The True Crime Thread (tw: all)

Discussion in 'General Chatter' started by valenstyne, Oct 24, 2016.

  1. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    I love the Dollop! They're hilarious. Definitely recommend, there's true crime and weird history and the tickling episode.

    I don't really know why MFM hit me so wrong; I have a pretty high tolerance for irreverence and I love gallows humor and all that. Just one of those things, I guess. :/
     
    • Like x 1
  2. Jemmy

    Jemmy Don't Do A Hit

    im on and off with MFM but they did an episode of, i think it was "home" crimes? where they each talked about a crime that had been committed near their home area. it was pretty cool to get a sort of direct line of thought from someone who'd been around during a time of panic

    also i remembered one of the murders they were talking about, it only happened a few years ago out here. christopher dorner made living in socal a real wild ride for a couple of..days? weeks? there.
     
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  3. spockandawe

    spockandawe soft and woolen and writhing with curiosity

    It was really funny, okay, so. I listened to the MFM episode on Chandra Levy, which was interesting to me in the first place because I lived for ages just outside DC (edit: OH, ha, just ran across a news article and according to the date, I did straight-up live outside DC at the time. I guess I just completely failed to notice the news any time ever :P ) But then less than a week after I listened to that episode, my mom and aunt and I were getting breakfast at a hotel for a family reunion, and the fact that there were new developments in the Chandra Levy case came up on the TV, and I got to sperg all over the place and have people actually interested in what I was saying :V
     
    Last edited: Oct 25, 2016
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  4. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    Ooh, discussion topic: Crimes committed in your hometown/home state/a place you lived once, etc.

    Personally, I hail from a state known mostly for lynchings (Leo Frank being a particularly infamous case) and the Atlanta child murders. Oh, and the Stocking Strangler. Haha we don't have problems with racism down here at all. /bitter sarcasm

    (And of course we're also the state that gave you Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and Furman v. Georgia.)
     
    Last edited: Oct 24, 2016
  5. artistformerlyknownasdave

    artistformerlyknownasdave revenge of ricky schrödinger

    i grew up in what was quite possibly a sundown town way back when and you could really tell ):
     
  6. Arxon

    Arxon Well-Known Member

    My mom wants to write a musical about Dorithea Puente, who she lived in the same neighborhood as at the time of her killings.
     
    • Like x 2
  7. spockandawe

    spockandawe soft and woolen and writhing with curiosity

    Well, MFM is doing pretty good at hitting my childhood homes, because between Chandra Levy and the Michigan co-ed killer, they're two for four. It's funny, because my family lived in Ann Arbor because my dad was in grad school at UM, and it was the friendliest place and kids would run around outside and through the nearby park (our house butted right up against it) with minimal supervision, so it's weird thinking about it as a place where a serial killer used to do his thing. DC is... easier to believe :P

    Edit: OH HEY, also Henry Lee Lucas lived in Blacksburg, VA, my college town.

    And then I don't have a particular crime, but when I moved to Limerick, Ireland, people who didn't know the country would make jokes about the poem. People who knew the country would make jokes about the violent crime rate. I've heard it called the getting-stabbed-with-a-knife capital of Ireland. There were significant parts of the city where ambulances and fire trucks wouldn't answer calls without a police escort, several of my classmates (in my very small class) had been mugged while walking home from school, annnnnnnd my first year I lived a mile off campus and had a class that let out at... eleven at night. Yeah, my parents helped me pony up for a cheap car. That was probably a good call.

    Bonus: walking a couple miles through that city, all on my own, carrying almost two thousand euros in cold hard cash on my person to go pay for my vehicle. SLIGHTLY STRESSFUL EXPERIENCE.
     
    Last edited: Oct 24, 2016
    • Like x 2
  8. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    Yeah. There's a lot of…national scarring, I guess, from Jim Crow and just racism in general. It's grim. :/

    That is awesome. The musical, I mean, not being neighbors with a serial killer.
     
    • Like x 1
  9. spockandawe

    spockandawe soft and woolen and writhing with curiosity

    Oh, also my stay at Virginia Tech was neatly framed by two shootings, which was... less than awesome. I don't really do the grief thing, but it's pretty overwhelming when a school of 25,000+ people around you is doing it. And my family had nothing to do with VT before me, but one of the people who died was the child of someone who was in my parents' wedding. Once or twice during school there were unexpected fireworks, and I knew the odds were low that anything was bad, but I still sat in my dorm with my lights off and my door locked, just in case. The second shooting was smaller, but by then everyone knew what a shooting at VT could be like, and I still had tons of friends there. Even my Irish classmates were asking me about how things were back in America when that happened.

    And even better worse, okay. I'd been spending my school breaks for a few years working at the Navy Yard in DC. When sequestration kicked in, those college students counted as a 'temporary workers', so I got laid off. Later that year, what happened? Another shooter. My building. My floor. Practically my desk. The shooter used the parking garage and door that I'd used for years. Same elevator. He unpacked his gun in the men's restroom right about ten seconds walk from my desk. He opened fire over the balcony that I'd sat next to for years. It was a large building, but I was in a pretty small department, and there were multiple coworkers of mine showing up in the news, including one fatality, and one lady who did some MAJOR hero stuff trying to save him. If I'd been there, I'm pretty sure I'd be dead. Reading about that was one of the most rattling experiences I'd ever had in my whole life.
     
