How many times did he go to that field outside Ottawa to burn evidence, anyway?
How many times had he purged himself of his meticulous records, to start new again?
Did I miss something? Link?
How many times did he go to that field outside Ottawa to burn evidence, anyway?
How many times had he purged himself of his meticulous records, to start new again?
Did I miss something? Link?
Williams would place lingerie in boxes or bags when he got home. He was so obsessive in his collection of undergarments that he had to burn some of his trophies in a field to make room for more.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2010/10/18/col-williams-court-1018.html
He collected hundreds of panties and bras from his break-ins, so many that he twice took some of his “trophies” to a field in Ottawa and burned them. He kept the photographs, though, and hid them on hard drives he stored in the ceiling above the basement of his Ottawa home. He used a system of deep electronic folders to make them more difficult to find.
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/877044--day-in-court-ends-with-details-of-assault?bn=1
Regarding capital punishment. I was a hardliner for that as well but changed my mind completely when I read how many releases of innocent prisoners, many on death row have occurred since DNA. Now it's a question of money for many of them. Apparently it's expensive to request. So to me, one innnocent man killed by the state is too many.
apologies for quoting myself, but I got sidetracked and didn't get to the point I was trying to make. There are some questions I've been pondering about for some time now:I thought it was BRILLIANT! And not only Det. Smyth, but the whole OPP. They made sure all their "T"s were crossed and the 'i"s dotted. Kudos to them all!!!!!
RW was treated nicely, he could not even claim he was forced into a confession.
His wife hired the best lawyer money can buy, BUT not even Mr. E could do much for him. Now don't ask me why his wife got him the best lawyer, the one who specializes in the lost causes cases.... the one we know is very capable to turn things around. So why did she want RW to have the best representation?
I cannot answer that, cause I simply DO NOT KNOW, DO NOT UNDERSTAND, so it would be nice if someone can help me understand, can give their opinion as to why.
It is a real puzzler.
latte: When I said "empathy" I was talking about empathy towards the suffering of the victims, their families, friends, etc. I did NOT mean empathy towards Williams.
The Dateline show is good, but we need to keep in mind is only one/two hours long? Not enough to contain ALL the details, and I am also sure they do a lot of editing, which unfortunately sometimes changes the meaning of what the interviewee was saying.
I so wish those Fifth Estate episodes were made available to countries outside Canada, those were really well done, and together with the Dateline show will help you get a better grasp/understanding of the whole story.
His friend Jeff was not a friend he was seeing much as of lately. He is one of RW's oldest friends. They knew each other while studying in Toronto, they were in their 20s. After RW married and went to live on the east coast, then moved to Ottawa (Orleans), they must have kept in contact probably by e-mails. If you notice in the Dateline show, when he is narrating the stainless steel fridge anecdote, Jeff says something to the effect of:
"just as Residency, only worse!"
so he is comparing RW the student at the University of Toronto to the RW in 2009, big gap of time, don't you think?
I found that comment of his very telling!
ITA Wondergirl, what evidence did he burn? how many times he did that? We have been told he did that every time "he had accumulated too much"
Also, latte, there is this other collateral victim... his neighbour in Cosy Cove, Tweed. This 65 year old man, who had lived an exemplenary life, was suspected of the sexual assaults, and there were 3 items that were stolen from him: a very greasy lighter, an old work coat and something else that I can't remember at the moment. Not to mention Jessica's body was found at this neighbour's hunting camp. All points in the direction that we was most probably being framed, and RW accepted to visit the Ottawa Police Headquarters so graciously because he thought the reason he was being called was not because the LE suspected RW, but he thought LE suspected his neighbour. You can come to your own conclusions of what he was going to say about poor Mr. Jones.
As for the DP, I am all for it in cases like RW, where there is no shred of a doubt that it was him who DID IT. I read today that a convicted murderer escaped yesterday...he is on the loose as we speak...so perhaps that's a good reason to get rid of monsters like RW.
Found another link for the Dateline show (just in case someone prefers white background as opposed to black)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41665374/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/
Found a good link from Macleans, but I guess I closed the window accidentaly
P.S: again, apologies for my English, as you can tell it is not my first language, so if something sounds "off" or "rough" is not cause I'm impaired in any way, but is not easy to express ideas, feelings in a foreign language, so hope you understand.
It seems to me that RW knew his time had come and the jig was up. Retaining a criminal lawyer at this point would only have dragged the case out for years and funnelled RW's assets into the pockets of lawyers.-- Do you guys think that his lawyer, Mr. E., told him that he should have requested a lawyer?
-- Do you guys think that RW should have at least called his real-estate lawyer?
-- Do you guys think that if RW decided to walk out of the interrogation room or declined to submit DNA samples would that have made any difference?
Or was his fate already sealed?
Canadian commander by day; sexual predator, killer by night
'Dateline NBC' details the astounding double life of Air Force Col. Russell Williams
But many Americans were either ignorant of or only dimly aware of the surreal case of a double life unfolding to the north — a sordid tale in which a decorated officer’s sexual fetish spiraled into gruesome violence against unsuspecting women who caught his eye.
“Russ is still my friend,” says Jeff Farquar, one of Williams’ oldest friends. “And I hate the crimes, but I don’t hate Russ.”
But for all his digging, Morrison can’t answer what remains the central question of the case: How can a man who was by all accounts an exemplary officer unravel so completely?
Additional details emerged after his trial. The Toronto Star, citing an informed source, reported in November that Williams had been taking multiple pain medications for at least two years before his arrest. Among them was prednisone, which has been documented in some instances to produce mind-altering side-effects.
