Intro In psychology there are many different areas of study, from who we are to what makes us study the different abnormal illnesses that can affect the mind. These branches of psychology focus in depth on the various aspects that can either hinder a person socially and as an individual. Mysteries have been intriguing to me my whole life. From NCIS and criminal have been something I grew up with because of the lack of kids shows on TV when I got home. Growing up with that I was also constantly reprimanded because those shows were not meant for a 9 year old. It always ended in a talk of what is right and what is wrong, what is socially acceptable and what is morally right. Anything that did not fall in those lines was bad and could end in severe …show more content…
Ho wrote in her article Jennifer Pan’s Revenge: The inside story of a golden child, the killers she hired, and the parents she wanted dead, the very elaborate girl that was part in a very thought out plan to kill her over bearing parents. Jennifer Pan spent all her time trying to please her parents and lied about a majority of her life after failing high school to reach the expectations they had set for her. She lied about and falsified documents about her post high school education of going to Ryerson University and U of T’s pharmacology program. When he parents found out of the lies that lasted 4 years, she spent her time planning on ways to kill her parents and imagining how her life would be without them. Her old flame helped her and put her in contact with Lenford Crawford who would charge her 10, 000 for the murders. With what seemed to be a robbery to hide the murders both of Jennifer’s parents were shot in their basement. Her father lived and told authorities of things that did not add up when they were “robbing” them, how their daughter and the suspects seemed friendly rather than his daughter cowering from them. Jennifer Pan and her accomplices were sentenced with 2 life sentences with no chance of parole for 25 years, on accounts of attempted murder and first-degree