1 Victims and Crimes Bibliography MCC Library 2/8/2010 Ungodly : The

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 Victims and Crimes Bibliography MCC Library 2/8/2010 Ungodly : The Victims and Crimes Bibliography MCC Library 2/8/2010 Ungodly : the passions, torments, and murder of atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair Dracos, Ted. BL 2790 .O38 D72 2003 Jesus freaks : a true story of murder and madness on the evangelical edge Lattin, Don BP 605 .C38 L38 2007 Blood done sign my name : a true story Tyson, Timothy B. F 264 .O95 T97 2004 The lynching of Emmett Till : a documentary narrative F 350 .N4 L96 2002 Down by the river : drugs, money, murder, and family Bowden, Charles HV 5825 .D692 2002 Crime signals : how to spot a criminal before you become a victim Givens, David B. HV 6024 .G58 2008 Victimology: a new focus HV 6030 .I54 1973 v. 1 HV 6030 .I54 1973 v. 2 HV 6030 .I54 1973 v.3 HV 6030 .I54 1973 v.4 HV 6030 .I54 1973 v.5 Women who kill Jones, Ann HV 6046 .J66 1988 Dangerous women : why mothers, daughters, and sisters become stalkers, molesters, and murderers Morris, Larry A., HV 6046 .M365 2008 Murder among the mighty : celebrity slayings that shocked America Nash, Jay Robert. HV 6245 .N38 1983 1 Destined for murder : profiles of six serial killers with astrological commentary Young, Sandra Harrisson HV 6245 .Y68 1995 The devil's right-hand man : the true story of serial killer Robert Charles Browne Michaud, Stephen G. HV 6248 .B753 M53 2007 Tailspin : the strange case of Major Call Conners, Bernard F. HV 6248 .C125 C66 2002 Very much a lady : the untold story of Jean Harris and Dr. Herman Tarnower Alexander, Shana. HV 6248 .H183 A43 1983 Poisoned blood : a true story of murder, passion, and an astonishing hoax Ginsburg, Philip E. HV 6248 .H454 G56 1987 A gathering of saints : a true story of money, murder, and deceit Lindsey, Robert. HV 6248 .H467 L56 1988 Final harvest : an American tragedy Malcolm, Andrew H. HV 6248 .J43 M35 1986 The devil in the white city : murder, magic, and madness at the fair that changed America Larson, Erik. HV 6248 .M8 L37 2003 The circle of guilt Wertham, Fredric HV 6248 .S33 W47 2007 Entering Hades : the double life of a serial killer Leake, John HV 6248 .U68 L43 2007 Predators : who they are and how to stop them Cooper, Gregory M. HV 6250.25 .C68 2007 2 Murder in the name of honor : the true story of one woman's heroic fight against an unbelievable crime Husseini, Rana. HV 6250.4 .W65 H87 2009 Becoming evil : how ordinary people commit genocide and mass killing Waller, James HV 6322.7 .W35 2002 Death of innocence : the story of the hate crime that changed America Till-Mobley, Mamie HV 6465 .M7 T55 2003 Crime of passion : murder and the murderer Lester, David HV 6515 .L4 1975 Serial killers and sadistic murderers : up close and personal Levin, Jack HV 6515 .L483 2008 When killing is a crime Waters, Tony. HV 6515 .W33 2007 Killing for profit : the social organization of felony homicide Dietz, Mary Lorenz. HV 6529 .D53 1983 Mass murder : America's growing menace Levin, Jack HV 6529 .L5 1985 Bad blood : a family murder in Marin County Levine, Richard M. HV 6533 .C2 L48 1982 In cold blood; a true account of a multiple murder and its consequences. Capote, Truman HV 6533 .K3 C3 Blood bath Mustafa, Susan D. HV 6533 .L8 M87 2009 3 Missing beauty : a true story of murder and obsession Carpenter, Teresa. HV 6533 .M4 C37 1988 Murder