Introduction
1 Cycle of Death: Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong’s Pattern of
Violence
2 In Rare Company: Female Serial Killers in History
3 Killing Like a Man: Angels of Death, Black Widows, and Damsels of
Doom
4 A Cluttered Mind: Marjorie Diehl’s Hoarding and Other
Obsessions
5 Dictionary of Disorder: Defining Mental Illness
6 Death of a Boyfriend: A Fatal Shooting, a Suicide, and a Question
of Stability
7 “A Madman or a Natural Fool”: Determining Mental Competency
8 “Scared to Death”: Marjorie Diehl’s First Homicide Trial
9 Flight of Ideas: The Burdens of Bipolar Disorder
10 “Freezer Queen”: Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong Kills Again
11 The Fractured Intellectuals: The Pizza Bomber Plot Unravels
12 Psyche on Trial: Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong’s Final Verdict
Afterword
Jerry Clark, PhD, retired as a special agent with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in 2011 after twenty-seven years in law
enforcement, including careers as a special agent with the Drug
Enforcement Administration and the Naval Criminal Investigative
Service. He is an assistant professor of criminal justice at Gannon
University in Erie, Pennsylvania, where he is also co-owner of
Clark & Wick Investigations LLC.
Ed Palattella joined the Erie Times-News, in Erie, Pennsylvania, in
1990. He has won a number of awards, including for his
investigative work and his coverage of crime.
Both are the authors of Pizza Bomber: The Untold Story of America’s
Most Shocking Bank Robbery and A History of Heists:Bank Robbery in
America, which was published by Rowman & Littlefield in 2015.
Former FBI agent Clark and journalist Palattella take a deeper look
at the woman behind [a] gruesome crime... Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong
is best known for her role as an accomplice in the 2003 bank
robbery in Erie, Pa., that led to the death of Brian Wells, a pizza
deliveryman, but she had killed before. Clark and Palattella
provide chilling details into her gunning down of two boyfriends,
starting with the 1984 murder of Bob Thomas, also in Erie. After
shooting Thomas in his sleep, she confessed her crime to a stranger
and offered her $25,000 to help dispose of the corpse. The authors
trace Diehl-Armstrong’s evolution from bright student to murderer
and look specifically at how mental illness is used as a defense to
criminal culpability in Anglo-American jurisprudence.
Diehl-Armstrong was diagnosed as bipolar and had been anorexic as a
child, but, as the judge who sentenced her to life for her role in
the bank robbery noted, others with those illnesses don’t turn
violent. Despite the authors’ detailed knowledge of their subject,
readers will emerge from this well-written volume wondering what
exactly led this once-promising woman to a life of violent
crime.
*Publishers Weekly*
One in almost every six serial killers is a woman, according to
serial killer expert Eric Hickey. The case of Marjorie
Diehl-Armstrong, a female accomplice in the bizarre Pizza
Deliveryman Collar Bomb Heist, is a shocking eye-opening account of
just how predatory and dangerous a female serial killer can be.
*Peter Vronsky, Author of Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of
Monsters and Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become
Monsters*
Clark and Palattella's riveting true crime narrative, wrapped in a
history of forensic psychiatry, offers a disturbing tour inside the
baffling mind of an anger-driven female serial killer. Meticulous
and probing, they unravel the psychiatric and legal back story of
the bizarre Pizza Bomber killing and the demented woman who devised
fatal solutions to her "poor luck with men." A tangled tale of
losers, hoarders, swindlers, and manipulators that offers all the
right stuff for criminologists and true crime fans alike.
*Katherine Ramsland PhD, professor of forensic psychology and
author of How to Catch a Killer*
The case of Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong is a labyrinth of lies,
deceit, and violence. Fraught with diagnoses of mental illness and
mental disorders, authors Clark and Palattella delve into
convoluted psychopathology of one of America’s most twisted female
serial killers. Her amazing story is a dichotomy of good and evil,
of victim and victimizer, of innocence and guilt. This is a must
read for those fascinated by the Darkside.
*Eric W. Hickey, PhD, Walden University*
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