PREVIOUSLY at 4 p.m.: A teenage gunman in Texas killed 18 students and a teacher Tuesday at an elementary school near San Antonio in what would be one of the deadliest mass shootings at a school in U.S. history.
Serial De Gunman Chronicles
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Officials said an 18-year-old gunman was killed by police in response to the shooting and acted alone. It is the deadliest school gun massacre in the U.S. since 2012, when a 20-year-old shooter killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, CT.
Kim Wendy Allen (above), a 19-year-old student at Santa Rosa Junior College, was one of seven women slain while hitchhiking along highways in and around Santa Rosa in the early 1970s.The spree began in February of 1972 when Yvonne Weber and Maureen Sterling, both 13, were thumbing rides on Guerneville Road. The pair disappeared and their bones were found 10 months later in the hills outside Santa Rosa.Over the course of the next 18 months, six more women went missing in the area, with five of their bodies found thrown on the side of Northern California roads or pitched down steep embankments. One victim was never found, but is presumed dead.Though the causes of death in the cases were different -- two were strangled, one was bludgeoned, one was poisoned -- each of the women was last seen hitchhiking along deserted highways.A number of suspects were investigated, including the Zodiac Killer and serial killer Ted Bundy, but police never made any arrests.
The most infamous unsolved serial killing in Bay Area history is undoubtedly that of the Zodiac Killer. Although other serial killers were far more prolific, few have captured the public's attention like Zodiac.He targeted mainly young couples, killing four women, two men (one who was a taxi driver in San Francisco) and injuring two more. But it was his distinctive and persistent letters to the press that gained him worldwide notoriety. His final letter to the Chronicle in 1974, praising the newly released movie 'The Exorcist,' was the last anyone heard from him.
Wong's writing followed the comments of Professor Elliott Leyton, a social-anthropologist whom CTV says is probably the world's most widely consulted expert on serial homicide. Interviewed by CBC Newsworld on September 14, 2006 about the Dawson College shooting, Leyton stated that because all three such murderous rampages in Quebec involved a killer who was either an immigrant or a child of immigrants, it warranted an examination of government and societal attitudes.
A Vancouver man complained that the content could have told the gunman where the students were. The council said that as a result of modern technology reducing geographic distance as a barrier, CKNW had breached Section 10 (coverage of violent situations) of the broadcast code. The station broadcast the decision as required, but did not air an apology.
This huge, perfect bound copy of SERIAL KILLER MAGAZINE is chock full of artwork, rare documents, trivia and in depth articles regarding serial murder. It is also packed with unusual trivia, exclusive interviews and much more.
Students who graduated from Fort Sam Houston's U.S. Army Medical Specialist Basic Course in June 1979 didn't realize it at the time, but they had spent weeks learning and living beside one of the most notorious serial killers and cannibals in American history.
In addition to grave problems surrounding the lack of regulation of corporate manufacturing of firearms, ammunition, and firearm accessories, there exists an entire segment of the firearms industry that operates with even less oversight than traditional manufacturers: homemade firearms, ammunition, and firearm accessories makers. There is a robust online community of amateur gun-makers offering tips and tricks for making guns at home and selling kits to allow people to do so that often come very close to the line of what is legally permissible.167 There are two primary concerns related to homemade firearms and accessories: First, these guns and accessories are often made using parts that can be purchased without a background check, creating an easy avenue for individuals prohibited from gun possession to evade that law and make guns at home. Second, homemade guns and accessories are often made with parts that are not required to include a serial number, rendering the finished firearm untraceable if it is later used in a crime.
