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Don discovers the story of real-life Dr. Frankenstein, Robert E. Cornish trying to resurrect the dead at the University of California at Berkeley; investigates the giant penguin hoax when witnesses spotted three-toed footprints on the beaches at Florida's Honeymoon Island State Park; explores Sybil's Cave in Hoboken, New Jersey that was tied an ...
The search for missing hiker Susan Lane-Fournier, 61, took a tragic turn after her body was found over the weekend in Welches, Oregon, an unincorporated community at the base of Mount Hood.
The Breakthrough follows a double murder that took 16 years to solve — much like a real-life incident that occurred in Sweden in 2004.. Based on the 2021 novel of the same name, the Netflix ...
He committed his first murder on August 13, 1993, when he stabbed his neighbor, 18-year-old Tricia Pacaccio, to death on her back doorstep. Her father found her body the following morning. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Gargiulo moved to Los Angeles in 1998, allegedly to escape the scrutiny of the police in Illinois, [ 5 ] and committed two murders and an ...
The Best American Mystery Stories 1997, [1] [2] a volume in The Best American Mystery Stories series, was edited by guest editor Robert B. Parker with Otto Penzler. [3] The series editor chooses about fifty article candidates, from which the guest editor picks 20 or so for publication; the remaining runner-up articles listed in the appendix.
A known MS-13 gang member wanted for years for murder and terrorism in El Salvador has been busted living illegally in New Jersey. The arrest Friday of Johnathan Stanley Garcia-Vasquez in West New ...
In the latter category are Dorothy Sayers, the British crime novelist (whose Lord Peter Wimsey stories are the best known); Howard Haycraft, a U.S. publishing executive whose The Art of the Mystery Story (published in 1946) is a recognized survey of the mystery genre; and Edgar Smith, a General Motors corporate executive who was one of the U.S ...
After the murder trial of a New York man accused of killing his wife, the judge wrote that his lawyer was so unprepared that he relied on Google for help with forensics