17821 reads ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:48 - 0 comments
... at Randall’s Island, who is said to know most about the crime. Grace is supposed to have been done away with in lime, but another ... living in a rundown shack 10 miles from the scene of the crime. One man, Salvatore Pace, a local gas station owner, got his gun and ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:40
... and dumped on a Shankill street less than a mile from the crime scene. One of those involved later admitted that one of the gang, a ... the Butchers as a unit. The Butchers’ first collective crime was also one of their most destructive, involving an armed robbery at ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:27 - 1 comment
... Wright is not alone in maintaining his innocence. To crime investigator and writer David Dixon, the forensic evidence linking Wright ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:25 - 0 comments
... the bed. The killer was an enthusiastic reader of true crime books and FBI manuals, and he knew how to clean up a crime scene. He wiped down any surface that he may have touched and changed his ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:23 - 0 comments
... anywhere near as planned and even then his full plans for a crime were often thwarted because he had not made adequate allowance for the ... At 8 or 9, he came across photographs in a detective magazine of women tied up, apparently terrified. The images lingered in his ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:21
61989 reads ...
admin - 04/16/2014 - 15:16
... Levy told The Times that “the audacity of the crime recalled in some ways the so-called Pink Panther robberies – a long ...
admin - 04/07/2014 - 16:44 - 1 comment
... a recidivist criminal . He was known worldwide and crime fiction writers like Conan Doyle mentioned him in their books. ( ...
admin - 04/07/2014 - 16:34
... Although DNA profiling was already being used at Adelaide crime scenes by 1996, the technology available at that time wasn’t up to ... bore distinct tooth mark-like indentations, Carson asked the crime scene examiner to collect the gum. He arranged for it to be stored in the ...
admin - 04/07/2014 - 16:20 - 0 comments
On the night of November 29, 1988, near the impoverished Marlborough neighborhood in south Kansas City, an explosion at a construction site killed six of the city’s firefighters. It was a clear case of arson, and five people from Marlborough were duly convicted of the crime. But for veteran crime writer and crusading editor J. Patrick O’Connor, the facts—or a lack of them—didn’t add up. Justice on Fire is OConnor’s detailed account of the terrible explosion that led to the firefighters’ deaths and the terrible injustice that followed. Also available from Amazon
With the purpose of writing about true crime in an authoritative, fact-based manner, veteran journalists J. J. Maloney and J. Patrick O’Connor launched Crime Magazine in November of 1998. Their goal was to cover all aspects of true crime: Read More
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