AMBER ALERT WI - Jayme Closs, 13, Barron, missing after parents found shot, 15 Oct 2018 *endangered* #11

Welcome to Websleuths!
Click to learn how to make a missing person's thread

DNA Solves
DNA Solves
DNA Solves
Status
Not open for further replies.
I just can't see a skinny meth head teen or early 20's doing all of this. It had to be somebody really strong to take on three people and a dog and get away without anybody seeing them and leaving no clues.
Kind of like Superman!
This is a great article on the effects of meth with examples:

"Billy Nicholls, former Hawthorn and Richmond footballer of "exemplary" character, is sentenced to 11 years' jail after shooting two men in the leg in separate incidents while in an ice-induced psychosis.

▪ Police investigate the ice usage of John Torney, 31, charged with murdering his girlfriend's two-year-old daughter after her body is discovered in the roof cavity of their house in Mildura, Victoria, with evidence of a blunt force injury.


▪ A 35-year-old man with a history of ice use is charged with stabbing his mother and seven-year-old nephew to death outside their home in Lalor Park in Sydney's west.

Lawyers and judges are warning that newly addicted people, not previously known to the criminal justice system, are increasingly being charged with highly violent crimes on their first offences: armed robberies, aggravated burglaries, serious assaults and sex offences.

Professor Michael Farrell, director of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at the University of New South Wales, says he would love to know what proportion of ice users experience psychosis. .

"Initially we thought it was dose related, that when you take a lot, you go mad."

But it turns out to be more complex than that. One of ice's unusual attributes is that, in contrast to some other drugs, the brains of long-term users become more rather than less sensitised to it, so that smaller doses can have bigger effects.


"It's important not to be too simplistic about these chemicals in the brain," Professor Farrell said.

The "incredibly complex connections" between all the different brain parts are not well understood, but overactivity in one part of the brain can lead to underactivity in another part.

The combination of paranoia and hyper-arousal can add up to violence, he said."

Inside an ice rage: what methamphetamine does to your brain
 
How very true. There is no age on evil. It's everywhere.

I do think, if the door was kicked in, it had to be somebody with some strength and wearing some big KA boots!

True. Yet many men in their 60s and 70s are very strong.

I am not saying that is the age but there have been women and men capable of doing terrible gruesome murders and in some of the cases the male victims far outweighed the female suspects..some who were in their 70s at the time.

I dont know how strong their door was but other than breaching the door none of this would have been difficult to do imo.

He/they had a lethal weapon. None of the victims had anything to defend themselves with.

Imo
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Staff online

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
132
Guests online
2,094
Total visitors
2,226

Forum statistics

Threads
605,389
Messages
18,186,441
Members
233,343
Latest member
TacoPanda
Back
Top