Joseph DeAngelo, the man known as the Golden State Killer, has been sentenced to life in prison.
His sentencing is the culmination of a crime investigation that began in the 1970s and attracted worldwide attention.
DeAngelo, 74, was arrested in 2018 after his DNA was found via a genealogy website.
In June he admitted to 13 murders in a deal with US prosecutors meant to spare him the death penalty.
He also admitted to numerous rapes, burglaries and other crimes at the time.
After sitting silent and expressionless throughout victims’ testimony this week, DeAngelo addressed those in court on Friday, removing his mask and rising from a wheelchair to speak, shortly before Judge Michael Bowman began the sentencing.
“I’ve listened to all of your statements. Each one of them. And I’m truly sorry to everyone I’ve hurt,” DeAngelo.
The infamous killer will now likely die in prison, serving 11 consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole, with 15 concurrent life sentences and other time for weapons charges.
“When a person commits monstrous acts they need to be locked away where they could never harm another innocent person,” Judge Bowman said.
DeAngelo was a Californian police officer during his crimes in the 1970s and 80s and his crimes stretched across the state of California.
The former police officer, Vietnam War veteran and auto mechanic was arrested in April 2018 after police tracked him down by matching his DNA with a genealogy website.
Investigators created a family tree dating back to the 1800s in order to identify him as a suspect. Detectives followed him and collected a piece of rubbish he had thrown away, finding the same DNA recovered from several crime scenes.
DeAngelo’s murderous reign began in 1975, while he was working as a police officer in Exeter, in northern California.
Starting with lurking, stalking and theft, his crimes quickly escalated to a 12-year spree of brutal violence, rape and murder.
On Friday, Judge Bowman sentenced DeAngelo in a university ballroom – the space needed to hold surviving victims and their families.
Prosecutors described the scale of violence as “simply staggering”: spanning 87 victims and 53 crime scenes in 11 counties across California.