The Suffolk County Police Department are among the most pathetic excuses for those sworn to serve and protect anyone.
They don’t give a single fuck about the murders of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, Amber Lynn Costello, Jessica Taylor, or Shannan Maria Gilbert.
They were all attractive young women in their twenties who, like myself, used Craigslist to post ads for erotic services back when they still allowed them.
Shannan Gilbert - Long Island serial killerAlthough the Suffolk County Police would like us to believe that Shannan Gilbert’s death was unrelated to the others listed above, as well as up to 10 other unidentified sets of remains found nearby, I strongly believe she was another unfortunate victim of
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My personal belief is that the cops are lying about Gilbert only because her family has been the most active in terms of seeking legal recourse and demanding answers.
They want to convince them that Shannan’s death is unrelated to the others because then they won’t have to find the person who murdered her.
Without the Gilbert family breathing down their necks for answers and justice, they can keep the case low on their list of priorities, where they think it belongs.
I’m sorry, but it’s insulting to anyone’s intelligence to suggest that Shannan Gilbert was not a murder victim when the last thing she did while still alive is call 911 and tell the operator that someone was “trying to kill her.”
She did not end up drowning in the marsh near Gilgo beach following that phone call. She was murdered and dumped there with a list of other sex workers, all killed by the same sadistic fuck who is still out there somewhere.
He may even be preying on prostitutes to this day, for all anyone knows.
Despite the cavalier attitude of both law enforcement and society in general, the Long Island serial killer’s victims are NOT
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Yes, Taylor and more than one of the unidentified Jane Doe victims whose remains were recovered did seem to be disposed of differently than the four women this case is centered around.
The four women pictured above were found relatively close together along the beach and each were wrapped in burlap sacks, their skeletons intact.
While this may suggest that the dismembered victims were not killed by the same person, I think it’s awfully strange that some other psychopath with an appetite for prostitutes just happened to also be using close-by parts of the same beach as their body dumpster.
I spent the better part of a day reading Robert Kolker’s book ‘Lost Girls: an Unsolved American Mystery.‘
I’ll admit that while I do a lot of reading, books are not really my format of choice. In fact, the last time I read a book cover to cover was over ten years ago.
So you can imagine my surprise when after I began to read the book yesterday afternoon, I wasn’t able to stop for long before diving back into it. I finished it earlier today, devouring all 384 pages in nearly one sitting
The murders of more than 7 backpackers in New South Wales (NSW, Australia during the 1990s, were committed by one of Australia's notorious serial killers, Ivan Milat. Ivan was born on the 27th December 1944 at Guildford, NSW, Australia into a large family. The bodied of seven missing young missing backpackers from different parts of the world were discovered in a shallow grave in the Belanglo State Forest. Five of the bodies that were found were foreign backpackers visiting Australia from Germany,3, and Britain,2.
The “Dark Minds” Woodsman case documentary examines the, at the time, unsolved connected murders of five main south women. These women were known prostitutes in the area, in which many of the were also hooked on drugs. Betzaida Montalvo and Carmen Rudy were the first to be discovered at the hillside school in Marlborough, which sparked the investigation, soon after. The documentary goes on to explore the three other deaths of Denelia Torres, found in Hudson, Wendy Morello, found in York, Maine, and Lineida Olivera found in Rutland. M. William Phelps, along with help from John Kelly, a criminal profiler, who profiled the woodsman case.
The Death Penalty in Houston Texas a woman named Kayla Duncan once justice for kindhearted sister Allison Simmons who was brutally murdered with an ax in her home in Dallas Alison's husband claimed that he left his house to run a few errands and return to his home where he found his wife murdered after further investigation by the court Allison's husband Chase Simmons was found guilty for the murder of Allison Simmons Chase was a man with morals and from everyone the police talked to said they had gotten the impression that he was a good man after Kayla heard that Chase was guilty of murder of her sister Allison she took charge to try to get the court to reassess the case because she wanted Chase to be sentenced to the death penalty after the
Allegedly, Daniel Nations is a suspect in the murders of Abigail and Liberty. His resemblance and suspicion could be a big break in the case. The murderer is still out there and it’s very scary. Right after the two murders happened parents started being extra precautious of their kids and teenagers. The scary factor in this case is that there were some eye witnesses to seeing the killer before or after the murders, yet no one wants to step up and claim who the killer actually is.
In the sunshine state of Florida, between the years 1989 and1990 seven men were mysteriously murdered. These killings were later found to be the work of a female prostitute, who would find her victims through hitch hiking along Florida’s Highways. She caused the entire state of Florida to be on edge, and it was terrifying for the families of the seven victims. Local law enforcement were stunned by these incidents, and would do everything in their power to solve these cases. The killer who became the first female serial killer, fitting FBI’s profile was Aileen Wuornos.