in the Carolinas Rhyne, Nancy HV 6533 .N8 R48 1988 Victim : the other side of murder Kinder, Gary. HV 6533 .U8 K56 A murder in Virginia : Southern justice on trial Lebsock, Suzanne. HV 6533 .V8 L43 2003 Defending Gary : unraveling the mind of the Green River Killer Prothero, Mark HV 6533 .W2 P76 2006 A death in Belmont Junger, Sebastian. HV 6534 .B43 J86 2006 Wicked intentions : the Sheila Labarre murders, a true story Flynn, Kevin. HV 6534 .E676 F59 2009 Mom said kill Barer, Burl HV 6534 .E94 B37 2008 Twentieth-century murder : a year-by-year account of the world's most pitiless crimes Fido, Martin. HV 6534 .F57 1995 Shattered night Sandiford, Kay. HV 6534 .H8 S26 1984 Union Station massacre : the shootout that started the FBI's war on crime Clayton, Merle. HV 6534 .K2 C55 4 A cast of killers Kirkpatrick, Sidney. HV 6534 .L7 K57 1986 Murder at the Met Black, David HV 6534 .N5 B56 1984 The execution of Officer Becker : the murder of a gangster, the trial of a cop, and the birth of organized crime Cohen, Stanley. HV 6534 .N5 C643 2006 Missing : the Oregon city girls : a shocking true story of abduction and murder O'Neal, Linda HV 6534 .O69 O54 2006 Deadly lust Vernon, McCay. HV 6534 .S17 V47 2005 Dial M : the murder of Carol Thompson Swanson, William, HV 6534 .S193 S92 2006 Death of a "Jewish American princess" : the true story of a victim on trial Frondorf, Shirley. HV 6534 .S48 F76 1988 Blind faith McGinniss, Joe. HV 6534 .T6 M35 1988 Relentless pursuit : a true story of family, murder, and the prosecutor who wouldn't quit Flynn, Kevin HV 6534 .W18 F59 2007 Scream at the sky : five Texas murders and one man's crusade for justice Stowers, Carlton. HV 6534 .W58 S76 2003 5 Runaway devil : how forbidden love drove a 12-year-old to murder her family Remington, Robert. HV 6535 .C33 M43 2009 The infamous Burke and Hare : serial killers and resurrectionists of nineteenth century Edinburgh Gordon, R. Michael HV 6535 .G6 E3335 2009 While they slept : an inquiry into the murder of a family Harrison, Kathryn. HV 6542 .H37 2008 Erased : missing women, murdered wives Strong, Marilee. HV 6542 .S77 2008 Rape and sexual assault III : a research handbook HV 6561 .R369 1991 Crime, criminals, and corrections MacNamara, Donal E. J. HV 6779 .M22 1982 Coping with crime : individual and neighborhood reactions Skogan, Wesley G. HV 6791 .S56 Violent crime : environment, interaction, and death Block, Richard. HV 6795 .C4 B55 Fighting violent crime in America Lauder, Ronald S. HV 7431 .L38 1985 The girl with the crooked nose : a tale of murder, obsession, and forensic artistry Botha, Ted. HV 8073.4 .B67 2008 Inside the mind of BTK : the true story behind thirty years of hunting for the Wichita serial killer Douglas, John E. HV 8079 .H6 D684 2007 6 No place safe : a family memoir Reid, Kim. HV 8079 .H6 R45 2007 A question of murder Wecht, Cyril H. HV 8079 .H6 W43 2008 Murder at the Harlem mosque Grosso, Sonny. HV 8148 .N52 G76 1977 The execution of Willie Francis : race, murder, and the search for justice in the American South King, Gilbert. HV 8699 .U5 K55 2008 Bloodsworth : the true story of the first death row inmate exonerated by DNA Junkin, Tim HV 8701 .B56 J85 2004 Kids who kill Ewing, Charles Patrick HV 9067 .H6 E954 1990 When the husband is the suspect Bailey, F. Lee KF 221 .M8 B35 2008 The defense never rests Bailey, F. Lee KF 221 .M8 B3 The framing of Mumia Abu-Jamal O'Connor, J. Patrick. KF 224 .A354 O257 