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All we're saying is that many of the world's most terrifying serial killers are in fact roaming free, and could be outside your door right now.Due to some legal loopholes and a system that's surprisingly forgiving of mass murderers, some true monsters have been cranked out onto the street. So the next time you go shopping, you may want to keep an eye out for. 5Nikolai DzhumagalievFrom:KazakhstanWhy You Don't Want to Meet Him:Nikolai Dzhumagaliev is as close to a real life Hannibal Lecter as you can get.
The main difference is that Dzhumagaliev has metal teeth.Operating in 1980 in the former Soviet Union, Dzhumagaliev is one of the most prolific serial killer cannibals the country has ever seen. Affectionately called "Metal Fang" for the set of white, metal teeth which had replaced his own chompers (making himself a sort of hybrid between Lecter and Jaws from James Bond), Dzhumagaliev is said to have killed and eaten somewhere between 50 to 100 women.
and even served a few portions to his unknowing friends."No, seriously, Nikolai, what is in this?"No, we didn't make this guy up.Why You Might Meet Him Anyway:After being sentenced to a mental institution in Uzbekistan and escaping once, the government decided that less than 10 years oostr free with serial killers rehabilitation was enough for this serial killer and simply let him go."And you PROMISE you won't eat any more women?"So Where Is He Now?Very little is known of Dzhumagaliev's current whereabouts, though he is said to be living with his relatives in Eastern Europe.
However, being a free man and all, he can travel anywhere he pleases. Perhaps a place where almost no one has heard of him. Like your town, for example.It could be your neighbor.Nikolai has always been described as a very charming and well-spoken man, and one not bad to look at to boot (which only helped him lure more women into his fridge).
The Jaws teeth are, thankfully, a dead give away. But hey, he could totally blend in at a James Bond convention. Unless he keeps his mouth closed, in which case he could blend in anywhere at all. Your basement, for instance. 4Karla HomolkaFrom:CanadaWhy You Don't Want to Meet Her:Let's say you're a woman.
And let's say that prior to your wedding, your husband-to-be expresses his one wish: He wants to rape your sister. If your immediate reaction is to help him do it, then you're probably Karla Homolka.You!When the sister died during the course of their adventure in unspeakable horror, Karla panicked, called the police and gave herself up.Oh, wait, no. She and her husband decided to do it again, to another victim.
And another. Thus we wound up with the terrifying husband and wife serial killer team of Karla Homolka and Paul Bernardo, whose rampage only ended when Karla was charged with two counts of manslaughter in 1993. She then held a "going away party" before going off to jail, possibly with an amusing cake decorated for the occasion.Why You Might Meet Her Anyway:As bad as Karla was, apparently her husband was worse.
Despite a mountain of conflicting statements from Karla and Paul, she managed to get a plea bargain in exchange for rolling over oostr free with serial killers her man. She served 12 years in prison and was released in 2005.So Where Is She Now?In 2007, Homolka decided that the only place for her and her one-year-old son to live a normal life were the Antilles. So now, she can be anywhere in Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic or Puerto Rico.
You might think that Latin America is not the perfect place for a skinny Canadian blonde to hide but. we don't know how to finish that sentence.What a monster.Either way, if while vacation you spot a MILF in her late 30s and want to make sure she is not your type (you know, the raping-killer type), then just remember that the courts have denied Homolka the change of her name.
So a quick "Hey Karla" shout-out should clear everything up. If she turns around, that will be your cue to try to break the 500 meter dash record. 3Juha ValjakkalaFrom:Sweden/FinlandWhy You Don't Want to Meet Him:On July 3, Predicted confessions of fbi serial killers 24 Mar 2016 @ 07:21, by Geral SosbeeBelow is a description of the apparatus of terror & intimidation used by the USA's Central police authority which is the fbi.Today, the fbi enjoys the same dictatorial authority that was Adolf Hitler's in his time and place.A few observations in the next paragraph are borrowed from Jarred Boyles who addressed the high crimes committed by Adolf Hitler.
Boyles reported on some of the confessions of Nazi war criminals who operated with the implied consent of the people of Germany."What is it about a dictator that makes men set aside their own morality and so heedlessly slaughter other human beings?
Do their cries of pain fall on deaf ears?Fear is a perfect motivating factor, but how can fear paralyze millions of people so thoroughly? "Today in the USA all Americans are afforded the opportunity to read my reports of fbi atrocities against me and others, but no one tries to stop the crimes because the fbi as dictator instills such extreme fear as to practically paralyze the members of government and most in the general population.
