Serial Killer Targets Homeless in California

With the way that it’s been highlighted on television programs the past several years, you may think that Orange County, California is only home to wealthy teenagers who spend their days flirting by the beach and “real housewives” who document their marital troubles and new romances for the world to see.  But, the truth is that there is also a significant homeless population in this county, with more than 18,000 homeless in the area over the course of a year.  While living on the streets is dangerous on its best night, those who sleep on the sidewalks of Orange County have had a new threat to face over the past month.

Police have warned the area’s homeless to be vigilant for a probably serial killer who stabbed three homeless men to death in December.  The unknown suspect is described as a criminal who enjoys the hunt and who likely would be considered a sociopath.  Authorities believe that this killer, whose distant image has been captured on a surveillance camera, will strike again so they are urging those on the streets to stay in groups and seek protection at a shelter.  They also are handing out flashlights and whistles to the homeless to offer some level of protection.

Serial killers so often prey on those who are considered by many to be the discards of society—runaways, prostitutes, and, in this instance, the homeless.  Fortunately, the members of law enforcement realize the protection of every individual in this country is important and they are demonstrating this commitment by engaging in several steps to help this targeted population.  I hope that the combined work of the police and the homeless men and women who now fear for their lives daily will bring this despicable criminal to justice before another life is lost.

Posted in crime, Serial Killers | Tagged , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Out & About Magazine — January 2012

It’s 2012 and time for the new monthly issue of Out & About Magazine!  It’s California’s South Bay premiere entertainment guide with several great articles. 

My monthly book review column features Hunter by Robert Bidinotto.  Don’t miss it!  You will find the review on pages 37-38 along with my monthly crime safety tip. 

Out & About Magazine features a pdf file or online digital version for viewing.  I encourage you to read all the different articles.

* * *

Blog: www.authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: www.emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk: www.blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase/
Books: Compulsion = Dead Game = Silent Partner = Screenwriting
Posted in Book Review | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

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

I spent some time over the holidays catching up on what some of the professionals who I respect in the field of forensic psychology have been sharing with their reading audience lately.  I came across a fascinating, although disturbing, piece by Dr. Karen Franklin.  I have referenced Dr. Franklin’s blog on here before, as I always can count on her to provide some fascinating food for thought.  This time, she discusses a study of men’s magazines in Great Britain and the effect they may be having on the way that adolescent boys think about women.

Dr. Franklin shares a study that is being published in the British Journal of Psychology that shows men identify more with comments made by rapists than those printed in the “lad mags” that are designed to play upon the sexual attractions of a young male just reaching adulthood.  And, here’s the somber follow up—the fact that men favor the comments by rapists may be a good thing! 

When putting comments made by convicted rapists side by side with those found in the magazines, the researchers found that the latter were actually more denigrating and predatory toward women.  One theory is that sex offenders are often required to seek psychological treatment and enroll in programs that attempt to teach them the appropriate way to view women, while the “journalists” in the magazines just continue to play to the most base urges and reactions of its intended audience. 

If you want to see for yourself if you can distinguish what is being said by a rapist and what is being printed in a magazine for men, check out this article which contains sixteen sample statements.  It’s frightening stuff. 

While the publishers of these magazines certainly have the right to sell such material to the young men they target, it is disturbing that the readers may use these articles to develop their attitudes about women, or perhaps reinforce the perspective they already have.  It’s just another example of the objectification of women that is so prevalent in popular culture and that needs to be watched closely so that others may try to counter that message with more positive words and images.

* * *

Blog: www.authorjenniferchase.com/
Crime Watch Blog: www.emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk: www.blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase/
Books: Compulsion = Dead Game = Silent Partner = Screenwriting
Posted in Criminology | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Guest Post – Best Selling Thriller Author Rebecca Forster

I’m pleased and extremely excited to begin a series called “The Thriller Tribe” of outstanding, awesome, and critically acclaimed thriller authors this year.  They’ve been so gracious to humor me with an article about various areas and experiences of thriller writing, which includes the genres of crime, suspense, mystery, and police procedural.

Today, I begin this blog series with best selling author Rebecca Forster and her critically acclaimed Witness Series. 

* * *

THE PROCEDURAL: WRITING IT WHEN YOU’RE NOT A DOCTOR, LAWYER OR COP

Years ago I was a panelist at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books when an obviously perturbed woman stood up in the back of the huge UCLA auditorium and directed a question my way.

“How can you say you possibly write legal procedurals when you’re not a lawyer?” she demanded.

 “I sleep with one,” I responded.

My flippant answer brought the house down, but both the question and the response encompassed the truth about procedurals. Those who read them want the authenticity; those who write them better deliver.

In my case, I was always a justice junky. Even before I met my husband I was fascinated by crime. After we wed, I was privy to the rigors of law school, the tension of passing the bar, his experiences as an assistant U.S. attorney specializing in terrorism and organized crime, and, finally, his terms as both a criminal and civil court judge. My interest in his work was not the courteous curiosity of a wife but that of a writer passionate about the law as the basis for fictional entertainment. While my husband was my in-house research, his help could only be given in response to my direction. That meant, I had to know what questions to ask and how to use the information I received.

