wickedannabella
Former Member
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2018
- Messages
- 9
- Reaction score
- 56
Stalk. Murder. Repeat.
Over the past four decades Robert Gross has been a prime suspect in several stalking and murder cases. Some of the people close to those cases go as far as to call him a serial killer. Why has he not been convicted for murder?
A terrific read.
Chapter 1
Meet Gross
Chapter 2
First killings
Chapter 3
Disappeared
Chapter 4
Man on fire
Chapter 5
Body found
Chapter 6
Unsolved
Fires had been staged in several places inside the apartment. Ying Li’s body lay in the living room, decapitated.
Li had been advertising herself online as a massage worker, police learned — a clue that would link her murder to a series of crimes that began in the 1960s. Homicide detectives suspected the killer was a man long known to police as an incredibly violent predator.
It was not the first time they had connected him to a woman’s death, or a suspicious fire.
Yet, he had remained elusive to them for more than four decades. And as the smoke cleared that morning, he was still a free man.
.
By Shelly Yang | Neil Nakahodo Kansas City Star
Over the past four decades Robert Gross has been a prime suspect in several stalking and murder cases. Some of the people close to those cases go as far as to call him a serial killer. Why has he not been convicted for murder?
A terrific read.
Chapter 1
Meet Gross
Chapter 2
First killings
Chapter 3
Disappeared
Chapter 4
Man on fire
Chapter 5
Body found
Chapter 6
Unsolved
Fires had been staged in several places inside the apartment. Ying Li’s body lay in the living room, decapitated.
Li had been advertising herself online as a massage worker, police learned — a clue that would link her murder to a series of crimes that began in the 1960s. Homicide detectives suspected the killer was a man long known to police as an incredibly violent predator.
It was not the first time they had connected him to a woman’s death, or a suspicious fire.
Yet, he had remained elusive to them for more than four decades. And as the smoke cleared that morning, he was still a free man.
.
By Shelly Yang | Neil Nakahodo Kansas City Star
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