2008 Unreasonable doubt : circumstantial evidence and an ordinary murder in New Haven Thompson, Norma KF 224 .B29 T48 2006 Murder by contract : the people v. "Tough Tony" Boyle Lewis, Arthur H. KF 224 .B68 L48 7 Case of a lifetime : a criminal defense lawyer's story Smith, Abbe. KF 224 .J36 S65 2008 Till death us do part : a true murder mystery Bugliosi, Vincent. KF 224 .P34 B83 The wrong man : the final verdict on the Dr. Sam Sheppard murder case Neff, James. KF 224 .S47 N44 2001 Anatomy of a trial : public loss, lessons learned from The People vs. O.J. Simpson Hayslett, Jerrianne KF 224 .S485 H39 2008 Arc of justice : a saga of race, civil rights, and murder in the Jazz Age Boyle, Kevin KF 224 .S8 B69 2005 The innocent man : murder and injustice in a small town Grisham, John. KF 224 .W5535 G75 2006 Cry rape : the true story of one woman's harrowing quest for justice Lueders, Bill. KF 225 .B66 L84 2006 Contemporary issues in criminal justice : some problems and suggested reforms KF 9223 .A75 C66 Enemy of the state : the trial and execution of Saddam Hussein Newton, Michael A. KMJ 41 .H87 N49 2008 Old City Hall Rotenberg, Robert PR 9199.4 .R6845 O43 2009 That bird has my wings : the autobiography of an innocent man on death row Masters, Jarvis Jay PS 3563 .A826 Z46 2009 8 The insanity offense : how America's failure to treat the seriously mentally ill endangers its citizens Torrey, E. Fuller (Edwin Fuller) RC 443 .T67 2008 Beyond victim : you can overcome childhood abuse--even sexual abuse Beveridge, Martha Baldwin RC 569.5 .C55 B35 1988 Accident-trauma victim identification ; Death notification [videorecording] Video HV 8079.5 .A22 1998 STAFF_ONLY AV 9 .
Recommended publications
  • Patterns in the Mindset Behind Organized Mass Killing
    Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal Volume 12 Issue 1 Article 8 6-2018 Democidal Thinking: Patterns in the Mindset Behind Organized Mass Killing Gerard Saucier University of Oregon Laura Akers Oregon Research Institute Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp Recommended Citation Saucier, Gerard and Akers, Laura (2018) "Democidal Thinking: Patterns in the Mindset Behind Organized Mass Killing," Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: Vol. 12: Iss. 1: 80-97. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5038/1911-9933.12.1.1546 Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol12/iss1/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Open Access Journals at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Democidal Thinking: Patterns in the Mindset Behind Organized Mass Killing Acknowledgements Thanks are due to Seraphine Shen-Miller, Ashleigh Landau, and Nina Greene for assistance with various aspects of this research. This article is available in Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol12/iss1/8 Democidal Thinking: Patterns in the Mindset Behind Organized Mass Killing Gerard Saucier University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon, USA Laura Akers Oregon Research Institute Eugene, Oregon, USA In such a world of conflict, a world of victims and executioners, it is the job of thinking people, as Albert Camus suggested, not to be on the side of the executioners. –Howard Zinn1 Introduction and Background Sociopolitical violence is a tremendous social problem, given its capacity to spiral into outcomes of moral evil (i.e., intentional severe harm to others).
