Catch up with the Indies and Walk a Crime Scene on BOOK & CRIME TALK

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I have just wrapped another blog talk radio show on BOOK & CRIME TALK this week.  I love chatting with interesting people, whether it is a bestselling author or a cold case detective, I learn something new with every show.

Catch up:

CriminalInvestigative

Walking the Crime Scene – Cold Case Expert Jospeh Giacalone

This show discusses the ins and outs of crime scenes, working cold cases, and how to make sense of crime today with retired NYPD detective and cold case expert Joseph Giacalone.

Joseph L. Giacalone is a retired NYPD Detective Sergeant who held many prestigious positions during his more than 20 year career. Most of his career was dedicated to conducting and supervising major criminal investigations. Joe was the Executive Officer of the 110th Precinct Detective Squad in Queens and the Commanding Officer of the Bronx Cold Case Squad. He was responsible for managing thousands of cold case homicides and missing persons cases. While working, Joe found the time to obtain a Master of Arts in Criminal Justice with a Specialty in Crime and Deviance from John Jay College of Criminal Justice in 2005.

For more information, please visit:

http://coldcasesquad.blogspot.com/

http://joegiacalone.net/

Books by Joseph Giacalone

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IndieMadness

Indie Madness Unplugged – Candid Talk with 3 Best Selling Authors

This SPECIAL EDITION and exciting discussion explodes with three best-selling authors: Gary Ponzo, Rebecca Forster, and Robert W. Walker.  In this episode, we discuss the publishing industry in 2013 and beyond, the ebook explosion, what it takes to write a thriller, and what it means to be an author today.  All uncensored and uncut!

For more information, please check out:

Gary Ponzo @ http://www.garyponzo.com/

Rebecca Forster @ http://www.rebeccaforster.com/

Robert W. Walker @ http://www.robertwalkerbooks.com/

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in Blog Talk Radio, Police, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Social Media Plays Critical Role in Guilty Verdicts Handed Down in Ohio Rape Case

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Photo: Keith Srakocic — AP

A criminal trial in a small town in Ohio that received international attention thanks to social media reached a moment of some closure over the weekend.  Judge Thomas Lipps found two high school football heroes guilty of rape.  One boy, seventeen-year-old Trent Mays, is facing a minimum of two years of time in juvenile detention but may remain incarcerated until he is twenty-one.  His cohort, sixteen-year-old Ma’lik Richmond, will be spending a year behind bars but also could be there until he turns twenty-one.

As you probably have read, and I have discussed before on this blog, these two teenagers performed sexual acts on a teenage girl who apparently was a good friend to both of them while she was extremely intoxicated and, in the words of one of the defendants, “like a dead body.”

One sadly has to wonder how often such events occur at high school parties.  But this time, the actions of Mays and Richmond were caught in photographs and videos on cell phone cameras.  One picture in particular, which showed the boys carrying the victim by her wrists and ankles, proved particularly damaging to their defense.

In addition to technology playing a pivotal role in capturing the crime itself, the news about the events and the investigation and subsequent trial to follow was spread across the internet through Facebook, a group called Anonymous that is known for social justice movements through hacking websites to spread a message, and other such methods.  The actions of these boys, as well as all of those who watched and did nothing to stop them and those who went so far as to document the sexual assault, put this little town on the global radar for all the wrong reasons.

While the most important element of this story it that this teenage girl received justice, a sub-plot has to be our 24/7 media culture and how the possibility that you could be videotaped at any moment can change the course of your life.

Do you think that the social media culture has taken away personal privacy?

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More articles:

Social Media, Crime, Football, and a Small Town

New Jersey Man May Have Held Girlfriend Prisoner for a Decade

Are There Similarities Between Serial Killers and Serial Rapists?

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in crime, Criminology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Write in the Moment and Take That Fantastic First Plunge

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Not long ago, I discovered a new term “mindfulness” to apply to my everyday life.  It basically means what it implies.  On one level it means paying attention to details of what’s going on around you at any given time, but on a much deeper level it brings your conscious awareness to a “moment-by-moment” basis.  It’s where you pay attention to what’s happening right now, but in a non-judgmental way and allowing things to be what they are to you.

Writing is demanding, but an absolutely fulfilling profession.  I’ve found myself taking part in standard Yoga stretches to ground myself and begin my day.  I’ve recently taken it a step further by using the meditation technique of mindfulness to de-stress and balance my mind and body.  I have a tendency for anxiety, so I wanted to reward myself with healing down times.  It’s been quite effective and I look forward to it everyday.  I highly suggest checking out Mindful Yoga.

I wanted to take the “in the moment” or “mindfulness” into my writing.  I’m currently working on my fourth Emily Stone Novel, where the term thriller is taken to new levels with an arson serial killer and an assassin.  By taking an experience along with emotion and observation, you can build a thrilling scene.

As I’ve briefly outlined my chapters and scenes, I’ve found myself creating the suspense and tension of the storyline.  I take a moment to view from Emily Stone’s perspective of “in the moment”.

