capital punishment
Weigh the pros, cons and controversies surrounding the grave issue of capital punishment; should the death penalty be allowed?
“Watching the Back: A Hostage Nightmare in Henry County”
Chapter 1: The Silence That Spoke Volumes It was just past 11 a.m. on April 4, 2019, when Anetria White pulled into her sister’s driveway in Stockbridge, Georgia. She had been trying to reach her pregnant sister, Sandra White, since the night before—but calls had gone unanswered. So had texts. Sandra wasn’t the type to just “go quiet.”
By 🕵️♂️ True Crime Enthusiast | Storyteller of the Dark Side 🔍6 months ago in Criminal
African American Serial Killers Part 4
In the late eighties early nineties, the Crack Era had police departments involved in bringing hustlers “to justice.” In fact, the War on Drugs, or battle from an inanimate object, sapped the resources of other departments dedicated to solving actual crimes.
By Skyler Saunders6 months ago in Criminal
"I Want to Talk to You" – The Tragic Final Hours of Humaira Asghar
📰 Editor’s Note: This story is a follow-up to my earlier coverage of the sudden and tragic death of Pakistani actress and public figure Humaira Asghar. New revelations have emerged from the police investigation that deepen the mystery and raise even more troubling questions. Here is the full updated report based on the latest evidence.
By 🕵️♂️ True Crime Enthusiast | Storyteller of the Dark Side 🔍6 months ago in Criminal
The Final Plea: The Story of Nimisha Priya, a Kerala Nurse on Death Row in Yemen
The Tragic Tale of Nimisha Priya: From Nurse to Death Row in Yemen On July 25, 2017, the Yemeni police in the city of Aden arrested Nimisha Priya, a nurse from Kerala, and her friend Hanan for the brutal murder of a man named Abdu Mahdi, a local broker. The case shocked international media after reports claimed that Nimisha had killed her "husband," chopped his body, and dumped it in a water tank.
By 🕵️♂️ True Crime Enthusiast | Storyteller of the Dark Side 🔍6 months ago in Criminal
How Two Kids Hacked the CIA
October 2015 – CIA Headquarters, Virginia John Brennan, Director of the CIA—the world’s most powerful intelligence agency—received a strange call from an unknown number. The voice on the other end wasn’t that of a terrorist, a foreign spy, or even an insider. It was a teenager.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in Criminal
The Real Murderer Revealed
In the heart of Washington, D.C., amid a city buzzing with politics and power plays, a gruesome murder shocked the local media. A young man named Aamir Shaikh — a freelance consultant with a history of shady deals and more enemies than allies — was found dead in an abandoned warehouse on the outskirts of the city.
By Engr. Mansoor Ahmad6 months ago in Criminal
How One Mistake Trapped the Dark Web King
A man was sitting inside his luxurious Bangkok villa, browsing on his laptop, when suddenly, a loud crash echoed from outside. Unaware that the luxurious life he had built was moments away from its end, he left his laptop open and rushed outside.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in Criminal
The Impossible Prison Break - Alcatraz Escape
FBI officers were stunned. Even if a prisoner was left completely unguarded inside this prison, there was no way to escape. So how had three inmates slipped out right under the nose of the authorities—and not just that, but it took 10 hours for anyone to even realize they were missing?
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in Criminal
Too Beautiful to Keep: The Crime of Cutting Noses in the Name of Honor
In some far-off tribal lands where mountains meet tradition, a dark chapter of history whispers through the silence. It is not written in textbooks. It is not shown in films. But it is real — and heartbreaking.
By Muhammad Adil6 months ago in Criminal
The Final Confession
Daniel Malik had everything a lawyer could dream of — success, money, power. His name was etched in gold outside a firm that defended the city’s most dangerous men. And he had a reputation: if Daniel was your attorney, you walked free — no matter how guilty you were.