    [Show full text]
  • Piteous Massacre’: Violence, Language, and the Off-Stage in Richard III
    Journal of the British Academy, 8(s3), 91–109 DOI https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/008s3.091 Posted 15 June 2020 ‘Piteous massacre’: violence, language, and the off-stage in Richard III Georgina Lucas Abstract: Shakespeare regularly stages extreme violence. In Titus Andronicus, Chiron and Demetrius are baked in a pie and eaten by their mother. Gloucester’s eyes are plucked out in King Lear. In contradistinction to this graphic excess are moments when violence is relegated off-stage: Macbeth kills King Duncan in private; when Richard III suborns the assassination of his nephews—the notorious ‘Princes in the Tower’—the boys are killed away from the audience. In such instances, the spectator must imagine the scope and formation of the violence described. Focussing on Richard III, this article asks why Shakespeare uses the word ‘massacre’ to express the murder of the two princes. Determining the varied, and competing, meanings of the term in the 16th and 17th centuries, the article uncovers a range of ways an early audience might have interpreted the killings—as mass murder, assassination, and butchery—and demonstrates their thematic connections to child-killing across the cycle of plays that Richard III concludes. Keywords: Shakespeare, massacre, Richard III, off-stage violence, child-killing. Notes on the author: Georgina Lucas is Lecturer in Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature in the School of Arts, English and Languages at Queen’s University, Belfast. Her research focusses upon the representation of mass and sexual violence on the early modern stage, and the performance and reception of Shakespeare during and after acts of atrocity.
    [Show full text]
  • An Exploration of Trauma Markers in the Artwork of Serial Killers
    LMU/LLS Theses and Dissertations Spring June 2017 An Exploration of Trauma Markers in the Artwork of Serial Killers Kiran M. Haynes Loyola Marymount University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/etd Part of the Art Therapy Commons, and the Marriage and Family Therapy and Counseling Commons Recommended Citation Haynes, Kiran M., "An Exploration of Trauma Markers in the Artwork of Serial Killers" (2017). LMU/LLS Theses and Dissertations. 314. https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/etd/314 This Research Projects is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in LMU/LLS Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TRAUMA MARKERS IN THE ARTWORK OF SERIAL KILLERS i AN EXPLORATION OF TRAUMA MARKERS IN THE ARTWORK OF SERIAL KILLERS by Kiran M. Haynes A research paper presented to the FACULTY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF MARITAL AND FAMILY THERAPY LOYOLA MARYMOUNT UNIVERSITY In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree MASTER OF ARTS May 2017 TRAUMA MARKERS IN THE ARTWORK OF SERIAL KILLERS ii © 2017 Kiran M. Haynes ALL RIGHTS RESERVED TRAUMA MARKERS IN THE ARTWORK OF SERIAL KILLERS iii Signature Page TRAUMA MARKERS IN THE ARTWORK OF SERIAL KILLERS iv Disclaimer The views, opinions, and findings expressed in this research paper are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Loyola Marymount University, the Department of Marital and Family Therapy, nor any other affiliated entity.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Visualise an Event That Is Not Representable? the Topos of Massacre in François Dubois’ St
    How to Visualise an Event that is not Representable? The Topos of Massacre in François Dubois’ St. Bartholomewʼs Day Massacre ALEXANDRA SCHÄFER Situated as it was at the centre of such swirling emotions, revolutionary implications, festering resentments and indeterminate intellectual repercussions, the Massacre of St. Bartholomew became a legend almost before it happened, and it grew with the telling and with the passage of time.1 The topos of massacre as a memory box and the French Wars of Religion The French Wars of Religion (1562-1598) were some of the most brutal, important and captivating confessional conflicts in the sixteenth century.2 On the night of the 24th August 1572, one of the most crucial violent events took 1 KELLEY, 1972, p. 1342. 2 The confessional conflict was entangled with many other domains, among them the preservation of the Valois dynasty, the concurrence between noble houses, the recovering from recent war, financial problems, failed reforms and the fight about hegemony in Europe against Habsburg Spain. 27 Unauthenticated Download Date | 6/24/19 11:07 AM Alexandra Schäfer place and soon became labelled St. Bartholomewʼs Day Massacre by contemporaries.3 This article4 examines how the topos of massacre, seen as a memory box, became pressing in the representation of this event. Therefore, one of the best known but rarely examined visual representations of St. Bartholomewʼs Day Massacre, the sole known contemporary Huguenot painting, was chosen: François Duboisʼ St. Bartholomewʼs Day Massacre5. Dubois opened the memory box of massacre when composing his depiction of the historical massacre on St. Bartholomewʼs Day, using layers from this box and adding new aspects hitherto not linked with it.
