• #13,261
This link shows the skull you asked about and the images JR showed in his news conference. It doesn’t speak to whose artwork it is though.
Maybe Tineye can help identify the artist?
 
  • #13,262
Maybe Tineye can help identify the artist?
Tineye?
ETA: If you mean Tierney, then I agree. LE should be able to identify the artist(s).
 
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  • #13,263
  • #13,264
Unfortunately, emotion is reigning supreme here. The bail application makes it clear that VH has been interviewed by LE.
See the portion about the trip to Vermont with the family of VH's kindergarten friend.

Since the FBI and State Police are part of the taskforce, along with local LE and perhaps other agencies, it makes sense to me to think she was interviewed by someone highly trained and skilled.

Just because we don't know what was said (and why should we?), doesn't mean that anytime the investigation needs info from her interview(s) LE won't have it - or get it. IF she is indeed a witness and if her testimony is needed in court, there's every reason to believe Tierney will have her on the witness stand.

She may not appear in court as her "witness" may not be necessary for the case the DA is building. BUT guess what folks, that is his job and his business how he builds the case. Tierney has repeatedly said the investigation speaks through indictments arrived at through the confidential work of a Grand Jury. So far, the taskforce seems to be doing a great job and has even charged in an unexpected direction.

John Ray on the other hand . . . well don't get me started. That disgusting display of a PC means I am no longer sitting on the fence where he is concerned.

Isn't most everything in life itself influenced by emotion? Particularly if we are on a website that discusses behaviors... greed, love, lust, jealousy, rage. Isn't most every follow, sub, click on social media driven by basic emotion? Sometimes we look further and find criminality other times we find lies... be it politicians, influencers, lawyers, and people who just want to muddy truth. Childhood trauma can be used in legal proceedings... maybe it will and maybe it won't. Trying to stop people from being emotional or expressing emotional reactions to public info is futile.

jmo
 
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  • #13,265
I'm confused what you mean by the name/number and where it could be written.

I just googled "Pandora's Box" NYC and there was no way in hell I was going to click on any of the numerous links after reading the snips. lol

Here's a SAFE link (no photos) just INFO:
If RH attended it would explain where all his money went, it's an expensive, elite club.
 
  • #13,266
yes and a gut feeling is not a crime last I checked
people are demonizing her and her daughter

of course not.

If she has info and evidence and refuses to divulge that is, however.
 
  • #13,267
Johnnie W. Mask and Gregory P. Isaacs spoke to Newsweek about what it was like to defend an accused serial killer and gave their perspectives on alleged Gilgo killer Rex Heuermann's case.

"It was basically seven, eight years out of my life and practice, but it was not a bad experience," Mask said.

Mask represented Charles Cullen, who admitted to murdering 40 people in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and some believe he could have hundreds of victims. Through his job as a nurse, Cullen gave patients a fatal dose of medication in their IVs.

He pleaded guilty to killing 13 patients and to attempting to kill two others in New Jersey in April 2004. He pleaded guilty to murdering three more the following month. In November 2004, he pleaded guilty to murdering six patients and trying to kill three others in Pennsylvania. He is currently serving 18 consecutive life sentences at New Jersey State Prison in Trenton.

Isaacs represented Thomas Huskey, who was accused of murdering four women in Tennessee in 1992, during two trials. Both resulted in a hung jury for the murder charges and the case was ultimately dismissed. Prior to the murder trial, Huskey was convicted on several rape charges and sentenced to 64 years in prison.

"The dynamic that I had with four capital homicides, it's a tremendous amount of work because if they're being tried together, which in my case they were, you're basically doing four capital cases at the same time," Isaac said

"I have done and do a lot of high-profile cases, but when you have the specter of a serial killer, this may sound cliche, but it almost adds a chill to the courtroom," Isaacs said. "So it's a very different dynamic and electricity that until you've been there, literally it's hard to describe."

"There's the media frenzy. The public, for whatever reason, good or bad, appears to be captivated by the fact that there was a serial killer in their community," Isaacs said.

"I think it gets attention because of the rarity of the situation," Mask said. "There's not that many serial killers around, and people are curious about what would make a person commit these crimes and they want to see what's going on in the heads of individuals that [do] these things."

The defense in Huskey's case included dissociative identity disorder, which Isaacs said increased public interest in the proceedings.

Word Document Rex Heuermann

Rex Heuermann, the alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer, made a list of notes. The evidence was found in March. Court documents
:( :mad:
 
  • #13,268
do you feel this way about every family of serial killers?
what if their lives were never exposed on a international scale by John Ray?
do you still consider them all 'witnesses' with something to hide?
just curious

I think EVERYONE wonders what did the family know. Were there RED FLAGS? Signs?.. Were they victims too? Did he abuse them too?
Or how did the SK hide his double life, everyone wonders about it.
Detectives have to ask these tough questions and so do psychologists.
They weren't living separately or estranged they lived in a small house together. The daughter lived there for 26 years.
 