    Last edited: Oct 25, 2016
    • Like x 2
  10. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    D: That is too many shootings to be in the proximity of.
     
    • Like x 3
  11. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    oh jeez, it just occurred to me that I've also been six degrees of separation from a shooting. My mom actually knew one of the victims from work.

    (That was kind of an inverse school shooting, come to think of it: the gunman was a professor but the crime was committed off campus…)
     
    Last edited: Oct 24, 2016
  12. Acey

    Acey hand extended, waiting for a shake

    I live near Santa Cruz, California, and we once had three serial killers operating at once, IIRC. Back in the 70s, I think.

    We also had a truly horrific murder case here just this summer--Madyson Middleton. Little 8-year-old girl was raped, murdered, and thrown in a dumpster at the art compound/apartment complex where she lived, and the person who admitted to the crime was a 15-year-old boy who lived in the same complex (and all evidence points towards his confession being true, from what I recall). I'm less than six degrees of separation from the murder myself--my mom has a friend whose daughter had a class with the probable killer.

    What's terrifying there is that the kid hadn't gone anywhere dangerous; her mom had told her the areas to avoid while out riding her scooter (there are some areas nearby that have real issues with drugs and violent crime), and she did avoid them...and then she was brutally raped and killed by a boy she knew. It's sickening and tragic, and I just...I pass by the Tannery Arts Center, where Maddy lived and died, a lot. It's right near the local Costco. And every time I pass by there, I think about the fact that a teenager killed a little kid there.

    (The whole incident really shook up the area at large. You know those "ALWAYS REMEMBER (person)" bumper stickers? There are tons around here that say "ALWAYS REMEMBER MADYSON." And you know, just from that first name, exactly who they're referring to. :( )
     
    • Like x 3
  13. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    @Acey California is the state for serial killers, seems like. My mom grew up there during the heyday of Manson, the Zodiac, and the Night Stalker. :/

    The Madyson Middleton case is really awful. The victim and the killer both being so young, augh.
     
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  14. KingStarscream

    KingStarscream watch_dogs walking advertisement

    There was a pretty horrific double-murder (with a side of arson) in my high school town when I was just about to graduate. It sticks in my mind because it was a kid from one of the biggest farm families, for a while the police weren't sure they could get the charges to stick, and the cousin of the murderer had been trying shit with my stepbrother all year.

    Stepbrother was told to just drop the vehicle theft case against this kid because they weren't even sure if they could make murder stick with how influential the family was in the area.

    edit: Link to an article about the actual sentencing/more details on the murders. I am nearly positive I went to school with this kid.
     
    Last edited: Oct 26, 2016
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  15. Morven

    Morven In darkness be the sound and light

    My friend Linda's mother was the next door neighbor of the Green River Killer for many years and met him a bunch of times; he was a bit odd but no clue he was capable of it.
     
    • Like x 3
  16. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    Wow. It's so creepy to think you or someone you know could be that close to something absolutely awful happening.
    ariel-molvig-new-yorker-cartoon.jpg
     
    Last edited: Oct 27, 2016
    • Like x 3
  17. Nertbugs

    Nertbugs Information Leafblower

    A few years ago there was a case in my hometown where a couple of teenagers were convicted of manslaughter. They'd broken in to an abandoned building and set fire to some junk they found in there. When they left they thought the fire was out, but it was still smouldering and caught again. The whole place went up. What they didn't know was that there was a homeless guy sleeping in the basement, who ended up dying in the blaze.

    The building in question is just off a main flyover, and I pass it semi regularly when we're driving to see my parents / friends. It's still a blackened ruin and it makes me shiver whenever we go past.
     
    • Like x 1
  18. artistformerlyknownasdave

    artistformerlyknownasdave revenge of ricky schrödinger

    so i started listening to blurry photos and thank you for reccing them! their true crime is really interesting, and i've got more than a passing interest in the paranormal (and making-fun-of-the-paranormal) so these guys are really the perfect podcast for me :p
     
    • Like x 2
  19. Acey

    Acey hand extended, waiting for a shake

    Another thing about it that just angered me. You know Polly Klaas, that kid who was abducted and killed from her own home? Well, her father became, in theory, an advocate for missing kids cases...except in this case he admonished Maddy's mother for "not paying close enough attention."

    Like, dude. Your daughter was kidnapped from her house--your house. And Maddy didn't stray too far from her home; she was just riding her scooter on the grounds of the apartment complex, like kids there regularly do.

    It just made me seethe, hearing someone who lost his own daughter turning around and blaming a kid's parent for something they never could've known would happen.
     
    • Like x 5
  20. valenstyne

    valenstyne Went out for cigarettes, never came back

    Yay! Blurry Photos miiiight be my favorite podcast ever, I'm glad to have spread the good word to new listeners :D

    …wow. A+ advocacy dude, very sensitive and respectful.
     
    • Like x 4
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