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LEFT FOR GOD..!!

Here are some top most unsolved murder cases are written..If you can solve..then try it out..

By Mystery Published about a year ago 3 min read
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LEFT FOR GOD..!!
Photo by Sander Sammy on Unsplash

1. Jack the Ripper

A dreadful year to be a prostitute was 1888. Five women were murdered in the Whitechapel neighbourhood of London's East End between August 7 and November 10, and all of their bodies were mutilated in a way that suggested they were all killed by the same person. Their throats were slashed in each case. Even the kidney of one victim was sent to the police, along with a string of insulting messages written by someone identifying themselves as Jack the Ripper. Serial killing was a relatively new phenomena, and the attacks received extensive media coverage. Due to the public anger over the law's failure to catch the murderer, both the home secretary and the London police commissioner were forced to retire.

Whoever Jack the Ripper was, he has been the focus of countless novels and essays. His identity has been the subject of numerous speculations, ranging from a clandestine Masonic plan to a royal family member. The most plausible suspects are listed below:

A lawyer with expertise of human anatomy, Montague Druitt. He was thought to be mad and vanished following the previous murder; his body was later discovered floating in the Thames.

During the time of the murders, George Chapman. a barber, lived in Whitechapel. He was later found guilty of poisoning three of his wives.

Whitechapel resident Aaron Kosminski, well known for his fondness for prostitutes Several months after the previous murder, he was admitted to an asylum.

2. The Zodiac Killings

"I like killing people because it is so much fun."

So started one of the numerous encrypted letters that the Zodiac, a man who sent letters to San Francisco newspapers, sent. A serial killer plagued Bay Area residents for the most of 1969, killing at least five people and maybe more. On December 20, 1968, a couple was shot and killed while riding in a car in the lover's lane. Over the course of the following ten months, the murderer would commit several further crimes, including shooting a cab driver in the head and stabbing two more men and women near a tranquil lake.

But it was the manner he played with the police and the media that made the case so intriguing. Using a cross inside of a circle as his symbol, he reported some of the deaths and started sending coded messages to newspapers. He once sent a piece of his bloodied shirt in the mail as identification. Another occasion, he made a threat to open fire on a school bus carrying children. Years were invested in the investigation. Numerous suspects were thought about and interrogated in vain. Never was the Zodiac apprehended. People are still frightened by the tale today.

3. Tylenol Poisonings

Seven residents in the Chicago region died after taking Tylenol pills laced with cyanide in late September or early October 1982. Adam Janus felt a pang in his chest. Within taking a few Extra-Strength Tylenol, he fell after an hour. He passed away. The following evening, the grieving and sore Janus' younger brother and sister-in-law took a handful of Adam's Tylenol pills. They passed away. An Extra-Strength Tylenol was taken by a 12-year-old girl who had a cold. Dead. The poisoned pills ultimately claimed the lives of seven people. I started to scream. Police vehicles were seen driving through the streets of Chicago on Thursday afternoon and evening, according to a 1982 TIME article. The medication was taken off the shelves. Precise copycat incidents—pins and needles found in candy bars—led some municipalities to outlaw trick-or-treating on Halloween.Uncharged with the murders, a man was detained after attempting to blackmail Johnson & Johnson for $100,000. Tamper-evident seals become commonplace.

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About the Creator

Mystery

HhlyHighly Bibliophile

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