1990, Gloria Nagy, A House in the Hamptons, Delacorte Press (1990), page 121:
Well, it's this great big old spooky house just off the Highway before East Hampton and a real creepazoid kinda handyman type lets me in and no lights on, like a Boris Karloff movie or somethin'.
1996, Pat Pollari, The Great Puke-Off, Bantam Books (1996), →ISBN, page 68:
"Like, for example, your father could finally figure out what a couple of creepazoid, scumslithering monsters you really are."
"I saw it all. Whitman and some longhaired creepazoid punk."
1998, George A. Beahm, Stephen King: America's Best-Love Boogeyman, Andrews McMeel Publishing (1998), →ISBN, page 134:
But the creepazoid Clawson does get his just desserts: George Stark, tracking a bloody path to Beaumont, viciously kills Clawson.
1998, Concrete Forest: The New Fiction of Urban Canada (ed. Hal Niedzvieki), McClelland & Stewart (1998), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
"Liking snow is like liking dandruff," some girl was telling her creepazoid boyfriend.
2002, Dennis J. Barton, Cola Wars, Writers Club Press (2002), →ISBN, page 249:
[…] Whoever's holding us here, I don't mean Bunny and her creepazoid friend, I mean whoever's really holding us here, he or she isn't all that smart. […]
2004, Lynda Sandoval, Who's Your Daddy?, Simon Pulse (2004), →ISBN, page 27:
C) I did think it was slightly creepazoid at first that we had to invite a dead relative, but I got to thinking it will be pretty cool having my mom "participate" in finding me a boyfriend.
"The total creepazoid. He's been bragging all day about how his dad told off Officer Henshaw."
2000, Jean D. Erhardt, She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not, Writers Club Press (2000), →ISBN, page 144:
Not only did I not want us to get swindled by some Nashville creepazoid, I was more convinced than ever that we owed it to my father to not sell his last remaining holding to a sleazeball.
2002, Derek T. Rosenfeld, Derek Rosenfeld's Travel Companion, Volume 1, Writers Club Press (2002), →ISBN, page 93:
Now, this guy Spits, he didn't even like "Titanic." What a creepazoid.
2003, Jonathan Kellerman, A Cold Heart, Ballantine Books (2004), →ISBN, page 35:
Petra visualized some acne-plagued scarecrow in a slovenly room. The kind of creepazoid with too much leisure time who'd phone the local supermarket, clutching the phone in his sweaty hands: […]
2003, Vicki Lewis Thompson, Nerd in Shining Armor, Bantam Dell (2003), →ISBN, page 120:
True, she'd brought the condoms on account of Nick, but Nick had been revealed as a murdering, embezzling creepazoid, so Jack could rightly assume she had no more interest in Nick as a sexual partner.
Her neighbor, the scuzzy creepazoid named Freddy Sykes, should be home by now.
2004, James Ellroy, Destination: Morgue!: L. A. Tales, Vintage Books (2004), →ISBN, page 364:
Donna said, "He's creepazoid. He whipped it out on a friend of mine. […]
2005, William Bernhardt, Dark Eye, Ballantine Books (2006), →ISBN, page 230:
[…] According to this book, the public image of Poe as this ghoulish creepazoid is inaccurate. His work was creepy, but he wasn't."
2006, James A. Moore, Harvest Moon, Cemetery Dance Publications (2006), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
It was like, though she'd never actually seen him looking at any of the girls on the campus, she could sense that he wanted to do things to her that she had no desire to do with a middle-aged creepazoid.
2010, Robin Benway, The Extraordinary Secrets of April, May, & June, Razorbill (2010), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
"Like hell, I don't," he said. "I don't want to see my roommate get killed. You know how hard it was to find someone who wasn't a Craigslist creepazoid in the first place? […]