In other words the people of the USA impliedly consent and often approve of the fbi hideous offenses that I chronicle.Extensive documentation of my allegations against the fbi are on line, as are items of proof that Congress and the Courts pretend that the fbi is innocent and is collectively Mr. Wonderful protecting the USA from criminals; nothing could be further from the truth.We have few or no confessions today from the human monsters of the fbi, but if we did here are a few of the outpouring of 'mea culpa' that would be forever inscribed in the annals of sickening American�Real History :Regarding ex fbi agent whistle-blower Geral Sosbee and many others targeted by the fbi for torture and death, here are a few of our assaults against him:We tortured him in his home with a variety of methods:Drove him into bankruptcy, homelessness and neuroses; sought as we monitored him in real time to force him into final exit and sent him messages to do so;poisoned him extensively and watched him collapse and seek emergency hospital care; made sure his doctor was incompetent and that he would need to flee the hospital for his life; frequently entered his home and destroyed some of his clothing; tampered with certain items so he would know that we watch him 24/7/365 in order to devise ways to drive him crazy; destroyed his cars when warranties expired, and took over by remote control the electronics of his car and his home for harassment purposes; attacked him relentlessly with directed energy weaponry (DEW) including microwave (causing blisters and cancers) and with extremely low frequency (ELF) sound waves causing disturbing sleep deprivation permanently; watched him in his car and home in order to plot new psychological assaults; sent street thugs to provoke him in order to try to arrest him on any charge for over decades; notified all police and all of his contacts that he is under investigation and is a dangerous mental case; repeatedly tortured him while he was in the hospital for treatments of injuries that we caused, or that he suffered in the army.When he attempted to report our attacks, we used his writings as evidence that he is dangerous, angry and a possible mass murderer (and that due to his combat service to USA he is by definition a murderer); orchestrated a crime scene where we planted his name as a prime suspect and subsequently directed high level police from state and federal agencies (not fbi) to open an official, full field criminal case on him.All of this is even now conducted by our counterintelligence group and is authorized by federal judges/magistrates based on ex parte sworn fraudulent statements from our operatives.Geral Sosbee somehow survived decades of these little atrocities even into his seventies and we plan to continue the macabre program against him until he dies."The more we do to you the less you seem to believe we are doing it".
Joseph Mengele���������� Log in or register to post comments Rochester Indymedia is now requiring editor approval for account creation.We came to this decision after we had repeated spam posted�to our website that caused difficulty with the website's functioning. We�will still have open publishing and keep our site as nonrestrictive and�accessible as possible.If you have any questions or concerns, please�feel free to contact us. As before, we will continue to be Rochester's�grassroots news and education site.
Thank you for your continued support�and remember,�"Don't hate the media, be the media!" The Rochester Independent Media Center (R-IMC) is no longer meeting regularly.We will set up meetings by necessity and appointment. Please contact us at rochesterindymedia@rocus.org.Our home is still the Flying Squirrel Community Space at 285 Clarissa St. Occasionally, we hold meetings at RCTV located at 21 Gorham Street. � Abruzzo� Alacant� Andorra� Antwerpen�A league of superheroes.
A society of Sherlock�s. The Cold Case Conquerors. These are all adulation's that have been used to describe The American Investigative Society of Cold Cases (AISOCC). The American Investigative Society of Cold Cases offers a professional, free, non-biased review of any cold case brought to us by law enforcement.
We have an elite group of experts, the "best of the best", to assist in solving cold cases.The American Investigative Society of Cold Cases (AISOCC) was born in March of 2013. While investigating the 1994 cold case murders of Gail Matthews and Tamara Berkheiser, I became stuck. It is a detective�s worst nightmare. It is a horrible feeling. You feel lost, desolate, failed and alone.
I felt that I had nowhere to turn for help because no single person or group entity had invested the time and passion I had into the case, so why would they even care. I finally swallowed my pride and went to the FBI�s famed Behavioral Assessment Unit for their guidance and in an attempt to get a new lead generated, because as a detective, that�s all you really want� is to have another lead.
The FBI was very courteous, polite and helpful. I had worked for them for two years previous to this as a member of their �Safe Streets Task Force� as an undercover agent and they treated me with such class and respect. Eventually, they did generate a new lead for me�.however I wasn�t sure if it was leading me down the correct path.In an attempt to validate their conclusions and to get another opinion, I checked out the Vidocq Society and their cold case group.
