guilty
Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time; a look into all aspects of a guilty verdict from the burden of proof to conviction to the judge’s sentence and more.
Crazy ways People Avoid the Law
Nobody wants to end up in prison. But what if you’re sentenced? Then, you have no choice. However, not everyone goes down easily. Some criminals get creative. They hide their faces in ink. Others fake their own deaths or alter their appearances. These people go the extra mile to evade the law. Curious about how many got away with it? You’re about to find out! Let’s dive into the wildest ways some tried to escape justice.
By Tafara Sibotshiweabout a year ago in Criminal
Harsh Punishments for minor crimes
Life can be unfair. Some individuals face extreme punishments for seemingly minor offenses. Examples include people jailed for charging their phones, fined for feeding their families, or incarcerated simply for sending a friend request on social media. These instances raise important questions about justice and legality.
By Tafara Sibotshiweabout a year ago in Criminal
Worst Prisons in History
Nelson Mandela once said that to truly know a nation, you must experience its jails. However, today we go beyond nations and venture back through centuries. We will explore the worst prisons in history, from ancient dungeons to modern facilities.
By Tafara Sibotshiweabout a year ago in Criminal
The First Shadow: Unveiling Jack the Ripper's Earliest Crime
Without further ado after 3:30 a.m., Charles Cross strolled through the overflowing ghettos of London’s Whitechapel neighborhood on his way to work. As he strolled down Buck’s Row—a calm byway flanked by distribution centers and miserable, two-story cottages—Cross looked through the obscurity and spotted something bizarre drooped against the gated steady entrance on the other side of the road. As Cross crept closer over the cobblestones, he made a horrible revelation. “I might not tell in the dim what it was at first,” he said. “It looked to me like a covering sheet, but venturing into the street, I saw it was the body of a woman.”
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Echoes of the Night: The Jack the Ripper Case
Jack the Ripper terrorized London in 1888, killing at least five women and mutilating their bodies in an unusual manner, indicating that the killer had a substantial knowledge of human anatomy. The culprit was never captured—or even identified—and Jack the Ripper remains one of England’s, and the world’s, most infamous criminals.
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Room 348: Death at the Inn - Ch # Last
Case Closed Brennan was stressed when the judge begun perusing the sentence. He had flown to Beaumont on October 29, 2012, to connect Susie Fleniken and Scott Apple and a gather of Greg’s family and companions for the sentencing of Spear Mueller. The circuit tester had entered a no-contest supplication to murder. As Brennan recalled it, the judge started by saying that this entirety catastrophe might be seen fair as a appalling accident.
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Room 348: Death at the Inn - Ch # 8
“Did anyone thump on the entryway following entryway, to check on the guy?,” Brennan asked. “No,” said Steinmetz. “I continuously inquire myself, if I was in a circumstance like this, you know, what would I do, and I admit—”
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Room 348: Death at the Inn - Ch # 7
“You’ve Got a Problem” Tim Steinmetz must have been feeling lovely O.K. around this assembly with the Texas cops. Getting called had been a stunner. It was more than seven months since he and Spear Mueller had come domestic from the work in Beaumont. Presently two cops from down there had come all the way to Wisconsin to see him and to address him around the fellow who had kicked the bucket another entryway. It had been troubling. He and Mueller had conferred approximately it previously by phone and made beyond any doubt their stories were straight. Steinmetz met the analysts in an meet room at the Chippewa Province Sheriff’s Division, and, truly, they might not have been more pleasant. Tim sat in a swivel chair on one side of a huge wooden table, and they sat inverse him with their scratch pad open and records helpful. Exceptionally official. They said thanks to him for coming in. They guaranteed him that this was routine.
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Room 348: Death at the Inn - Ch # 6
Dr. Brown was not convinced. He had inspected the man’s body from head to toe, cut him open, reviewed his inward organs one by one, and turned around the desires of the police. With accuracy and with the understanding of a long time, he had decided that Greg Fleniken kicked the bucket not from characteristic causes but from a extreme beating. Presently they needed to tell him that his cautious and proficient perceptions were off-base? That he had missed, of all things, a bullet wound?
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal
Room 348: Death at the Inn - Ch # 5
Dried Toothpaste The taking after morning, Apple picked up Brennan and they gone by the lodging room, where Apple appeared him the crime-scene photographs and the post-mortem examination comes about, and surveyed what he had done over the past seven months. Brennan listened him out and at that point reported, “I think I know how this fellow passed on. I think I know when he passed on. I think I know who slaughtered him. And I think I know how we’re going to capture him.”
By Shams Saysabout a year ago in Criminal









