NYT bestseller “Chase Darkness with Me: How One True Crime Writer Started Solving Murders,” Discovery+: “Unraveled: Long Island Serial Killer”
Oct 7, 2021 • 12 tweets • 3 min read
A note on this #ZodiacKiller news.
In 2015, I was called upon by a team of producers for the History Channel to pressure test a suspect in the DB Cooper case that a group of investigators had zeroed in on. They paired me with Tom Fuentes, former asst. director of the FBI.
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We spent months going through the DB Cooper case—as well as the suspect’s background. And we concluded that there was no concrete proof that the suspect—Robert Rackstraw—was the man known as DB Cooper. The head of the investigators, a man by the name of Tom Colbert,
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Jun 22, 2020 • 9 tweets • 2 min read
THREAD: Another analogy for the people in the back. If a hospital is bad at its job, people die, they lose the trust of the public and the public goes to another hospital. 1/9
If an airline is bad at its job, people die, they lose the trust of the public and the public flies another airline. If a police department is bad at its job, people die, they lose the trust of the public and... (yeah, finish this sentence if you can.) 2/9
Jun 5, 2020 • 7 tweets • 3 min read
For those still using the terms “good cops” and “bad cops,” please follow the thread.
Let’s say you’re a doctor, and a really good doctor. You save lives. But you know a few doctors in your hospital that aren’t so good. Their patients continuously get infected. They are quick
to anger. They seem to spend more time and effort on some patients rather than others with the same conditions. You would inform hospital admin or the med board of their behavior, right? If you didn’t, you may be a good doctor to all your patients—but you are a bad doctor because
Jan 28, 2019 • 27 tweets • 9 min read
As we all binge The Bundy Tapes on @Netflix and share the trailer for the Zac Efron movie, please remember the victims. These women all had hopes and dreams. They should all have movies made about them. I always try to remember what these monsters took away. #TedBundyTapes
Lynda Ann Healy was 21. She was a psychology major preparing to graduate that semester. Lynda loved working with handicapped children and got up at early every day to report on the skiing conditions for local radio.