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.
Suicide manslaughter
I want to start this post off by saying I mean no disrespect to the family or friends of the victims of this nor do I mean any disrespect to the victims themselves. I also don't want to encourage someone to do this, you will go to jail for this. I just want to bring attention to this as an issue.
By Lena Bailey5 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: A Damned Man- Timothy McVeigh
What more can be said about the deadliest terrorist attack against America carried out by an American citizen? Objectivity. One must hold Timothy McVeigh alongside some of the worst figures in modern day history. His selfless, self-destruction led to the demise of 168 people, 19 of them children.
By Skyler Saunders5 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: The Amish Perdition- Murderer Edward Gingerich
The Amish are some of the most peculiar people in the United States of America. They occupy pockets of over 22 states and abide by strict guidelines according to their faith. But the strangest thing to happen, perhaps, by an Amish person was to murder.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: How Calculating can One Smart be?-The Killer Pamela Smart
In the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility for Women in New York State, a high profile inmate serves her time. That inmate is Pamela Smart. Found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility for parole, Smart made a disaster of her life. By hiring three young men including Billy Flynn to dispatch her husband Gregg, Smart knew what she was doing.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
The Zona Heaster homicide
In 1896, a young woman from Greenbrier County, West Virginia named Zona Heaster, 23, met a handsome blacksmith named Trout Shue, 35. Whether it was simply love at first site or lust, the romance between the couple wouldn’t last long or end well. Zona didn’t really know enough about the man who had captured her heart. It would be a fatal mistake.
By Marc Hoover6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Murderous Menendezs-Lyle Bought a Porsche, Erik Hired a Full-Time Tennis Coach
Patient-professional confidentiality only goes so far. On Halloween 1989, psychiatrist Jerome Oziel listened to his patient Erik Menendez divulge a shocking and bloody secret. He and his brother had committed parricide. Oziel knew that this type of information must be handed over to law enforcement officials.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: Why Forgive a Monster?-John Albert Taylor
Philosopher and author Ayn Rand once said that, “If one does feel compassion for the torturers, it is an act of moral treason toward the victims.” This can be applied to the case of John Albert Taylor. Even at his execution by firing squad, Taylor wished to troll the state of Utah because the action would be “embarrassing.” In June 1989, the body of Charla King appeared before her mother. Taylor had garrotted her with a telephone wire.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: A Christmas Time Disaster- The Ronald Gene Simmons Murders
A man just woke up and decided to mow down people without remorse, without regard. That man was Ronald Gene Simmons. He essentially lined up his family and shot or strangled them, from his wife to his children among others. He had sexual relations with his own daughter and she produced his son/grandson. He gunned down Sheila and her husband along with his one-year-old grandson Michael.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: How Could a Woman Rape a Man? The Preppy Killer
Looking like Ray Liotta in his youth, Robert Chambers walked around as a prep school example. He had been selling and using drugs and the reason for his rejection from Boston University stemmed from a stolen credit card. But that action would not be what he would be known best for in his life.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal
Henry Rathbone: The forgotten soldier
On April 14, 1865, an actor named John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Abraham Lincoln as he watched a play. There have been many movies and books covering the story. You likely studied the details in high school or a college history class. The key players were Lincoln, First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln and Booth. There are several pictures that depict Booth shooting Lincoln to death.
By Marc Hoover6 years ago in Criminal
Reason First: A Letter to the Victims-The Patrick Henry Sherrill Murders
The phrase “going postal” has taken on a wicked history. It means now that someone has either gone crazy or is attempting to do something that is off-kilter or potentially deadly, especially in a workplace.
By Skyler Saunders6 years ago in Criminal