For example, she’s found a new clue that can track down the killer.  What does she do?  How will she move forward in a moment-by-moment way?  I break down the scene into action/reaction from beginning to end.  The beginning is when she finds the clue and the end is the result I want her to accomplish.  What are some of the observations, emotions, and details she can accomplish in this particular task?

You can take this writing task a step further into your own day.  Write the “in the moment” observations of a typical day for you.  Create a scene when you run errands, watch your favorite movie, or take a lunch break with a friend.  Write everything down that you observe.  What are the moment-by-moment actions that happen?  I think you’ll begin to see a different perspective with all of your characters.

I’ve found that by writing in the moment, you discover not only things about yourself but also about your characters in your stories.  The next time you feel that little procrastination bug nipping at you, pull back, and write in the moment.

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More articles on writing:

Are You a Word Wrangler or a Sentence Slinger?

Quirkiness of Writers Woven into Novels

No Bones about Writing Bad Guys

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Do You Know the Name of the Most Prolific Serial Killer in British History?

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I came upon an article recently about the serial killer who holds the sad record of murdering the most people in Great Britain.  While your thoughts may automatically turn to someone with the likes of Jack the Ripper or perhaps a European version of Ted Bundy, the criminal who is to blame for around 400 deaths is quite different than that.

Amelia Dyer advertised herself for a good part of the later 19th century as a caring figure who told single, pregnant mothers that she would give their babies a chance at a better life.

Wells Asylum Authorities, 1893

Wells Asylum Authorities, 1893

But instead, once the payment had been made for her supposed adoption services, Dyer strangled the newborns with dressmaking tape and then dumped their bodies in the Thames River.

Dyer reached her chosen act of violence after a couple of other ideas proved less successful.  At first, she suffocated babies at the request of their desperate mothers.  Then, she started taking in infants and drugging them heavily to keep them quiet as she starved them to death.  These acts eventually put her in prison for all of six months, and when she got out she moved forward with her new plan to strangle the babies and then dump their bodies.  She continued these murders for around thirty years.

These murders happened within the world of “baby farming,” which was unfortunately rather commonplace in Great Britain at that time.  Single mothers who had become outcasts from society turned to women such as Dyer to take their children and hopefully place them in good homes.  In most instances, these mothers never knew what happened to their babies once the hand off took place.

Amelia Dyer was hanged for her crimes in 1896 and is just now, with the recent postings online of millions of pages of historic criminal records, that the scope of cases like hers are truly measured and understood.  These records also offer a frank and disturbing look into the world of the poor and those unwanted by society and relates to some policy questions that many countries, including our own, are still trying to answer.

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More articles about serial killers:

Texas Filmmaker Searches for Identity of 19th Century Serial Killer

Chicago Sheriff Wants to Dig for More Gacy Victims

Hell’s Belle – The Matronly Face of a Brutal Serial Killer?

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in Serial Killers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

California Man Accused of Raping Woman He Met through Christian Dating Site

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There are thousands of instances in which happy couples can share that they found each other through internet dating.  Finding your significant other on a computer screen is becoming more common, as one popular dating site even touts that one in five relationships now start online.  While this chance for “happily ever after” is an appealing one, participants are wise to use discretion and proceed with caution.  People can pretend to be whoever they want on the internet.  Sometimes, the reality behind the charming persona is disturbing.

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Photo: La Mesa Police Department

Sean Banks of California was arrested late last month on charges of rape by force, digital penetration by force, and residential burglary involving a woman who he met through the dating site ChristianMingle.com.  He used an alias on the site, and authorities since have learned that this was a common practice for Banks, who relied on several different fake names in his efforts to meet women through the internet.  And, it is thought that these aliases represent other instances in which Banks has attempted or succeeded in accosting other women.

In fact, another woman who Banks met through the same website, Victoria Kinney, came forward this past week to share that Banks had admitted to her, when the time came to make plans to meet in person for the first time, that he had been arrested for rape. Kinney, a 2012 contestant in the Miss California pageant, claims that her instincts about Banks raised alarms from the start and that he had threatened her not to speak up about what he had shared with her while he was out on bail.

Banks has pleaded not guilty to the charges he faces.  His attorney has portrayed him as an upstanding graduate student and former member of the United States Navy and, of course, he is innocent until proven guilty.  If convicted, though, he faces thirty-six years to life for his alleged crimes.

If you so choose, enjoy the possibilities to meet new people that online dating provides.  But, please keep those first meetings public and trust your gut when you sense your safety may be in jeopardy.

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For all types of safety tips, please visit:

Emily Stone Crime Watch

For previous blog articles:

New Jersey Man May Have Held Girlfriend Prisoner for a Decade

Are There Similarities Between Serial Killers and Serial Rapists?

Comments by Rapists and Printed in British “Lad Mags” are Indistinguishable

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in crime, Police | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Hot Crime Scene Investigations

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I decided to tackle arson investigations for my soon to be released EMILY STONE THRILLER, DEAD BURN.  Since I love research, I found some interesting tidbits about arson crime scenes.