    [Show full text]
  • Hamlet As Shakespearean Tragedy: a Critical Study
    SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY HAMLET AS SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY: A CRITICAL STUDY Rameshsingh M.Chauhan ISSN 2277-7733 Assistant Professor, Volume 8 Issue 1, Sardar Vallabhbhai Vanijya Mahavidyalaya,Ahmedabad June 2019 Abstract Hamlet is often called an "Elizabethan revenge play", the theme of revenge against an evil usurper driving the plot forward as in earlier stage works by Shakespeare's contemporaries, Kyd and Marlowe, as well as by the .As in those works avenging a moral injustice, an affront to both man and God. In this case, regicide (killing a king) is a particularly monstrous crime, and there is no doubt as to whose side our sympathies are disposed. The paper presents the criticism of Hamlet as Shakespearean tragedy. Keywords: Hamlet, Tragedy, Shakespeare, Shakespearean Tragedy As in many revenge plays, and, in fact, several of Shakespeare's other tragedies (and histories), a corrupt act, the killing of a king, undermines order throughout the realm that resonates to high heaven. We learn that there is something "rotten" in Denmark after old Hamlet's death in the very first scene, as Horatio compares the natural and civil disorders that occurred in Rome at the time of Julius Caesar's assassination to the disease that afflicts Denmark. These themes and their figurative expression are common to the Elizabethan revenge play genre in which good must triumph over evil.Throughout Hamlet we encounter a great deal of word play, Shakespeare using a vast number of multivalent terms ranging from gross puns to highly-nuanced words that evoke a host of diverse associations and images. While Hamlet can tell this difference between a "hawk and a handsaw," the play challenges the assumption that language itself can convey human experience or hold stable meaning.
    [Show full text]
  • Mass Murderers: a Case Study Analysis of Social Media Influence and Copycat Suicide
    Walden University ScholarWorks Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Collection 2020 Mass Murderers: A Case Study Analysis of Social Media Influence and Copycat Suicide Stephanie Ann McKay Walden University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies Collection at ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Walden University College of Social and Behavioral Sciences This is to certify that the doctoral dissertation by Stephanie McKay has been found to be complete and satisfactory in all respects, and that any and all revisions required by the review committee have been made. Review Committee Dr. Eric Hickey, Committee Chairperson, Psychology Faculty Dr. Jerrod Brown, Committee Member, Psychology Faculty Dr. Victoria Latifses, University Reviewer, Psychology Faculty Chief Academic Officer and Provost Sue Subocz, Ph.D. Walden University 2020 Abstract Mass Murderers: A Case Study Analysis of Social Media Influence and Copycat Suicide by Stephanie McKay MS, Walden University, 2012 BS, Francis Marion University, 1996 Dissertation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Forensic Psychology Walden University May 2020 Abstract The frequency of mass murder has increased over the past decade, with nearly half of all mass murderers committing suicide. Previous researchers have found imitations of mass murderers which relate to suicide contagion, media contagion, and copycat effects; however, there remains a gap in the literature pertaining to the connection between copycat suicides of mass killers and the influence of social media.
    [Show full text]
  • Destruction and Human Remains
    Destruction and human remains HUMAN REMAINS AND VIOLENCE Destruction and human remains Destruction and Destruction and human remains investigates a crucial question frequently neglected in academic debate in the fields of mass violence and human remains genocide studies: what is done to the bodies of the victims after they are killed? In the context of mass violence, death does not constitute Disposal and concealment in the end of the executors’ work. Their victims’ remains are often treated genocide and mass violence and manipulated in very specific ways, amounting in some cases to true social engineering with often remarkable ingenuity. To address these seldom-documented phenomena, this volume includes chapters based Edited by ÉLISABETH ANSTETT on extensive primary and archival research to explore why, how and by whom these acts have been committed through recent history. and JEAN-MARC DREYFUS The book opens this line of enquiry by investigating the ideological, technical and practical motivations for the varying practices pursued by the perpetrator, examining a diverse range of historical events from throughout the twentieth century and across the globe. These nine original chapters explore this demolition of the body through the use of often systemic, bureaucratic and industrial processes, whether by disposal, concealment, exhibition or complete bodily annihilation, to display the intentions and socio-political frameworks of governments, perpetrators and bystanders. A NST Never before has a single publication brought together the extensive amount of work devoted to the human body on the one hand and to E mass violence on the other, and until now the question of the body in TTand the context of mass violence has remained a largely unexplored area.