I reached out personally to Richard Walter, the criminal profiler who is one of the three founding members of the Vidocq Society.
I went to his home and discussed the case with him for over four hours. His candor and methodology was exactly what I needed and he had earned my respect very quickly. As I always do, I listened more than I spoke.
Sometimes I feel you don�t need to try to impress someone with your own knowledge on a subject, just listen and you are guaranteed to learn something you didn�t know. We not only talked about the case and our methods, we talked about the need to have more organizations to look at the unfathomable number of cold cases.
I would never realize how impactful this meeting would be on my professional life and for the creation of AISOCC until years later. When I left his home, not only did I leave with a higher IQ about offender profiling and crime scene assessment but also a bottle of �Cold Case Chardonnay� and a copy of Michael Capuzzo�s Murder Room, compliments of Mr. Walter.As much as I respected Mr. Walter, I needed other opinions and eyes to see the case in a new light as his assessment was much like from the FBI�s�but I wasn�t so sure.
I kept looking for a group of professional investigators to bounce my theories off of. However, I came to a stark conclusion�there were very few others out there.The answer was rather easy for me at this point in time.
If I could not find anyone else to assist me in my battle to find a killer, I was going to start my own organization and staff it with a multi-disciplinary field of educated professionals whose sole purpose is to help law enforcement solve cold cases. I envisioned having the absolute best crime fighters in the world under one roof, battling the staggering amount of unsolved cold cases. I wanted the "cream of the crop" and the foremost names in crime fighting. I wanted AISOCC to always be the place where law enforcement oostr free with serial killers go when they could not solve a case.
I wanted there to be an organization that brings together the elite of the elite to review and ultimately solve previously unsolvable cold cases. I wanted that organization to be AISOCC.But first, I wanted to get �permission� from the man whom treated me so well and was the co-founder of the Vidocq Society.
After sending out a few inquiries to potential suitors, Mr. Walter oostr free with serial killers my cell phone and asked if I was in fact starting a new cold case group (word had apparently gotten back to Vidocq and it raised a few eyebrows). I explained to him that I was but I didn�t want to �step on anyone�s toes�.
I have since learned that stepping on toes is inevitable when you embark on this uphill battle of solving cold cases and seeking out the truth, no matter how hard you try. Eventually, feelings will get hurt and egos will get trampled of former prosecutors and old investigators, who tried their very best and may have come up short in solving the crime or worse yet, convicted the wrong person.Regardless of this fact, It was important to me to have the blessing from Richard Walter strictly because of the way he treated me and my respect for him.
I�m old school like that, I believe in firm handshakes, treating people with respect and being a standup guy, true to my word. Truth be told, I do not know what I would have done had Richard�s response have been different. Fortunately, his response was classic Richard when he said,Date/TimeDate(s) - 26/06/201620:00 - 23:00Location Joe's GarageCategory(ies)� FilmavondSunday June 26th 2016, Black and white film night: M eine stadt sught einen morder.
(Fritz Lang, 1931). Door opens at 8pm, film begins at 9pm. Free admission.The horror of the faces: That is the overwhelming image that remains from a recent viewing of the restored version of �M,� Fritz Lang�s famous 1931 film about a child murderer in Germany. In my memory it was a film that centered on the killer, the creepy little Franz Becker, played by Peter Lorre. But Becker has relatively limited screen time, and only one consequential speech�although it�s a haunting one.
Most of the film is devoted to the search for Becker, by both the police and the underworld, and many of these scenes are played in closeup. In searching for words to describe the faces of the actors, I fall hopelessly upon �piglike.�What was Lang up to? He was a famous director, his silent films like �Metropolis� worldwide successes. He lived in a Berlin where the left-wing plays of Bertolt Brecht coexisted with the decadent milieu re-created in movies like �Cabaret.� By 1931, the Nazi Party was on the march in Germany, although not yet in full control.
His own wife would later become a party member. He made a film that has been credited with forming two genres: the serial killer movie and the police procedural. And he filled it with grotesques. Was there something beneath the surface, some visceral feeling about his society that this story allowed him to express?When you watch �M,� you see a hatred for the Germany of the early 1930s that is visible and palpable.
