capital punishment
Weigh the pros, cons and controversies surrounding the grave issue of capital punishment; should the death penalty be allowed?
The Last Confession
M Mehran Detective Ayaan Malik had seen every shade of crime in his twelve years with the Karachi City Police—murders wrapped in lies, robberies disguised as desperation, betrayals hidden behind friendly smiles. But nothing unsettled him like the case of Zafar Qureshi, the man newspapers called The Gentleman Criminal. Zafar was unlike the others. No loud threats, no reckless violence. His crimes were elegant, almost meticulous—high-profile robberies targeting corrupt businessmen, politicians with offshore accounts, men already drowning in stolen wealth. To the poor, Zafar was a whisper of justice. To the authorities, he was a ghost with a taste for irony. Ayaan wanted him caught not because of duty, but because the criminal understood him—too well. 1 The letter arrived on a rainy Tuesday. No stamp. No return address. Only a single line: “Meet me tonight at the Al-Haroon Textile Mill. Come alone. —Z.Q.” Ayaan stared at the signature as thunder cracked across the sky. For months, he had chased Zafar’s trail—security footage with blurred faces, fingerprints wiped clean, informants with trembling lips claiming they never saw anything. This letter felt like a door finally opening. At midnight, Ayaan reached the abandoned mill. Broken windows. Rusted machinery like skeletons from another era. He stepped through the entrance cautiously. A voice echoed from the darkness. “You’re earlier than I expected, Detective.” Zafar Qureshi emerged from the shadows wearing a tailored coat, his posture calm, almost regal. He looked less like a fugitive and more like a professor interrupted on his way to lecture. “You called me,” Ayaan said, hand hovering near his gun. “Why?” Zafar smiled faintly. “Because the story ends tonight. And endings deserve honesty.” 2 Zafar told his story like a man reciting history, not guilt. He had once been a respected financial advisor. His clients? The powerful and the immoral. He watched them exploit workers, bribe officials, and bleed communities dry. When he exposed them, no one listened. When he protested, he lost his job. “A system that protects thieves forces better men to become criminals,” he said. “So I became exactly what they feared.” He robbed only the corrupt—stole their hidden money, exposed their secrets, leaked their accounts to journalists. At first, Ayaan wanted to believe him. But motive never excused a crime. The law didn’t bend for poetic justice. “You still broke into houses. You still threatened people,” Ayaan said. Zafar’s eyes hardened. “I never spilled innocent blood. But the men I exposed? They would have. They still might.” Thunder rumbled outside. Raindrops spilled through holes in the roof like tears from the sky. “Why confess?” Ayaan asked. Zafar hesitated. And for the first time, Ayaan saw fear in his eyes. “Because they’re coming. The men I ruined… they hired someone. A contract killer. I am dead tonight, Detective. I just want the truth to live longer than I do.” 3 Gunshots shattered the silence. Ayaan dropped to cover as bullets sliced through metal and concrete. Three figures stormed into the mill, faces masked, movements sharp and professional. Zafar returned fire with a concealed pistol. “Detective! Whether you hate me or not, fight now—judge me later!” Ayaan didn’t want to fight beside a criminal. But instincts answered before pride could argue. He fired back, hitting one of the attackers in the leg. Zafar’s shot disarmed another. The third retreated into the shadows, waiting. The mill went still again, except for the storm outside. “You shouldn’t have come alone,” Zafar said breathlessly. “You asked me to.” “I didn’t think you’d trust me.” Ayaan almost laughed. “I don’t.” A bullet whizzed past, grazing Zafar’s arm. He staggered, dropping to one knee. The final assailant stepped forward, gun raised. “You ruined powerful lives, Zafar,” the man sneered. “Now you pay.” Ayaan fired first. The attacker fell. Silence swallowed the mill once again. Zafar sank to the ground, blood darkening his coat. “Go,” Zafar whispered. “Leave before the others arrive. You can still save yourself.” “I’m arresting you,” Ayaan said, kneeling beside him. Zafar laughed weakly. “You can’t arrest a dying man.” “Watch me,” Ayaan snapped, pressing a hand to the wound. Zafar shook his head. “This is my ending. But the files… the