There was a story in Dec 20 Macon Telegraph about a murder that occurred in April 2014. Kane Rolison, a 17 year old kid so smart that he had skipped 11th and 12th grades and was in college, killed another college student, J'maal Keyes. Seems that Kane had gotten caught up in a weird video game called Skyrim. He lured J'maal (whom he did not know) into his car, stabbed him to death, burned the body, dismembered it and dumped it in the river to score points in this Skyrim game.
Wonder how many points you would get for killing and decapitation and for killing and dumping a body in a lake?
<Sniped & BBM for Focus>
http://abusesanctuary.blogspot.com/2007/01/between-good-and-evil-by-roger-l.html
Retired FBI BAU Profiler Roger L. Depue quote from "Between Good and Evil"-
My work has given me a profound respect for what humans suffer at the hands of evil, and a particular sensitivity for what its victims endure. During every investigation that I participate in, there is always an invisible observer at my shoulder, whose presence I never forget. Regardless of the circumstances of a case, I am always giving voice to its silent victim.
What must this young girl’s final minutes have been like? Did she cry out while he was repeatedly stabbing her, or keep silent, breathing like a wounded animal, watching for the next glint of a blade? Did her thoughts turn to her parents in those final seconds, when she was overwhelmed by the deepest loneliness she had ever known? Did she experience a dissociative response, the sense of drifting upward and watching her own death as if from above? Or did she sink mercifully into unconsciousness, and feel nothing as her life ebbed away?
Killer in slaying, burning of college student: ‘I kept stabbing him ... I’m sorry’
BY JOE KOVAC JR.
According to Rolison, he and Keyes were acquaintances. Rolison was a Hawkinsville High School student jointly enrolled at Middle Georgia State when he met Keyes there, at a gazebo designated for smoking.
Rolison has said he and Keyes once smoked marijuana together.
“They were not bosom friends,” Oconee Circuit District Attorney Tim Vaughn said. “(Rolison) said he woke up one morning and decided he was gonna kill somebody.”
‘WE CRIED AND HE DIED’
Until Monday, Keyes’ family didn’t know the disturbing circumstances of his death.
“It would be nice if I got the absolute truth. ...
I wonder what J’maal’s last hour was like,” Veronica Keyes, 48, told The Telegraph last week.
“Did he cry? Did he call out? Did he see it coming? ... That’s something a mother needs to know. ... What happened to my baby?”
Thoughts of the horrible unknown ran through her mind daily.
“There are days where all I do is cry,” she said. “Sometimes I wish it was just a dream, that I’ll wake up and it’ll all be over.”
Asked if her son would forgive Rolison, she said, “I think he would. And that’s what he would want me to do.”
All she hoped was that Rolison would be sent to prison for life.
Aside from that, Veronica Keyes said, “I don’t think about the guy. I don’t allow myself to stare at him. I don’t want his face to be etched in my mind. ... I just want to remember J’maal.”
‘A CARING YOUNG MAN’
J’maal Malik Keyes was a New York City native, from the Bronx.
The youngest of three children, he dreamed of being a police detective.
But that wasn’t his first choice.
In high school he was in Junior ROTC. He wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps, join the Army, then be in the military police.
In May 2012, upon graduating Hiram High, he went to enlist but was overweight.
He joined a gym, but the pounds wouldn’t come off fast enough.
College, he figured, might offer another path into law enforcement.
His favorite TV show was “The First 48,” a documentary series about cracking murder cases. He wanted to do that.
Read more here:
http://www.macon.com/2014/11/17/342...ilty-in-disappearance.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy