Question:

Suspicious Murder?

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Whats The Weirdest Murder You"ve Heard Of

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  1. the CSI episodes are pretty good and a lot of them are based on True Crimes.


  2. Many years ago on the common near Newbury a girl was found murdered, this was back in the sixties, she was raped as well, but they never found anyone who knew her, no-one missed her, and they never found the killer, the police eventually released the body and the only person at her funeral was the detective who tried to find her killer, it always stuck in my mind, I felt so sorry that a person could be murdered and nobody cared..

  3. Ok so this is only attempted murder but could have been murder..... a Chinese women in her 30s had an ultrasound and they discovered just over 2 dozen sewing needles in her organs and inside her body. Its most likely the grandparents, not wanting a baby girl, inserted the needles under her skin when she was a baby in a bid to kill her. I just can't believe she went this long without noticing!

    News article below.

  4. The Boy Slave

    Imagine, for a moment, that you are Kenny Kimes Jr., born in 1975 to a mother and father who both loved to steal and con just for the thrill of it. You have a mother who smothers you with an unnaturally close form of love at an early age. Your father is drunk more often than he is sober and seems to be operated by his spouse as if he were a marionette. Your first memories are of police and investigators constantly showing up at your home to look into one shady scheme after another. Any hope of a normal life is doomed from the beginning.

    The Real Amityville Horror:

    The tragic murder of the Ronald DeFeo family

    The Bizarre Murder of Robert Schwartz:

    On Monday, December 10, 2001, 57-year-old Robert Schwartz, a nationally reknown scientist in biometics and DNA research, did not show up for work. His coworkers phoned a neighbor to check on him. He had lived alone since his wife had died and was usually quite punctual, so they were worried. They had good reason to be. His corpse was found face down in his log-and-slate farmhouse, some forty miles west of Washington, D.C. He had been stabbed repeatedly with a sharp knife-like implement two days earlier and left to die. Investigators who arrived at the scene could clearly see an 'X' carved into the skin on the back of Schwartz's neck, which seemed to indicate that the murder was ritualistic.

    Lizzie Borden:

    This classic has to be one of the most enduring murder mysteries America has ever produced. Elderly Andrew Borden, still in his heavy morning coat, reclines on a mohair-covered sofa, his boots on the floor so as not to soil the upholstery. As he naps, his wife, Abby, is on the floor of the guestroom upstairs, dead for the past hour and a half, killed by the same hand, with the same axe, that is about to strike him, as he sleeps.

    The bloodiness of the acts is startling. Along with the gruesome nature of the crimes is the unexpected character of the accused, not a hatchet-wielding maniac, but a church-going, Sunday-school-teaching, respectable, spinster-daughter, charged with parricide, the murder of parents, a crime worthy of Classical Greek tragedy. Many people believed she killed her father and stepmother, but recent forensic research suggests that she didn't.

    Christian Brando:

    The success of a star parent may play some role in how his or her children turn out, but probably the most important factor is the care and nurturing the children receive from their parents as they grow. An unbalanced or eccentric star likely breeds unbalanced and eccentric children. One of the most capricious stars ever is Marlon Brando, and few families have experienced more pain and suffering than Brandos. Suicide, homicide, addiction and violence have all touched the Brandos, and the actor himself took some of the blame for how his children turned out.

    Alice Crimmins:

    In this classic murder mystery, Alice Crimmins' two children are murdered. As a very attractive and sexually adventuresome woman in the 1960s, she is railroaded into a conviction not based upon the evidence, but upon the scandal of her s*x life. "A tramp like her is capable of anything," the prosecutor sneered.

    Theresa Cross:

    Woman uses her children to murder her children. A study in fatal family dysfunction.

    Kathleen Folbigg:

    Tragic crib deaths appear to be the reason that Kathleen Folbigg's babies died, but then her husband finds her terrifying diaries.

    Marvin Gaye:

    Marketed as Motown's lover man, he beat the women he loved. He sang soulful romance, yet forced his wives into degrading s*x. All this ended after he attacked his father who then shot and killed him.

    Marcus Wesson:

    Says he is Jesus Christ, marries and then sires children with his own daughters and his wife's nieces. He rules his children with an iron first abusing them physically and sexually. He teaches them to worship him, support him, bear his children and when the time comes, to kill their children and themselves rather than be separated from him.

    Mary Bell:

    Who could look at the face of this sweet 10-year-old girl and ever imagine her to be one of the youngest serial killers ever discovered. Was this youngster who killed her playmates without any feelings of guilt the result of a monstrous family or a bad seed or something else?

    James Bulger:

    Two 11-year-old boys steal baby from his mother at shopping mall.They then molest the little boy and murder him. Now much older, the boys release from prison stirs major controversy.

  5. JonBenet Ramsey. How could they not find the killer after so long? Why were they so determined to pin it on the parents? Who killed JonBenet and why? And why did John Mark Karr falsely claim he had done it? These questions need answers.

  6. All murders are weird.  

    The cruelest I've heard in recent years was committed by a guy called Allen Lee Davis who entered a house in Florida, raped a woman and when her two little girls of 4 and 6 entered the room on hearing their mother's cries,  he shot both little girls one in the face and the other in the back. Allen Lee Davis died in the electric chair on July 8, 1999.

    EDIT  EDIT  EDIT  EDIT  EDIT  EDIT

    " magpyre " -- I'm really moved by your story. Poor, poor girl.

    " TAB, the avid bibliophile" -- I have seen the autopsy photos of Jon Bennet.  Honestly, I had tears in my eyes. How can anyone, anyone, do such a thing to a 6-year old little girl.

  7. what is a weird murder, and when you think of a answer, ask the family of the person involved what they think about your judgement

    Perhaps that's not the answer you were looking for, but I cannot think of any murder that I would call weird, horrific yes even sad but not weird
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