This man is Richard Mallory, and the killer is Aileen Wuornos. She later goes on to kill several other men. The FBI defines serial murder as the unlawful killing of two or more victims by the same offender(s), in separate events. Male and female serial killers alike have plagued the world for centuries, but criminal
She will emphasize a point she made around 200 pages before. This did not especially inconvenience me in light of the fact that I felt that she was effectively giving so as to express the idea in a more prominent accentuation. The book is a touch longer than it should have been too. Despite the fact that the general population in this book alongside the various transients were looking for a superior life in the north, the fight for correspondence was long from over and the absolute most intriguing parts of the book for me were their encounters in the north. I took in an awesome arrangement perusing the book.
Did they actually murder their husbands, children, or parents? Six woman made it all the way to the top of most famous women murderers. Should they have been accused the way they were, or should it have been different? “Lizzie Borden had an axe, gave her mother forty whacks, when she saw what she had done she gave her father forty-one.” Born July 19, 1860 in Fall River, Massachusetts, Lizzie Borden is the daughter of Andrew Borden and stepdaughter of Abby Borden.
The hunt for the Clutters’ killers, Dick Hickock and Perry Smith, mesmerized the nation and left a lasting impact in Kansas, drawing journalists from across the country to the rural outpost on the Kansas prairie (Huffington Post). An unremarkable New York Times article, which was considerably small and short, at approximately 300 words, grabbed viewers and drew the audience. The column reported the Clutter family murder in the tiny farm town of Holcomb, Kansas on the Great Plains. “Popular headlines surrounding the Clutter family murders were often along the lines of ‘Wealthy Farmer, 3 Of Family Slain” with a photo of Herb Clutter which left residents in shock and dismay that a horrific crime marred the serene and presumably safe landscapes
One of those men were at her apartment drinking before leaving before the bar. Later on while leaving the bar, she left with one of her friends and had him drop her off at her apartment. When investigators checked her phone and found that the men she was at the bar with, both sent her text messages just hours before she was killed. Maples took a “selfie”
In July of 2008, a woman named Cindy Anthony reported that her granddaughter, Caylee Anthony, had not been seen in over a month. The toddler lived with Cindy and her husband, George, as well as the toddler’s mother, Casey. More shockingly, Cindy reported that a pungent odor was coming from her daughter Casey’s car, a smell that was strangely similar to that of a decomposing body (Neubauer 24). Six months after this report was made, Caylee’s remains were found just blocks from the family’s home in Orlando, Florida. The main suspect was her mother: Casey Anthony.
Facts Jesse Gilbert was charged with armed robbery and the murder of a police officer. Gilbert would not answer questions about the robbery charge without a lawyer, but later answered questions about a robbery in which the robber, supposedly Gilbert, used a handwritten note demanding the money. He gave the police handwriting samples, which were later admitted into evidence. The police also had eyewitnesses identify Gilbert in a line-up that was conducted without notice to his attorney. During the trial, several witnesses identified Gilbert in the courtroom as being a part of several robberies; it could not be determined whether or not identifications in the court room were a result of the illegal line-ups that occurred before the trial.
A friend of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, the first of the victims to disappear, says she got an odd call a few days after the 25-year-old vanished in 2007. “ said she was at a whorehouse in Queens,” Sara Karnes tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue, on newsstands now. “I told him she would never go for that, because she was independent. He goes, ‘Well, that’s where I saw her.’ And he described her to a T to me.”
The police could not ignore them because law enforcement was not providing any information to the community. There were two additional bodies of young African Americans children who were found in the spring of 1980, and another child became missing. The FBI was then sent in to assist in the case because there were bodies of African-American victims begin turning up in wooded areas. The break that law enforcement needed came when the perpetrator changed where they were disposing of the bodies, which most of the murdered bodies were found in the woods. But bodies started showing up in the Chattahoochee River in 1981.
Our class lecture and forensic research tell us that serial killers tend to blend in with the community and are well-employed appearing normal however; serial killers have a hidden dark side or evil character (Bartol & Bartol, 2012). A movie directed by John Erman called The Atlanta Child Murders gives accounts of true events and leaves one with their own conclusion (Watch The Atlanta Child Murders. 1985, p.1). Williams’ professes his innocent’s still today and told police he never harmed children or adults (Bardsley, 1981). The research finds that the African population has doubts and believes Williams was framed and incarcerated for political reasons and might be innocent (Bardsley, 1981).