Apart from a few perfunctory shots of everyday bourgeoisie life (such as the pathetic scene of the mother waiting for her little girl to return from school), the entire movie consists of men seen in shadows, in smokefilled dens, in disgusting dives, in conspiratorial conferences.
And the faces of these men are cruel caricatures: Fleshy, twisted, beetle-browed, dark-jowled, out of proportion. One is reminded of the stark faces of the accusing judges in Dreyer�s �Joan of Arc,� but they are more forbidding than ugly.What I sense is that Lang hated the people around him, hated Nazism, and hated Germany for permitting it. His next film, �The Testament of Dr. Mabuse� (1933), had villains who were unmistakably Nazis. It was banned by the censors, but Joseph Goebbels, so the story goes, offered Lang control of the nation�s film industry if he would come on board with the Nazis.
He fled, he claimed, on a midnight train � although Patrick McGilligan�s new book,Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast, is dubious about many of Lang�s grandiose claims.Certainly �M� is a portrait of a diseased society, one that seems even more decadent than the other portraits of Berlin in the 1930s; its characters have no virtues and lack even attractive vices. In other stories of the time we see nightclubs, champagne, sex and perversion.
When �M� visits a bar, it is to show closeups of greasy sausages, spilled beer, rotten cheese and stale cigar butts.The film�s story was inspired by the career of a serial killer in Dusseldorf. In �M,� Franz Becker preys on children � offering them candy and friendship, and then killing them. The murders are all offscreen, and Lang suggests the first one with a classic montage including the little victim�s empty dinner plate, her mother calling frantically down an empty spiral staircase, and her balloon�bought for her by the killer�caught in electric wires.There is no suspense about the murderer�s identity.
Early in the film we see Becker looking at himself in a mirror. Peter Lorre at the time was 26, plump, baby-faced, clean-shaven, and as he looks at his reflected image he pulls down the corners of his mouth and tries to make hideous faces, to see in himself the monster others see in him. His presence in the movie is often implied rather than seen; he compulsively whistles the same tune, from �Peer Gynt,� over and over, until the notes stand in for the murders.The city is in turmoil: The killer must be caught.
The police put all their men on the case, making life unbearable for the criminal element (�There are more cops on the streets than girls,� a pimp complains). To reduce the heat, the city�s criminals team up to find the killer, and as Lang intercuts between two summit conferences � the cops and the criminals � we are struck by how similar the two groups are, visually.
Both sit around tables in gloomy rooms, smoking so voluminously that at times their very faces are invisible. In their fat fingers their cigars look fecal. (As the criminals agree that murdering children violates their code, I was reminded of the summit on drugs in �The Godfather.�)�M� was Lang�s first sound picture, and he was wise to use dialogue so sparingly. Many early talkies felt they had to talk all the time, but Lang allows his camera to prowl through the streets and dives, providing a rat�s-eye view.
One of the film�s most back to freedom after having served 27 years in prison, Marco Furlan, which together with Wolfgang Abel has committed, in the eighties, a number of racist murders under the name "Ludwig."Both serial killer at the time were young students: Furlan, graduating in Physics from the University of Verona, was the son of the primary burn center in Verona, while Wolfgang Abel, who graduated with honors in mathematics, working always in Verona, a German insurance company whose father was director 's administration.The two couples were united by an admiration for the huge neo-Nazi philosophy, xenophobic and homophobic, and shared the idea of a world clean soiled by tramps, prostitutes, homosexuals, drug addicts, priests from the not very clean past, red light cinema and nightclubs.
The first murder dating back to 1977 when the two kill the homeless Guerrino Spinello giving him fire while he was sleeping in his Fiat 126. Here are three other crimes, all without a claim. It 'only in 1980 that appeared for the first time the symbol "Ludwig" in a leaflet came to the' Gazzettino 'Venice signed with a Nazi swastika. The trail of blood that is Ludwig door closed in 1984 when two young men are arrested for attempting to fire at the disco Melamara Castiglione of Stiviere (Mantova).Accused of murder of 15 people between Italy and Germany - even though investigators have always believed that the crimes were committed at least 28 - have been sentenced to 30 years in 1987.
A year after the Court of Assizes of Appeal of Venice call them for free from the time of imprisonment. Furlan, meanwhile fled, was re-arrested in Crete in 1995 after the Court of Cassation had confirmed the sentence. The man thanks to his good conduct could get 3 Condoni the penalty to be served, a total of 45 days per semester.Enrica Raia � 2000�2016 San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center.Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free fornon-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net andelsewhere.