All crime scenes are documented and processed with the same types of procedures, but arson investigation offers challenges that are more specialized.  Not only are fire scenes extremely difficult to read for what happened and why, but by the time the fire investigator arrives much of the scene has been trampled and altered by fire fighters, supervisors, onlookers, property owners, and others.

Take a look at this statistical information from 2009 to give you an idea of how many arson related fires took place in California.  These incidents are a staggering number of arson crimes.

According to the State of California Department of Justice:

Total: 9,233  (California 2009 Arson Crimes)

Structural: 2,865

Mobile: 3,304

Other: 3,064

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Let’s look at the behavioral aspect that propels someone into setting intentional fires.  The most common motive for arson is the concealment of another crime, such as for insurance purposes.  However, fires have been intentionally set to cover up murder, burglary, embezzlement and fraud.   The individual wants to destroy evidence to make it impossible to identify the victim or clues leading back to the perpetrator.

Motivations for arson:

  • Revenge
  • Profit
  • Vandalism
  • Excitement
  • Extremism
  • Crime concealment

“One of the most important behavioral concepts to understand is the nature of the relationships between a person’s behavior and their motives, or needs.  Human behaviors are a manifestation of human need.  They are the expression of want, and can be the windows to intent.”  – Dr. Brent E. Turvey, Criminal Profiler and Forensic Scientist.

It’s important to examine the fire crime scene by the action of the individual; meaning, the act of arson is only constrained by the individual’s motive, intent, skill level, and the availability of material.  That’s where victimology plays a big role in the investigation for individuals, groups, and type of property.

Every fire crime scene presents its own natural limits and what the scientific process can reveal.  In cases where the intended target was a person, it reveals the offender’s use of force and can give the investigators a little more insight into the case if they know how and where to look.

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There are many differences in conducting a crime scene fire investigation compared to other types of crimes scene investigations.

  1. It may not be immediately known that a crime has actually taken place.
  2. The search for accelerant or flammable liquids can be difficult if not sometimes nearly impossible.
  3. Explosives can be involved and require special handling and investigation.
  4. Location of the point of origin is imperative in investigating any type of fire.
  5. The color of the smoke in a suspicious fire is an important investigative lead.
  6. Differentiating between flammable and combustible liquid residues is called the passive headspace concentration method.
  7. When processing the fire crime scene (actual scene and evidence), it should be documented with both color and black and white photographs.

I like to learn something new with my research to string together several facts to make an interesting fictional storyline or subplot.  I realized that a serial arsonist can not only burn structures and land for whatever motive, but they can capture victims and use arson as a another signature method in the crime.

We’ll just have to wait and see how Emily Stone handles this type of serial killer and all the other obstacles thrown at her in DEAD BURN.

In the meantime, you can read the current available novel with the first three chapters of Dark Mind.

DEAD BURN release is scheduled for March 15, 2013

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in Dead Burn, Forensic | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Bronx Man Accused of Dismembering Mom and Discarding of Her Body Parts

Many times Law and Order: SVU and other shows of that genre will advertise that an upcoming episode is “ripped from the headlines.”  The gruesome story that came out of the Bronx this week would offer the perfect opening scene to capture the viewers’ attention.

A man is out walking his dog in the early hours of a New York City winter’s day. The dog starts barking relentlessly at a bloody suitcase.  Irritated neighbors start to rouse from their sleep and wonder why that dog down below won’t get quiet. The man holding the leash cautiously opens the bag and is shocked to find bloody body parts.  The cops are called and then spend the rest of the morning tracking down other parts scattered in bags and suitcases spread a block wide.

Cue the theme music.

Sadly, this Bronx tale is all too real and one family is living out a nightmare that seems to get worse with every new detail.

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Source: Daily News

The victim of dismemberment has been identified as 45-year-old Tanya Byrd, who was reported missing just a day earlier by her adult son, who lives with her.  This same son, 23-year-old Bashid McLean, was led away in handcuffs from their home several hours later. He is accused of killing Byrd after a chainsaw was discovered in their apartment and a shower curtain that should have been there was missing.  On top of that, the home smelled like bleach.

Byrd leaves behind another adult child and a young son with Down’s syndrome, as well as friends and family members who came forward to speak of her kind and loving heart.

And we have questions about how a young man could commit such atrocious acts against his mother.  In addition to criminal psychologists and journalists, I am guessing some TV producers are waiting to learn more about the alleged criminal as well.

Investigators will begin to peel away the layers of the clues of this crime.  Violent crimes are mostly complex in nature as to the motivations and impulses that led to such a horrific act.   My thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of Tanya Byrd.

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More articles:

Two Murders and Two Mothers Who Must Turn in Their Sons

Murder of Teenager in Oregon Shows How Experts Can Crack a Case after a Decade

Boy Facing Murder Charges in the Death of His Stepbrother

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Author Blog: https://authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: http://emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk:  http://blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase
Books: Compulsion  Dead Game  Dark Mind  Silent Partner  Screenwriting
Posted in crime, Criminology | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments