Posts

My Apologies

 I know I said I re-started this site because there seemed to be an issue I could not determine through Google and AdSense but it appears that I have the same issue here which fails to allow me to reach an audience.   I am begining to believe that the "policy violation" that they are now claiming is a "new" one and involves true crime itself. To be honest I have not checked into this in quite a while because I became overly frustrated trying to deal with it.  It appears that if this is the route that I want to continue to take that Blogger.com may not be the format for me.   Hopefully sometime in the near future I will dig deep into things again.  On that note I have been diving deep into the Delphi Murders and have watched and gotten involved in several podcasts related to the case.  I am expecially partical to The Defense Diaries and CriminaliTY on YouTube so if this is also something you are interested in those podcasts are very good. ...

McDonald's Hot Coffee and How it Damaged Us All

  This case is different than any I have done so far, but will not likely be the last of its kind that you will see here. This is a civil case, not a criminal case, and does not involve a murder. Civil cases are much different, and have different rules than criminal cases. Most will tell you that the biggest thing is the standard used to find a “defendant,” more commonly called a respondent in civil cases, guilty or responsible. In criminal cases it is “beyond a reasonable doubt” while in civil cases it is a “preponderance of the evidence.” This is important because criminal cases generally involve taking the freedom of someone. In civil cases it is generally about punishing someone financially. Another big difference between the two types of courts is that when all is said and done in civil courts a percentage of responsibility is often allotted to all of the parties involved and that can include the person who brought the lawsuit. This case is not only about hot coffe...

Jeffrey MacDonald and Fatal Vision

  Once again this has become a blog in which I have started, erased, started again and erased again. The Jeffrey MacDonald case is an extremely long and complicated case. In fact, it has been called one of the “most litigated” and the “longest” criminal/murder case in U.S. History. The murders of MacDonald's pregnant wife and two young daughters occurred in 1970. There was an Article 32 Hearing through the Army in 1970 that ended with a recommendation that charges be dropped against him but no actual trial. Over the next several years both the Army and the Federal Government were investigating the murders and MacDonald remained their prime suspect. He was officially federally indicted on three counts of murder in January of 1975. For the next few years things were in and out of the courts considering whether there were issues involving double jeopardy or MacDonald's right to a speedy trial. MacDonald finally went to trial in July of 1979 and was convicted. However, t...

Lori Vallow-Daybell and The Murders of Her Children

  I had not intended on doing this case just quite yet. There are so many layers to this case and so much more to be seen yet through the courts. My previous blog site was established enough that I could add cases that were older and unknown and well quite honestly shorter and easier to put together. So initially I was thinking as I did a re-launch that the more stories I got out, the better to get it off the ground. While I do share the links on my person Facebook page as well as the page from the old blog, that is the only traffic it will see unless someone is looking for something specific. And let's face it people are not searching for obscure older cases, they are searching the cases that are in the news and current or a least still in the minds of people. This is another case where I have started, erased and started again more than once. My goal was to tell the story like I do in so many other cases and then analyze it. I was attempting to simply concentrate on th...