  • #13,269
AE had nowhere to go???? How do you know this please? Please provide proof of your statement.
Being financially dependent on RH? With a disabled son to take care of?

I can imagine she may have thought that the other option is "the streets."
 
  • #13,270
My youngest once told me that while on a sleep over at his buddy's house, his friend showed him a closet full of S&M and bondage stuff. It belonged to his dad, who had divorced his mom a few years prior.

Rex living with his family in that rather small home while killing multiple women in the basement - that's going to be hard to hide.

As info, my son's friend had a lot of serious psych issues from an early age that have only grown worse in adulthood.

Parents with S&M kinks should lock the door, but knowing how clever kids are he might have locked it and he found the key.
 
  • #13,271
Being financially dependent on RH? With a disabled son to take care of?

I can imagine she may have thought that the other option is "the streets."
That's not what you stated though. You said "she had nowhere to go" as if it's a fact. You can't possibly know what she was thinking.
 
  • #13,272
“I do not agree with anything John Ray is doing,” Sherre Gilbert, sister of Shannan Gilbert, wrote on X. “This is disrespectful and I had no prior knowledge to this ‘press conference’ or the ‘evidence’ he was presenting today. He should’ve been there to discuss Shannan’s case period! He cuts his nose to spite his face! I do not support nor condone his actions whatsoever!”

 
  • #13,273
Johnnie W. Mask and Gregory P. Isaacs spoke to Newsweek about what it was like to defend an accused serial killer and gave their perspectives on alleged Gilgo killer Rex Heuermann's case.

"It was basically seven, eight years out of my life and practice, but it was not a bad experience," Mask said.

Mask represented Charles Cullen, who admitted to murdering 40 people in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and some believe he could have hundreds of victims. Through his job as a nurse, Cullen gave patients a fatal dose of medication in their IVs.

He pleaded guilty to killing 13 patients and to attempting to kill two others in New Jersey in April 2004. He pleaded guilty to murdering three more the following month. In November 2004, he pleaded guilty to murdering six patients and trying to kill three others in Pennsylvania. He is currently serving 18 consecutive life sentences at New Jersey State Prison in Trenton.

Isaacs represented Thomas Huskey, who was accused of murdering four women in Tennessee in 1992, during two trials. Both resulted in a hung jury for the murder charges and the case was ultimately dismissed. Prior to the murder trial, Huskey was convicted on several rape charges and sentenced to 64 years in prison.

"The dynamic that I had with four capital homicides, it's a tremendous amount of work because if they're being tried together, which in my case they were, you're basically doing four capital cases at the same time," Isaac said

"I have done and do a lot of high-profile cases, but when you have the specter of a serial killer, this may sound cliche, but it almost adds a chill to the courtroom," Isaacs said. "So it's a very different dynamic and electricity that until you've been there, literally it's hard to describe."

"There's the media frenzy. The public, for whatever reason, good or bad, appears to be captivated by the fact that there was a serial killer in their community," Isaacs said.

"I think it gets attention because of the rarity of the situation," Mask said. "There's not that many serial killers around, and people are curious about what would make a person commit these crimes and they want to see what's going on in the heads of individuals that [do] these things."

The defense in Huskey's case included dissociative identity disorder, which Isaacs said increased public interest in the proceedings.

Word Document Rex Heuermann

Rex Heuermann, the alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer, made a list of notes. The evidence was found in March. Court documents
:( :mad:
It almost seems like he was taking notes to eventually write a book. An instruction book.
 
  • #13,274
It almost seems like he was taking notes to eventually write a book. An instruction book.
They listed it in the court documents as a planning document. Or used as a blueprint to document crimes.
eta:
 
  • #13,275
  • #13,276
Kerri Rawson, the daughter of BTK serial killer Dennis Rader and a victims' advocate, also slammed the attorney over his claims.

'John Ray is not credible at all. This is disgusting and I hope Asa and her children seek all legal recourse,' Rawson wrote.


 
  • #13,277
It almost seems like he was taking notes to eventually write a book. An instruction book.

We have no idea if he didn't and sold it or gave it away on the Dark Web...yet.
I have a gut feeling this is just the tip of a giant iceberg.
 
  • #13,278
  • #13,279
We have no idea if he didn't and sold it or gave it away on the Dark Web...yet.
I have a gut feeling this is just the tip of a giant iceberg.
Exactly! Books seemed important to RH. He apparently used books for his own instruction. His planning document seems like a how-to when he writes, "next time" and "hit harder". These are things that imo don't need to be written down to plan something or to remember to do. Just seems more like instruction to others. JMO.
 
  • #13,280
They listed it in the court documents as a planning document. Or used as a blueprint to document crimes.
eta:
One thing that jumped out to me in the video you posted is how Tierney states, around :20 seconds, that RH had a significant collection of violent bondage and torture pornography dating back to 1994. That's the first I've noticed they assigned a start date to his pornography collection. I wonder if his collection was hard copy in addition to digital images.
MOO.
 

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