By Ubaid Ur Rehman6 months ago in Criminal
A Deadly Obsession: The Live Stream That Ended in Blood
Part 1: The Rise of Ai Mogami At around 9:15 AM, in the quiet streets of Tokyo's Shinjuku district, a young female streamer named Ai Mogami was setting up her IRL (In Real Life) live stream. The chill of winter was just leaving the city, and most people were already at work or school, making the streets unusually empty. She had attached her phone to a tripod and logged into her streaming app—HuWatch—a popular Japanese platform similar to Twitch or YouTube Live.
By 🕵️♂️ True Crime Enthusiast | Storyteller of the Dark Side 🔍6 months ago in Criminal
The man who changed the ways of crime and first made the term serial killer popular.. Content Warning.
Bob Howard, a patrol officer in Salt Lake City, Utah, was sitting in his car in front of his house on Hogan Street on June 18, 1975. He had just finished his shift when a beige Volkswagen Beetle passed by without its lights on. He felt something was off. He knew his area well and knew that this car didn’t belong to anyone in the neighborhood. He decided to check it out and followed the car. The car stopped in front of his neighbor’s house, which was empty at the time; the parents were not home, and their two daughters (aged 17 and 19) were inside alone. Howard turned on his high beams to read the car’s license plate. The driver got scared and sped away, and of course, Howard chased him immediately. The driver ran through one stop sign and then another, and Howard continued following him because he sensed something was wrong. After a while, Howard managed to corner the car and stopped it at an abandoned gas station. The driver got out with his hands raised, wearing jeans, a black hoodie, and sneakers. His hair was dark and long, reaching his shoulders, and he smelled like marijuana. Howard pointed his gun at him. The man claimed he was a lost college student who had been watching a movie at an outdoor cinema but got lost on the way. However, Howard had passed by the cinema earlier, and the movie the man mentioned wasn’t playing. Howard knew he was lying and decided to search the car. Upon searching, he found something strange: the passenger seat was missing and replaced by an open bag containing very suspicious items — a ski mask, crowbar, ice pick, garbage bags, gloves, women’s underwear, rope, and wires. In the trunk, there were handcuffs. Howard told the man, “I’m going to arrest you tonight for fleeing the police, and I’ll ask the prosecutor to charge you with possession of burglary tools.” They went to the station, registered his data, and took photos. But after all procedures, there was no direct evidence linking him to a crime, so he was released on bail. Howard was very suspicious and believed this man was planning to break into his neighbors’ house where the two daughters were alone. But what Howard didn’t know at the time was that this man was no ordinary person — he was the most notorious serial killer in American history: Ted Bundy. Arresting him a second time wasn’t easy, because Ted Bundy was a monster. He didn’t scream or attack wildly; he was smart, organized, charismatic, but at the same time, he beat his victims to death. He appeared normal to everyone, but he was a serial killer inside. During the 1970s and 1980s, Ted Bundy committed kidnappings and murders of young girls. He appeared as a handsome, educated man, but he deceived everyone. He would approach his victims in public places pretending to have an injury or illness, ask for help, then hit them until they lost consciousness, and take them to isolated places where he abused and killed them. Over time, the number of missing girls increased, and the police began to notice a pattern, but they had no strong evidence. Bundy chose his victims carefully and knew how to hide his traces well. In November 1974, he committed a crime that left eyewitnesses who helped the police identify him. A girl named Carol DaRonch had been abducted but managed to escape and reported detailed information about him and his car. In 1975, Ted Bundy was arrested after a police chase, and tools indicating his intention to commit crimes were found in his possession. He was released on bail due to lack of sufficient evidence. Later, he was arrested again and put on trial. He tried to defend himself but escaped from prison twice using clever and deceptive methods. During his second escape, he committed murders in Florida, including killing women at a sorority house at the University of Florida. In February 1978, he was finally arrested after resisting a police officer. In 1979, he was sentenced to death for killing several victims. Before his execution, he confessed to killing 36 women, but it is believed that the number of his victims may exceed 100. His trial was the first to be televised nationally in the U.S., where millions watched the case details. He was executed in January 1989. Ted Bundy’s story is considered one of the most famous serial killer stories in history, teaching us the importance of caution, watching over children, and teaching them not to trust strangers, even if they seem friendly.
By Ink pulse(different angle)6 months ago in Criminal










