, some discussions in these podcasts revisit Costa's 1974 prison death, officially ruled a , but entertain unverified theories of foul play based on inconsistencies in reports and inmate accounts. This contemporary scrutiny reflects the true crime boom's influence, with Costa's story adapted into a forthcoming Amazon series based on Helltown, potentially starring , which has amplified concerns in Provincetown about how such portrayals affect and the town's reputation as a safe cultural hub. Local discourse, as covered in 2022 Cape Cod Times reports, weighs the value of historical reckoning against fears that sensationalism could deter visitors to the area where the crimes occurred.

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