Fiber Cases Name of the Case: Tiny Fibers Helped FBI Nab Serial Killer Victim: Sofia Silva, Kati Lisk, Kristin Lisk. Suspects: Richard Marc Evonitz. How the Hair of Fiber Made a Connection for the Case: There was a correlation in evidence all that was left were tiny pieces of fiber that’s it. It first started with the death of Sofia Silva, a tiny piece of pink fiber was found on her when she was found dead in a creek. Second was the death of two girls Kati and Kristin Lisk.…
David Parker Ray also known as “The Toy Box Killer” was born in Belen, New Mexico. To the world he is known a sadistic lust killer who killed and raped women throughout Phoenix, Albuquerque, Truth or Consequences, and Elephant Butte. He is described generally as a white male with a height of 6’2. In his younger years he was said to be very attractive but extremely shy when it came to girls. In fact David said he never indulged in sexual activities until the age of eighteen..…
Nearly 27 years later the abductor Daniel Heinrich admitted in a court of law that he abducted Jacob, raped, and killed him. He led the authorities to the site of Jacob's murder and burial site just a couple of miles away from where he lived. At a court hearing before Judge Jack Tunheim of the US District Court in Minneapolis, as part of a plea agreement in which he pled guilty to one count of the 25 federal charges. Heinrich testified that he kidnapped and killed Jacob Wetterling. He described kidnapping and handcuffing the boy, driving him to a gravel pit near Paynesville, molesting him, shooting him, and burying his…
People from different classes lived in this one concentrated area. As the residents adapted to that environment, they developed attitudes, and behaviors that ruin their chances of success in the American society. They had to have networks from upper or middle classes in order to progress. The book interconnects the endurance of poverty among blacks in the United States,…
Jack the Ripper and Anthony Sowell. Two serial killers very alike and very different in their own right. Both targeted disturbed and desperate women in their cities. Police would find Jack’s victims and have no leads. The still have none to this very day.…
In 1850s London, life was a lot different than it is today. Different aspects of the city played a role in the spread of disease and poverty such as lack of structured sanitation systems, over populated neighborhoods and homes, and high costs of living. Steven Johnson’s The Ghost Map is a descriptive narrative that showcases the relation between the spread of disease, population density, the common folk and life in London in the 1850s. In an attempt to discuss the narrative of The Ghost Map and factors around it, what follows will introduce Steven Johnson and his qualifications, briefly summarize The Ghost Map, explain the structure of the book, explain Johnson’s central thesis, and discuss Johnson’s evidence used throughout the book.…
You might want to know how many people Jack the Ripper killed? Well, he killed 5 women that they know of. I bet you didn’t know that he sent letter to the police. In these letters he told them all the disgusting ways he killed people. He was sending these letters because he was taunting the police.…
Wilson: “Jobless Poverty” Jobless Ghetto: An impoverished and segregated neighborhood largely comprised of adults who are unemployed or have left the labor force Wilson discusses the elements that produce “jobless ghettos” and their impacts on society and cities The research studies conducted in Chicago were used to write Wilson’s book When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor Jobless Ghettos Jobless poverty has immensely changed from 1950 to today. A drastic decrease in the amount of men who worked occurred between 1950 and 1990 1950s - Even though most of the urban black population was poor, they still worked Most adults worked weekly jobs in Douglass, Grand Boulevard, and Washington Park 1990s - A majority of adults in inner-city…
Health Care is another insufficient factor in The Flats that displays a sense of poverty. At this time racism was still effective, which caused white doctors to stray away from treating black patients to avoid offending white patients. A few people utilized the free clinic that were available due to the lack of communication that was disbursed within the community. Statistics shows that due to The Flat’s poor environment and lifestyle 9.1 percent of non-whites died from diseases of early infancy. Regardless of this distraught lifestyle and statistics, the residents of The Flats still prefer to live there compared to the south.…
Peter William Sutcliffe otherwise known as ‘The Yorkshire Ripper ' was arrested on January 1st, 1981 after a murderous spree which spanned five years and claimed the lives of 13 women and attempting to murder a further seven (see appendix for details of victims). The case engulfed the nation as one of the most brutal in modern history since that of ‘Jack the Ripper ' in the 1800 's hence why the media adopted the term ‘Yorkshire ripper ' when addressing the case. Although known for the heinous crimes and number of them the case is also infamous for the failings of the West Yorkshire Police force in its hunt of Sutcliffe. The tension throughout West Yorkshire left neighbour suspecting neighbour and women afraid to be out at night alone. Despite the efforts of the police force, it was a standard patrol with an experienced officer who was training another that caught Sutcliffe and brought an end to his spree.…
Edwin Sutherland was seen as the most important criminologists from the Chicago School (Cartwright, 2011, p.159). Influenced by Shaw and McKay, Sutherland established the differential association theory; which later influenced other criminologists and sociologists to introduce other theories (Cartwright, 2011, p.155). Sutherland, as well as others, explored white-collar criminality, and while investigating this, he came up with differential association theory (which later lead to social learning theory). His differential association theory is based off the idea all aspects of criminal behaviour are learnt (Cartwright, 2011, p.156).…
Have you ever sat contemplated and wondered about the millions of children subjected to city poverty in the 1800’s? It was a common trait for many children. The uneducated, homeless, or poor children growing up in the 1800’s had to live with scrap food from dumpsters, or were forced to go fetch beer for their no-good parents. In Jacob Riis’ book and the article we read, “The Problem of the Children,” in How the the Other Half Lives in 1890, goes in depth into the surroundings many had never uncovered of the poor in many cities of the United States.…
This shows how if the wealthy were at least to increase the wages a little bit, it would cause less riots and less people to be on the streets and turn into criminals. At the end, the riots happened so these tragedies in the tenements could stop happening. Although the foolish idea of ‘Social Darwinism’ and discriminating the poor prevented them by…
Huntington claims that hard-working men and women leading noble and pure lives are just as present in tenement-houses as feeble minded and corrupt people. Jacob A. Riis claims that generations degrade in the slums because of “the influences that prevail there” (Riis “The Problem of the Children” 1892). This environment is not only degrading, but can be the only way of life. “The road to ruin, as we call it, is so fatally easy to them; who shall dare to blame them if they take it?” (Edgar Fawcett “The Woes of the New York Working-Girl” 1891).…
In her memoir, Call the Midwife, Jennifer Worth recounts the stories of unusual characters she encounters as a midwife in post-war London’s East End slums. The slums of the East End served as a popular tourist destination for the middle class. Some middle-class philanthropists visited the slums to comprehend the tragic situation of the working-class, whereas other, less-benevolent middle class citizens toured to satisfy their curiosity and to gawk at the poverty-stricken inhabitants (Koven). To an extent, Worth herself is a slummer— she is a middle-class women experiencing first hand the disgusting conditions and filthy bodies of the working-class women in the East End. Although Worth interacts with all types of working-class women, she only…