Defence Minister Peter MacKay was talking about more than the trauma of wounds when he visited C-F-B Trenton, Ontario, today.
He also spoke of the case of Russell Williams before he announced five new integrated support centres for military personnel and their families, including one in Trenton.
MacKay says soldiers and aircrew at Trenton had to deal with the reality of what he says was ``a monster in their midst'' when Williams' shocking sex crimes came to light.
But he says they showed courage in dealing with what he described as ``a shocking breach of trust and an unspeakable period of violence and depravity.''
http://www.680news.com/news/nationa...five-new-support-centre-for-military-families
Below snipped for brevity:
So far as I know there is no proof that an innocent person has been put to death in the United States. In one re-opened case they even went back after the killer had met his death and with new DNA techniques were able to verify that is was indeed him who had committed the heinous murder. In most cases that I am aware of there is a preponderance of DNA evidence and other forensic evidence against the killers on death row (let alone a confession). Depraved serial killers like Williams, who are too far gone, should not wake up every morning, not having to worry about where their next meal is coming from, able to read, watch t.v., talk to visitors, etc.
I have watched interviews on t.v. of people on death row and they would much prefer to not have to worry about meeting their death with the state needle. They appeal and appeal to get their sentences commuted to life. Every day they wake up and not only have to think about the horrible crimes they committed (that is if they even have one iota of empathy in them), they also have to think about being put to death. What I have noticed is how they seem to hate that idea, yet the idea of putting some innocent person to death by their own hands came quite easily to them.
Interviews of prisoners on life sentence seem different. Most of these people are sociopaths who seem to adapt to prison life. They figure out how to get in contraband, write letters to their groupies, enjoy not having to work at a job and pay taxes, figure out ways to communicate with fellow prisoners, make as many phone calls as they can to people who feel sorry for them and who enable them, watch t.v., get three square meals a day, etc. Some have even admitted it is a relief for them to be in prison. They even commit crimes just so they can come back when they have been out on parole. Even Charles Manson admitted that he prefers prison to life on the outside. Tex Watson and others have been able to get married (a couple of times), have conjugal visits, and sire many children. His victims (e.g. Sharon Tate) never got that chance. And because he was not sentenced to death, and has parole dates, he actually thinks he deserves to get out on parole because he has supposedly reformed by conveniently finding religion while in prison. Not fair for his victims at all.
I am just not buying that a life sentence in prison is harsher than death row.
apologies for quoting myself, but I got sidetracked and didn't get to the point I was trying to make. There are some questions I've been pondering about for some time now:
When Det. Smyth tells RW that he could leave at any time, and the Det. also lets RW know that he can ask for a lawyer to be present, he even asks him if he has a lawyer, to which RW jokingly answers that he has 'a real-estate lawyer'
so my questions are:
-- Do you guys think that his lawyer, Mr. E., told him that he should have requested a lawyer?
-- Do you guys think that RW should have at least called his real-estate lawyer?
-- Do you guys think that if RW decided to walk out of the interrogation room or declined to submit DNA samples would that have made any difference?
Or was his fate already sealed?
What I think is: he was so sure the reason he was called that Sunday evening was not because of him, but as I said in above post, he thought he was called to answer questions regarding his neighbour Mr. Jones, so IMHO, it never crossed his mind it was him who was being suspected.
It caught him totally off guard ... like a Chess game ... he was totally outsmarted, JMHO.
Yes I do think Mr E would have told Williams that he should have requested a lawyer.
No, though it would have been a quick link for him, I don't think he should have called his real estate lawyer. There would or should have been quick criminal defence numbers available to him on request (even on a Sunday) for him to attain a lawyer's phone advice and from there have a legal representative with him very quickly.
The thing is that rightly or wrongly, except in the case of attempted malicious prosecution or police incompetence, requesting a lawyer is perceived as an admission of guilt. In the best of all possible worlds, an innocent person should never need a lawyer. I'm thinking that RW was so confident of himself he thought he could bluff himself through anything that was thrown at him. (Or go down in flames, which he did.)
Paul Morse 1 hour 11 minutes ago Military probes accused doctor
http://www.thespec.com/news/crime/article/491111--military-probes-accused-doctor
ACCUSED Ancaster doctor Amitabh Chauhan, who once trained to be a military pilot and is now part of the naval reserve in Hamilton, is being investigated by Toronto police for gang sexual assault.
Related Stories Second sex assault claim against Ancaster doc
Toronto police say a second alleged victim has come forward in a sexual assault case involving two Ontario...
.A gang rape investigation involving Hamilton physician and naval reserve officer Dr. Amitabh (Amit) Chauhan of Ancaster has expanded to the Canadian military.
We are in the midst of contact with (the Canadian Forces National Investigative Service), said Toronto police spokesperson Constable Tony Vella on Tuesday.
I can confirm that we know that he was taking flying courses in the military, and we are investigating all tips, Vella said.
Welcome back PPI've been away from this forum for a while and came back to see if MEH filed for divorce...Do we know? Has there been any news about this?
I don't know, but IMO that sounds kinda 'conditional' ... makes me think that if the outcome is not what she expects, then no divorce? :dunno:Binks said Harriman wouldn't formally file for divorce until after she knows the outcome of her motion seeking the sealing order.
Read more: http://www.windsorstar.com/news/Killer+wife+wants+divorce/4011233/story.html#ixzz1G1vhHlAt
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