proof… it’s real. In my office, behind the painting of the harbor. Bring them to light. Don’t let my story be twisted.” His voice trembled—not from pain, but urgency. “You’re a good man, Detective. Better than the system. Don’t let it turn you into a villain like it did me.” His breath slowed. One last exhale. Zafar Qureshi—the Gentleman Criminal—was gone. 4 Morning arrived like a confession. Police swarmed the mill. Reporters circled like crows. Ayaan stood in the doorway, exhausted and hollow. Captain Rahim approached. “Where’s Qureshi?” Ayaan looked at the body, covered in a white sheet. “He’s done running.” “And the evidence? The files? Were his claims true?” Ayaan’s mind burned with questions he could never ask again. “Yes,” he answered quietly, even though he hadn’t checked yet. “They’re true.” Because he wanted them to be. 5 That evening, Ayaan stood in Zafar’s office. Behind the painting as described—folders, hard drives, names that could shatter careers and topple empires. Proof that justice wasn’t just broken—it had been sold. Ayaan closed the drawer, hands trembling. He had two choices: Hand the evidence to the authorities and trust a corrupt system. Leak it, expose them, become the villain the world needed. He heard Zafar’s final words echo in his head. “A system that protects thieves forces better men to become criminals.” Ayaan locked the office door behind him. Sometimes justice didn’t live in the law. Sometimes it lived in the shadows. And maybe tonight, the shadows had a new owner.
By Muhammad Mehran17 days ago in Criminal
Pedro Rodrigues Filho: Brazil’s Most Notorious Vigilante Killer
Pedro Rodrigues Filho, often referred to in the media as “Pedrinho Matador,” is one of the most infamous figures in Brazilian criminal history. His life story is frequently cited as an extreme example of how cycles of violence trauma and vigilantism can intertwine, producing a legacy that remains deeply unsettling decades later.Filho’s story begins even before his birth, in a household marked by severe domestic abuse. His father was violently abusive toward his mother throughout her pregnancy, a level of brutality that would shape the narrative of Filho’s life from the very beginning. Growing up, he was surrounded by instability, fear, and violence, conditions that would later be used by commentators and psychologists alike to explain—though not excuse—his actions.
By Kure Garba17 days ago in Criminal
The Epstein Files: What the Latest Disclosures Reveal—and What They Don’t
The name Jeffrey Epstein remains deeply embedded in public conversation, years after his death, largely due to renewed attention surrounding the so-called Epstein files. These documents—released in stages through court orders and legal proceedings—have sparked intense debate, speculation, and misunderstanding across media platforms. To grasp their true significance, it is essential to distinguish between verified facts, legal context, and public assumptions.
By KAMRAN AHMAD24 days ago in Criminal
Javed Iqbal Case: Pakistan’s Most Shocking True Crime Story. AI-Generated.
Javed Iqbal Case: Pakistan’s Most Shocking True Crime Story The Javed Iqbal case remains one of the most disturbing and widely discussed true crime stories in Pakistan’s history. More than two decades later, it continues to haunt public memory — not only because of the scale of the crime, but because it exposed deep cracks in society’s ability to protect its most vulnerable children.
By shakir hamid24 days ago in Criminal
Empire, Exodus, and Erasure:
The United States has pumped billions into Israel through military aid, trade deals, and strategic partnerships, reinforcing a powerhouse alliance that keeps both nations at the top of the geopolitical game. This financial backing isn’t just about friendship—it’s about maintaining power, influence, and military dominance in one of the world’s most volatile regions.
By Living the Greatest CONSPIRACY Theory. By RG.25 days ago in Criminal
The Missing Murder Weapon! Nick Reiner Hires Prominent Lawyer
By nightfall, the fog had rolled into Brentwood. Standing outside Rob Reiner’s home for the second night in a row, the scene felt different. Quieter. Darker. The media presence had thinned, but the weight of what happened here hadn’t lifted. People still walked their dogs past the gates. Neighbors slowed down. Some stopped. Everyone seemed to be processing the same unthinkable reality.
By Lawrence Lease26 days ago in Criminal










