Wine and Gun

Chapter 3

2. Edward Tasmir case (file number: I028-2927): On July 10, 2010 (Saturday), he was suspected of planning three bank robberies (see file: S973-4245) and resulted in a total of four deaths Tasmir of Tasmir was found dead at a shutdown construction site in the lower city of Westerland, with major joints smashed with blunt instruments and three Byzantine gold coins stuck in his throat. When found, the deceased was suspended from the scaffolding of the main building by piano strings, in the same posture as the angel in relief on the back of the Byzantine gold coin in his throat.

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24. Tripp Caroan case (file number: F283-4320): On April 29, 2016 (Friday), suspected qiángjian and killed 4 women (see file: M239-0374), but due to evidence Caroan, who was underwhelmed and was found dead on his bed in his home, at the same time, his apartment was also the scene of the qiángjian case suspected by the police before. The victim's genitals were amputated, limbs were amputated along the wrists and ankles, and the abdomen was opened. The killer shoved the limbs and genitals of the deceased into his abdominal cavity after removing most of his organs. According to the forensic autopsy, the murderer was still alive when most of the organs were taken out.

It can be seen that the methods of the criminals are relatively mature, but there are some obvious excessive killings in the cases related to qiángjian, considering that the psychological trauma suffered by them is related to the qiángjian case.

This series of homicides has mature methods of murder, and the frequency of crimes is relatively regular. It is suspected that he had a criminal record in other states, and he came to Westland around 2006. The offender should be a Caucasian male, between the ages of 35-50. According to the results of the on-site trace inspection, the process of torturing and killing the victim was completed by one person. The perpetrator should be a taller, stronger person with certain fighting skills.

It can be inferred from this that the case in Westland should not be the first murder of the perpetrator. The first murder can't be as skilled as Tom Green's.

However, the pianist's criminal methods are very characteristic, and no similar cases have been found in other states. The most likely possibility is that he didn't do it the way he does now when he committed crimes in other states or cities - I don't think he would abandon stringing the dead, maybe he just chose not to contact the police, or Dispose of the corpse in another way and so on, so the murder does not enter our field of vision in its current form.

The crime scene of this series of murders is basically in a sparsely populated area. The murderer is more likely to attack the victim and bring the victim to the site that has been selected before. Considering that the murderer has a communication tool, it may be because the internal space is relatively small. Spacious SUV car.

All victims were strangled to death by piano strings. From the perspective of obtaining the murder weapon, the perpetrator may be engaged in a related trade of selling musical instruments, a piano teacher, or a piano at home. Based on the above inferences and the expensive props used by the murderer in the second, fifth, and thirteenth cases when setting up the scene, the criminal may have a wealthy family and a good education.

I think it's unlikely that the murderer had anything to do with the piano, the WLPD always makes weird mistakes in this kind of detail. In the preliminary investigation, no criminal suspect who met any of the above conditions was arrested. I will discuss the criminal's anti-investigation ability below, and I tend to think that since he has the most important murder weapon of the piano string, he will never put the piano within his sight.

The victims selected by the perpetrator are all male victims with previous convictions or suspected criminal suspicion. Details reflected in the third, tenth, twelfth, fifteenth and twenty-second cases It shows that the perpetrator has access to some undisclosed information within the police. The perpetrator may be a police worker, or some of his family members and friends are police workers.

Victims of this series of murders have some common characteristics: strong men with a criminal history, mostly blond hair, the perpetrator's tendency to choose victims may be related to his past experience, the person may have been some kind of A victim of bào forceful behavior, his principle of choosing a victim is likely to be based on the characteristics of the older male who bào force him.

The perpetrator frequently provokes the police: whether it is killing a criminal who is not convicted or not convicted as it should, or writing a letter to the police after the incident to inform the police where the murder occurred, it can be regarded as a provocation to the police. The criminal's anti-reconnaissance ability is extremely strong, and he has inflated self-confidence in himself, and the danger is extremely high.

If the Westland pianist did commit crimes in other states, and apparently did not notify the police after committing the crime, protesting and contacting the police were not necessarily the killer's way of getting pleasure. Therefore, things like "inflated self-confidence" or "provocation of the police" cannot be said either. This stark modus operandi is just to distinguish him from certain murders in other states, so that people don't suspect him.

From this perspective, he is not "confident" - he is extremely cautious, bold and decisive, and his anti-reconnaissance ability is indeed very strong. The Westland pianist may have tried to disguise himself as another type of killer to distract the WLPD investigation. And from the current point of view, this approach is indeed effective.

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