Opinions are those of the contributors and are notnecessarily endorsed by the SF Bay Area IMC. Disclaimer |Copyright Policy |Privacy |Contact |Source Code When a defendant has performed rap lyrics about crime in songs and videos, is that evidence of real criminality?
Prosecutors are telling juries yes, but a Richmond professor is telling juries that the prosecutors are wrong. On the evening of June 12, 2012, 19-year-old Melvin Vernell III, a rapper who went by the name Lil Phat, was shot to death in a parking lot outside an Atlanta-area hospital.
At the time, his girlfriend was inside giving birth to their daughter.Investigators identified the motive as retaliation for a drug theft. They said Vernell had stolen 10 pounds of marijuana from two men, Gary Bradford and Decensae White, the latter a former college basketball star who had played for Bobby Knight at Texas Tech for a bit before landing at San Francisco State University.Bradford, investigators concluded, was a gang leader who had ordered the murder. Prosecutors charged him with seven counts related to the crime, and he went to trial in the summer of 2014.In the case against Bradford, Fulton County, Ga., prosecutors introduced statements from a powerful figure: Eldorado Red, Bradford�s alter ego.
It�s both the name by which Bradford was known on the streets and under which he recorded rap music with dreams of making it big. Eldorado Red is brash and menacing, a remorseless career criminal. In music videos released on YouTube, he parades around in red colors associated with the Bloods, a violent street gang, flashing weapons and stacks of cash from the seats of expensive cars.�I�m El Jefe,� Eldorado Red brags in �I Supply Your Town,� a song about selling drugs.
�Meet the dealer. Bricks and pounds when I come around.�In another song, called �I Got 100 Shooters,� Eldorado Red warns, �Go against the mob, you get your a** knocked off.�To prosecutors, these songs read like clear-cut confessions to drug dealing and murder and lined up remarkably well with the facts of the Vernell case.
They pointed the finger right at the creation Eldorado Red in their efforts to convict Gary Bradford. In fact, �Eldorado Red� was the name by which they often referred to Bradford throughout the trial.This distinction between Gary Bradford and Eldorado Red would blur often during the trial, which is how a Richmond professor with no relation to the case found himself in the middle of it.
Erik Nielson, an associate professor of liberal arts in the School of Professional and Continuing Studies, has become a sought-after resource for defense attorneys and national media because he was among the first to identify a growing trend: prosecutors introducing lyrics written and performed by criminal defendants as evidence against them in trials.By conflating reality and art, he argues, prosecutors are manipulating the prejudices of some jurors to persuade them to hold rap artists responsible for the fictional confessions of their artistic creations.
He says the scrutiny rappers face in the criminal justice system is unique among musicians and other artists, a discrepancy Nielson says is tied to broader issues of race and justice in the United States.It is tempting to call Nielson � a nearly middle-aged white college professor from western Massachusetts � an unlikely champion of this cause, but that would misunderstand how deeply rap music, and the hip-hop culture from which it springs, has so thoroughly infused American culture in the second decade of the 21st century.
Among its self-identified fans are both the current Democratic president, Barack Obama, and one of this spring�s major Republican candidates who had hoped to succeed him, Florida Sen.
Marco Rubio, who once told a reporter that one of his three favorite rap songs is one of the genre�s most famous profanity-laced expositions on criminality, N.W.A.�s �Straight Outta Compton.�Nielson grew up in Wendell, Mass., about an hour north of Springfield.
His parents divorced when he was a toddler, and his mother, a preschool teacher, raised him as a oostr free with serial killers parent in an area so rural that his winding bus ride to school took an hour.�I grew up not having very much, so I think I had something of chip on my shoulder,� he said. �And the way I expressed that � aside from really horrible behavior when I was little � was academically because I was always very good at school.� As an undergraduate at the University of Virginia, he began to come into contact with the ideas that would later influence the development of his research and teaching.
Courses that touched on jazz, sociology, and African-American literature were vehicles for exploring questions about race and inequality. It was the time of the O.J. Simpson trial and The Bell Curve, a controversial book that ignited national debates about links between intelligence and race.�College was an awakening for me,� he said.
�I went in thinking I would be a government major, maybe political science, and then a lawyer or something. College totally changed that. As soon as I started reading � and I admit it, this is probably not good for the alumni m