    [Show full text]
  • Maureen Hiebert on Gendercide and Genocide
    Adam Jones, ed.. Gendercide and Genocide. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2004. 336 pp. $69.95, library, ISBN 978-0-8265-1444-8. Reviewed by Maureen Hiebert Published on H-Genocide (September, 2005) In the frst chapter of his edited volume Gen‐ The volume is anchored by an introductory dercide and Genocide, Adam Jones asserts that essay by Jones in which he outlines his own defi‐ "gendercide," in a global-historical perspective, "is nition of gendercide and the need to gender geno‐ a frequently and often defining feature of human cide studies in a way that the targeting of non‐ conflict" and a "ubiquitous feature of contempo‐ combatant "battle-aged men" is acknowledged as rary politico-military conflicts worldwide" (p. 2). a central feature of many genocides. Drawing on More importantly for Jones is the contention that Mary Ann Warren's original definition of geno‐ genocide is not restricted to the victimization of cide, Jones defines gendercides as "gender-selec‐ women, but includes the targeting of battle-aged tive mass killing" (p. 2) where gender and sex are men. This gender-specific targeting of men has, in taken to be relatively synonymous by virtue of Jones's view, "attracted virtually no attention at their interchangeable use in everyday discourse. the level of scholarship and public policy" (p. 2). For Jones, the targeting of battle-aged men is per‐ Thus, with this opening salvo, Jones launches vasive because the removal of adult males, be a concerted and important effort to place gender they elites, non-combatants, or soldiers, is often in general, and the victimization of men in partic‐ the frst step in the wider victimization of groups ular, front and center in the growing literature on defined by ethnic, racial, religious, national, or po‐ comparative genocide studies.
    [Show full text]
  • German Mass Murderers and Their Proximal Warning Behaviors
    Journal of Threat Assessment and Management © 2019 American Psychological Association 2019, Vol. 6, No. 1, 1–22 2169-4842/19/$12.00 http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/tam0000122 German Mass Murderers and Their Proximal Warning Behaviors Mirko Allwinn and Jens Hoffmann J. Reid Meloy Institute Psychology and Threat Management, University of California, San Diego Darmstadt, Germany The main objective of this study was to analyze mass murder cases committed by adults from a threat assessment perspective, and to identify risk factors and proximal warning behaviors. Therefore, court records of 33 German mass murderers between 2000 and 2012 were systematically evaluated. One major focus was the comparison between psychotic and nonpsychotic offenders. Significant differences were found between the 2 groups regarding their choice of weapons, planning behavior, personal crises, per- sonality aspects, and warning behaviors. Nonpsychotic subjects were significantly more likely to evidence pathway warning behavior and directly threaten their targets before the attack when compared with the psychotic subjects. Effect sizes were medium to large. All offenders showed multiple proximal warning behaviors prior to their attacks. Findings are interpreted in light of previous studies and for the purpose of enhancing threat assessment protocols of such persons of concern. Public Significance Statement The study reveals the presence of warning signs in a representative sample of adult German mass murderers and relates the results to the research from the United States. A predisposition to commit an act of deadly violence was noticeable months, years, or even decades in advance in most of the cases, but the specific intent became apparent relatively late in the pathway toward violence, usually within days or weeks before the killings.