Law enforcement has grown increasingly concerned about the proliferation of ghost guns. In 2019, District of Columbia police recovered 115 ghost guns, a 360 percent increase from 2018, when they recovered 25 ghost guns, and a 3,733 percent increase from 2017, when only three such firearms were recovered.189 In California, federal law enforcement reports that 30 percent of all guns recovered from crime scenes are blank, without a serial number, and are therefore untraceable.190 The untraceable nature of these weapons makes them highly desirable for firearm traffickers and criminal organizations. In 2015, the New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman authorized the Organized Crime Task Force and the New York State Police to conduct Operation Ghostbusters, focused on identifying a ghost guns trafficking ring.191 The outcome resulted in officers discovering a ghost gun construction operation that built fully functional firearms using unfinished receivers and firearm parts and then transferred them to firearm traffickers.192 The two men responsible for the ghost gun operation received sentences of nine and 11 years, respectively, for the criminal sale of firearms in the first degree, among other charges.193 In 2018, the Los Angeles Police Department and ATF conducted an operation that found criminal organizations were relying on building arsenals using homemade firearm kits.194 In addition, a new spike in online purchasing of ghost gun kits was reported when much of the country was staying at home during the onset of the coronavirus crisis as part of a larger surge in gun buying during this period.195
The combination of an outdated law and legal interpretation by ATF has resulted in the development of a substantial subset of the consumer gun industry producing, marketing, and selling nearly finished firearm receivers and frames that can be turned into fully functional guns by individuals at home with basic tools and no specialized knowledge or skills. Unfinished receivers pose the same risk to public safety as completed firearms and should therefore be treated the same under the law. ATF should commence a rulemaking process to update the regulations to clarify that unfinished receivers should be treated the same under the law as fully functional firearms for purposes of serial numbers and background checks. In December 2019, Everytown for Gun Safety filed a petition requesting this rulemaking,332 and in a May 2020 interview, former Acting Director of ATF Thomas Brandon revealed that he pursued efforts to reclassify some gun-making kits as firearms but was unable to make significant progress prior to his retirement.333 In addition, Congress should enact legislation making this change to further reduce the risks of homemade guns, such as legislation that has been introduced by Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D-NY)334 and Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI).335 These requirements should also apply to firearm receivers and frames manufactured using a 3D printer.
In another path, Baiken kills I-No and gives in to her bloodlust, presumably becoming a serial killer. She comes to be known as "Baiken the Killer", and is ultimately chased down by Ky and the International Police Force for her crimes.[note 1]
Bob Munden was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as \\\"The Fastest Man with a Gun Who Ever Lived\\\".\",\"allowComments\":false,\"body\":\"Bob Munden was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as \\u201CThe Fastest Man with a Gun Who Ever Lived\\u201D.One journalist reckoned that if Munden had been at the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona, on October 26, 1881, the gunfight would have been over in 5 to 10 seconds. He could whip out his Colt .45 single action revolver (as used by John Wayne), shoot a target and replace the gun in his holster in .0175 seconds, and over his lifetime he won more than 3500 trophies, 800 championship titles and bagged 18 world records in speed-shooting.Munden\\u2019s accuracy was deadly. He could burst two balloons six feet apart in what sounded like a single shot and split playing cards \\u2014 edgeways. He might not have been quite as fast as the French cartoon character \\u201CLucky Luke\\u201D, the cowboy who could \\u201Cdraw faster than his shadow\\u201D, but Munden\\u2019s audiences sometimes needed slow-motion action replay to convince them that what they had just seen was not a trick.Robert Munden was born in Kansas City, Missouri, on February 8, 1942 to Robert and Dorotha Munden, and grew up in the San Bernardino Mountains of California. His father was a disabled veteran of the Second World War.Though Bob was the \\u201Csmallest kid around\\u201D he was always highly competitive, winning the South California marble championship. When told he was not tall enough to play basketball, he practised so hard that he played for his high school for all of the four years he was there.Meanwhile, inspired by Hollywood films, he was honing his skills as a gunslinger. He began with cap guns, then his father traded a shotgun for a set of nickel-plated Ivor-Johnson .38 revolvers and by the time Bob was 11 he was winning fast-draw competitions.After leaving school Munden tried his hand at a variety of manual jobs, but none of them lasted and he decided to try and make a living from winning shooting competitions.In 1963 he met his wife to be, Becky, the women\\u2019s quick-draw champion, at a tournament in southern California. They married the following year and in 1969 they decided to become full-time professional shooters and fast-draw artists.The Mundens appeared numerous times on television, including the Paul Daniels Show in Britain, and became an authority on the use of firearms in the Old West, which was nothing like the Hollywood myth: \\u201CThere weren\\u2019t any fast-draw artists in the Old West,\\u201D he said. \\u201CThe guns weren\\u2019t designed for it, and the holsters were designed to keep the gun in place.\\u201DIt was for this reason that he believed Wild Bill Hickok to have been the deadliest gunman of that time, as Hickok carried his two Remington revolvers in a red sash tied around his waist.Bob Munden is survived by Becky and two daughters.Telegraph, London 2ff7e9595c
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