interview
Interviews with defense attorneys, law enforcement officials, forensic psychologists and anyone with insight into bad behavior.
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SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic — Yocairi Amarante Rodríguez was heading to a beauty salon in Santo Domingo last fall when two men on a motorcycle sped up to her car and chucked a container of "ácido del diablo," containing sulfuric acid used for plumbing and sewer cleaning, through an open window and onto her face.
Tonja BarendsPublished 3 years ago in CriminalThe Gift Book
“It all started the day she jumped.” The young woman nervously adjusted herself in her seat. “It was almost as if she didn’t think she would die. She just spread her arms out and lept.”
Zaire GrayPublished 3 years ago in CriminalImpulse
My computer was humming. Winter, the perfect season for intensive CPU work. My window was open letting in a breeze that had already iced the glass. Two weeks were all I needed, and I would have access to Solaron’s main network. For obvious reasons, I won’t be disclosing which campus I was targeting, but this was one of the corporation’s axis mundis, they wouldn’t emerge from this unscathed. I had penetrated past their obvious traps, the easy to exploit honeynet, the dummy servers and faux communications. Their DDoS protection was top tier, but I had already obtained one employee’s hashed password. The digest took my code a few hours to crack, in which time I had been working on my resume.
Syed M HussainPublished 3 years ago in CriminalChainsaw killer-chiropractor opens taco stand after prison
Editor's note: An earlier version of this article appeared on News Break. When you interview a person who murdered their wife and dismembered her body with a chainsaw, you don’t soon forget it.
David HeitzPublished 3 years ago in CriminalHow to Feel Safe at Night
It is late, some would even call it early. You are alone, en route from your location to your mode of transportation, whether it be your car, the bus or subway, or even a taxi or rideshare; or, you live close enough to head directly home. The streets are empty, for the most part, save for the few straggling patrons spilling out the closing bars and perhaps a few houseless travelers, dozing on the sidewalks. It's dark. The streetlights offer little but a yellow haze directly below, leaving the rest of the street enveloped in an inky and mysterious blackness. You know this route like the back of your hand. You have traveled it every day for months or even years. You know which lights to cross at, where there are imperfections in the sidewalk to avoid and even the scents wafting from the various restaurants and cafes by heart. For some of us, this scenario is immediately familiar, a snapshot of our daily lives. The question is: when you put yourself in the situation and become the person it describes, how do you feel? Do you feel content? Rushed? Are you at ease with your surroundings? Or are you like 61% of the population? Are you afraid?
Jenn JacksonPublished 4 years ago in CriminalNigeria’s Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami has been in the saddle for over 5 years.
The common saying that “uneasy lies the head that wear the crown” seems to be the lot of Nigeria’s Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami. A man with a cultured disposition and one that is not enamored by the attractions of high office, Mr. Malami, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria has been in the saddle for over 5 years, but his fight against corruption in public offices has recently earned him the wrath of some jittery kleptomaniacs who see Government as an avenue for self-enrichment rather than a tool for the public good.
Purity EzenwaPublished 4 years ago in CriminalThe tribulations of Dianna Bedwell
The Sylvia Likens homicide will forever be known as one of the most brutal and violent murders in Indianapolis history. The crime has been the subject of several books and films. Although the murder occurred more than 50 years ago, it will live with Dianna Bedwell for the rest of her life.
Marc HooverPublished 4 years ago in CriminalSurviving Life; More Than Trafficking
Chapter 1–Common Threads–Bad Dreams My name could have been any number of beautiful girl names. My life could have been filled with ballet classes and dolls and tea parties. Many parents dream that this will be true for their children. But millions of children don't have the memories, and the safety of a tranquil lake of life. This is my story, but it could have been any of the 300,000 trafficked children in America today.
Stephanie AndersonPublished 5 years ago in CriminalInterview with a Murderer
I was working at my job in the local mall when Stephen came up to me. He'd seen the "Now Hiring" sign on the side of my booth and asked me what it took to get hired. I responded with the standard. "We take your résumé and we call you when we need someone new."
Liza NewheartPublished 7 years ago in Criminal- Top Story - September 2017
'Diana The Abduction Mystery Solved' - Interview with Rania Alammar
Rania Alammar is a Saudi ex-journalist, living in Berlin since she fled her country Saudi Arabia due to the unbearable governmental oppressiveness which inflicted her own way of life but more on her people who are against the methods of the ruling of Al Saud royal family. She never dreamed she would become an author. Not about Diana anyway but her life took her to that direction and she never resisted. Alammar has released a new book on the case of Diana Princess of Wales under the title (Diana The Abduction Mystery Solved.) The book is considered to be a thorough study of different sources and several investigative books that revives another possibility of what happened to Diana Princess of Wales in 1997. It’s a new reading between the lines that opposes the published result.
Nader Al-MatrookPublished 7 years ago in Criminal