    [Show full text]
  • Not the Crime but the Cover-Up: a Deterrence-Based Rationale for the Premeditation-Deliberation Formula
    Indiana Law Journal Volume 86 Issue 3 Article 4 Summer 2011 Not the Crime but the Cover-Up: A Deterrence-Based Rationale for the Premeditation-Deliberation Formula Michael J. Zydney Mannheimer Northern Kentucky University Follow this and additional works at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ilj Part of the Courts Commons, and the Criminal Law Commons Recommended Citation Mannheimer, Michael J. Zydney (2011) "Not the Crime but the Cover-Up: A Deterrence-Based Rationale for the Premeditation-Deliberation Formula," Indiana Law Journal: Vol. 86 : Iss. 3 , Article 4. Available at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/ilj/vol86/iss3/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Journals at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Indiana Law Journal by an authorized editor of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Not the Crime but the Cover-Up: A Deterrence-Based Rationale for the Premeditation-Deliberation Formula† * MICHAEL J. ZYDNEY MANNHEIMER INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................... 880 I. THE PREMEDITATION-DELIBERATION FORMULA:THE DOCTRINE AND ITS DIFFICULTIES ......................................................................................................... 881 A. THE DOCTRINE ........................................................................................ 882 B. THE DIFFICULTIES ...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Unresolved Problems in the Indonesian Killings of 1965-1966
    UNRESOLVED PROBLEMS IN THE INDONESIAN KILLINGS OF 1965–1966 Robert Cribb More than a generation separates today’s Indonesians from the world in which the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) was extermi- nated. Nonetheless, during the last days of President Suharto’s slow fall from power, one of the dire warnings commonly heard was that Indonesia perhaps stood on the brink of a bloodletting similar to that which took place during the six months from October 1965 to March 1966. In fact, the broader politi- cal context of 1998 only slightly resembled that of 1965 and no genocidal slaughter took place. However, that the events of 1965–66 could be conjured up as a terrible warning demonstrated that the issues surrounding the means Suharto used to come to power were still alive even three decades later, ready to be conjoined with more current concerns as he was being forced out. The possibilities for reexamining the bloodletting have increased in recent years and with them so too has the need to do so become ever more urgent. During the past decade, a small but valuable stream of publications has ap- peared discussing the killings, especially in their regional context. Studies undertaken by Hefner, Robinson, Sudjatmiko, and Sulistyo 1 have greatly en- riched present-day understanding of what took place throughout Indonesia in Robert Cribb is Reader in the Division of Pacific and Asian History, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra. Asian Survey , 42:4, pp. 550–563. ISSN: 0004–4687 Ó 2002 by The Regents of the University of California.
    [Show full text]
  • School and Related Violence
    1 School and Related Violence A BEHAVIOR-ANALYTIC PERSPECTIVE MERRILL WINSTON, PH.D. BCBA-D PROFESSIONAL CRISIS MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION LARAINE WINSTON, M.S., BCBA, LMHC BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS INC. Overview 2 The role of mental illness and mass violence (Laraine) Asking the right questions The role of firearms The necessary and sufficient conditions for mass violence Analogies to terrorism Means of addressing this problem other than pumping billions into mental health and passing tighter gun control legislation (as this is all we hear about) How each of us can become more proactive regardless of where we stand on the gun control debate What Are We Talking About? 3 According to the FBI, mass murder is defined as four or more murders occurring during a particular event with no cooling-off period between the murders. A mass murder typically occurs in a single location in which a number of victims are killed by an individual. How Big is This Problem? 4 Over the past 30 years, public mass shootings have resulted in the murder of 547 people, with 476 other persons injured, according to a March 2013 Congressional Research Service report. Less than one percent of gun murder victims recorded by the FBI in 2010 were killed in incidents with four or more victims. It is nevertheless true that some of the worst acts of violence in U.S. history have taken place in the past decade. Half of the deadliest shootings — incidents at Virginia Tech, Aurora, Sandy Hook, Binghamton, Fort Hood and the Washington Navy Yard — have taken place since 2007.
    [Show full text]