Accused preppie rapist Owen Labrie has just been declared guilty of raping a 15-year-old fellow student at the exclusive St. Paul’s preparatory school in Concord, New Hampshire last spring.
Security specialist Brian Krebs suspects Twitter user @deuszu played a key role in the #AshleyMadison hack attack that led to disastrous disclosures of the adultery site’s member lists and infidelities.
Florida’s machete murder mastermind has pleaded not-guilty in the premeditated attack on a fellow JobCorps student this month.
Hundreds of public officials’ porn is key to the case of a prosecuted prosecutor in Pennsylvania … so a judge has unsealed all that vulgar evidence this week.
According to meteorologists and climatologists, the pending apocalyptic hue is electric blue and already floating high above us.
On-air shooter Bryce Williams hasn’t been dead but 24 hours, yet the press is already portraying the African American newsman-turned-gunman as a crazy gay, whilst #BlackLivesMatter reps remain surprisingly tightlipped about his singular act
On the night of November 29, 1988, near the impoverished Marlborough neighborhood in south Kansas City, an explosion at a construction site killed six of the city’s firefighters. It was a clear case of arson, and five people from Marlborough were duly convicted of the crime. But for veteran crime writer and crusading editor J. Patrick O’Connor, the facts—or a lack of them—didn’t add up. Justice on Fire is OConnor’s detailed account of the terrible explosion that led to the firefighters’ deaths and the terrible injustice that followed. Also available from Amazon
With the purpose of writing about true crime in an authoritative, fact-based manner, veteran journalists J. J. Maloney and J. Patrick O’Connor launched Crime Magazine in November of 1998. Their goal was to cover all aspects of true crime: Read More
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