Fifty-six year-old Stuart Maynard Clark was arrested for beating and robbing a 83 year-old woman. The incident occurred around 4:40 a.m. on Monday, November 23, 2015. The woman told police officers that she woke up to find Clark punching her and demanding money. The woman fought back by hitting Clark with a cane and kicking him in the groin area. Clark stole the woman 's wallet, which reportedly had over $800 in cash.
On August eighteen, 1992, police were invited to a burning place Somerville, Texas, wherever they found the bodies of 45-year-old Bobbie Davis, her 16-year-old girl, and her four grandchildren, ages four to nine. Davis and in addition the grandchildren had been scraped, crushed and reserved. Davis’s girl, Nicole had fatally shot. A few days later, police inactive Henry M. parliamentarian Carter, 26, the dad of one of the grandchildren, once they detected he had burns and bandages at the children’s ceremony.
On January 29, 1991, a vile crime occurred in the Heikkila home in Basking Ridge, New Jersey. Twenty-year-old Matthew Heikkila, the adopted son of Richard and Dawn Heikkila loaded up a “sawed-off 20-gauge shotgun” (Sullivan). He labeled shotgun shells “Mom” and “Dad”, and shot his parents both in the head. Matthew plotted the murder to get the chance to steal his parent’s credit cards, and treat his girlfriend to a birthday dinner. Matthew then left his parent’s dead bodies on the floor of his home and he and his girlfriend enjoyed a night in NYC.
CM Gilmore made a home visit to the residence of William and Denise Baker to ensure safety and well-being. The visit was an announced home visit. CM Gilmore explained the reason for the visit. Mrs. And Mr. Bake reported the following: • William Baker greeted CM at the door and greeted her in.
Johnny Cade,Died on April,30,1960.He was 16 at the time,and he lived on the east side of Tulsa oklahoma. Johnny went to Tulsa East High school. Outside of school,he enjoyed hanging out with his friends and going to the movies with his best buds. He considered them family. Since his family did not care for him when they were alive and he was young.
Roger Fife wasn't considered as the most intelligent by the Merced Community Medical Center nor was he admired by his colleagues, one even mentioned him as a little thick. However, he was widely appreciated by the Hmong surpassing all other practices with a seventy percent clientele. The reason Dr. Fife explained was, “Maybe I talk slower than other doctors” (76). The Hmong agreed claiming that he “didn't cut,” or that he avoided Caesarean section in delivering babies. Fife also allowed mothers to take home their babies’ placentas something not a lot of doctors did due to uncertainty.
“One thing about dead people, they’re all the same.” Those were the shocking words of Charles Raymond Starkweather. Accompanied by his girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate, went on a killing spree in 1957 through 1958. Inspiring music like We Didn’t Start the Fire by Billy Joel, films such as Natural Born Killers (1944), and books like Outside Valentine by Liza War. A few of many.
Yesterday, on May 31st, 1924, Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold, Jr. confessed to the murder and kidnapping of 14-year-old Bobby Franks for ransom money and the thrill of the experience. Bobby was first abducted when walking home from school north on Ellis Avenue and he was found dead the next morning. When walking he saw his cousin Richard driving passed who offered him a ride home and to talk about his tennis racket as the Frank’s family loved Tennis. The cause of death was suffocation despite having head trauma after receiving multiple blows with a chisel, causing a large gash to form on the back of his skull.
In the documentary “Bowling for Columbine”, which is directed by Michael Moore, there is an abundance of fallacious arguments. From the most obvious Post Hoc fallacies demonstrated to strengthen the director’s argument, to the numerous fallacies committed by Moore himself, there is no shortage from which to choose. The fallacies that I have chosen to focus on are the Post Hoc used by Moore’s “opponents” and his own hasty generalizations and composition fallacies. The title of the film “Bowling for Columbine” is and ode to the fallacious reasoning of the gun proponents that Moore encounters throughout the film. Many of these figures cite the music of alternative rock singer Marilyn Manson as a driving force behind the Columbine school shooting,
Gary Leon Ridgway began killing women in 1982 and was caught in 2001. He was convicted of killing at least 48 women in Washington state. He was born on February 18th 1949, in Salt Lake City Utah. He held a job painting trucks for 30 years. He was married three different times.
Gary Ridgeway, also known as the green river killer, killed forty-eight people in his life time. (Ridgeway) Ridgeway admitted to murdering all of the women to his attorney, which went against what his results of the polygraph test he took said. Gray Ridgeways attorney is quoted as saying " He said he didn't do anything special to pass it, he just relaxed." (Ridgeway)
Capitol on January 30, 1835, following a memorial service for a congressman, a deranged house painter named Richard Lawrence fired a pistol at me from just a few feet away. When Lawrence’s gun misfired, he pulled out a second weapon and squeezed the trigger. That pistol also misfired. I then charged at him with my cane as the shooter was subdued. A subsequent investigation found the pistols to be in perfect working order.
In 1959, the Kansas town of Holcomb was left horrified after the murders of the Clutter family. The shocking murder caught both the attention and hearts of those who learnt of it. In 1966, Truman Capote brilliantly captured the acts of the murders in his book “In Cold Blood”. Shortly after in 1967, Richard Brooks released the adaptation to Truman’s book, “In Cold Blood” which uniquely captures the essence of the murdered and the murderers. Capote and Brooks depicted the killers, Perry Smith and Dick Hickock in two comparably different lights While observing both works of “In Cold Blood” various differences and similarities stand out including: the portrayal of Bonnie Clutter’s illness, how the murderers are, and amount of time dedicated to
‘’Guns are responsible for over thirty-three thousand deaths in the United States annually, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).. In 2014, the CDC reported that 11,008 of the 15,872 homicides committed in the United States that year involved a firearm. Of the 42,826 suicides reported that year, 21,386 involved a firearm. These statistics have inspired efforts at the federal and state levels to enact gun control legislation to reduce crime and violence’’(‘’Gun Control’’). According to the statistic guns are held for over 33,000 deaths in the United States.
In the book, “In Cold Blood,” Truman Capote takes us through the lives of the murderers and the murdered in the 1959 Clutter family homicide, which transpires in the small town of Holcomb, Kansas. The first chapter, “The Last to See Them Alive,” vividly illustrates the daily activities of the Clutter family—Herbert, Bonnie, Nancy, and Kenyon—and the scheming plot of Dick Hickock and Perry Smith up to point where the family is found tied up, and brutally murdered. In doing so, he depicts the picture-perfect town of Holcomb with “blue skies and desert clear air”(3) whose safety is threatened when “four shotgun blasts that, all told, ended six human lives”(5). Through the eyes of a picture perfect family and criminals with social aspirations, Capote describes the American Dream and introduces his audience to the idea that this ideal was no more than an illusion. Herbert Clutter: the character Capote describes as the epitome of the American Dream.