So the question becomes this: how does a nonprofessional tackle a thriller based on a specific profession? Here are a few ideas:

Passion and curiosity are essential.  Don’t read professional journals; devour them.  Then write with the vigor and confidence of an expert.  If the passion to understand the professional arena you are writing about isn’t there, your hard-core procedural readers will not take you seriously.

Understand the profession’s standards: Sure, you can deviate from reality for creative purposes but don’t massacre the system. It is one thing to explain why a trial was fast-tracked, quite another to ask the reader to believe a murder trial will start two days after a character’s arrest.

Expand your knowledge to tangential procedures:  In my best selling Witness Series Hannah Sheraton is a sixteen-year-old ward of the main character, attorney Josie Bates. In order to write about Hannah and Josie’s challenges, I had to understand how child protective services and children’s court worked.  Other books in the series found me researching safety regulations, coroner’s procedures, will provisions, and fathers’ rights. A procedural works best when all the pieces of the puzzle fit together.

Talk to a human or watch them work: If you’re not a lawyer, judge, cop or doctor (or married to one) find real world help. Courts and hospitals have public relations professionals to correspond with, most police departments have ride-along programs. Seek out college and university professors who can help you with forensics, anatomy or police studies. Go to a law school and ask to audit a class. Sit in a courtroom and watch a trial. Courts are open to the public so you’re only investing time. There you will get a bird’s eye view of how the system works and real life procedures will inspire fictional situations. Always acknowledge those who help you. 

Understand jargon: Every profession has its own jargon. Listen closely, and use it sparingly and appropriately.  Always explain the jargon if the meaning will not be immediately evident to the reader, but do so with a deft hand.  Your book should not read like a primer.

Understand jurisdictions and designations: A bluff will not fool the procedural reader, so understand the parameters of your fictional jurisdiction. There are differences between a federal crime and a state crime, an assistant U.S. attorney and a city attorney, courtroom etiquette and a breach. Utilizing this information will enhance your character and endear you to the procedural reader.

Walk a fine line:  The procedural is a balancing act between systemic knowledge and artistic freedom. Too much procedure overshadows the story and slows the plot; too little and you are not competing in the genre. 

Above all, remember that the thrill of a procedural stems from pitting your characters against a big, unwieldy, specialized system that is stacked against them. Understand the system and how your characters challenge it, and you will write a heck of a thrilling procedural.

For more information about Rebecca Forster and her thriller books:

Website: http://www.rebeccaforster.com/

 Check out Rebecca Forster’s Witness Series on Amazon

Posted in Guest Post | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Forensic News — New Data Standard Provides Improved Enhancement of Fingerprints

With all of the technology and scientific breakthroughs implemented today, forensic science works industriously with new ways to help identify pieces of crime scene evidence, victims, and suspects in order to solve cases. 

Biometric data is the digital or analog representation of the physical attributes used to uniquely identify all types of characteristics in humans (ultimately identifying a specific human), which includes many types of forensic evidence.   

In November of 2011, The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published a revised biometric standard that improves the type and amount of information that forensic scientists can share across international networks.  This would further assist in the identification of a victim(s) and/or solve crime(s). 

Brad Wing, a NIST Biometrics Standard Coordinator, stated, “The additions to this version of the standard represent a great leap forward.  The capabilities of the system have been greatly expanded from that of matching a fingerprint, facial image or iris sample collected directly from a live person and comparing to the samples previously stored in a database.”

Here are some areas that this new standard improves:

  • Exchange of DNA data.  For example, DNA can be used in a criminal case for identification in a rape case, identifying victims in disasters or plan crashes, and any investigation that needs to compare a sample from a suspect to a particular case.
  • Improved markers for latent prints: fingerprints, palm prints, and footprints.
  • Share geo-positioning coordinates of biometric sample collection.  For example, photos of items found around a crime scene as well as audio and video clips.

All of these examples can be shared with scientists and law enforcement agencies across the globe.

Researchers are diligently working on new additions to the biometric data standards with voice recognition, bite marks, and dental forensics.

2012 is a new year and I’m excited to see what new forensic breakthroughs that will amaze us and solve cases.

Top photo: These examples of the new standards Extended Features Set show forensic scientists how to mark core locations (clockwise from top left) for a double loop whorl, plain whorl, central pocket loop whorl and tented arch. (Credit: NIST)

* * *

Blog: www.authorjenniferchase.com/
Website: www.jenniferchase.vpweb.com/
Crime Watch Blog: www.emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk: www.blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase/
Books: Compulsion = Dead Game = Silent Partner = Screenwriting
Posted in Forensic | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Celebrating the New Year of 2012!

Wishing everyone a 2012 that will bring new adventures, inspirations, comforting memories, and lots and lots of laughter!

Thanks to friends and family that have made this somewhat difficult and transitional year a success for me.  I appreciate all the wonderful support from new readers, fans, colleagues, and networking friends.  You all make writing such a joy!

Happy New Year!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Last Post of 2011 – Read an Excerpt from DARK MIND

DARK MIND

An Emily Stone Thriller

  

CHAPTER ONE

Tuesday 1030 Hours

Intensity overrode the room’s rising humidity.  The claustrophobic staleness of the tight quarters pushed the confrontation between interrogator and suspect to the extreme.   

Emily Stone calmly watched her partner from her cramped vantage point.

His eyes, dark and piercing, focused on the suspect.  Sculpted biceps appeared pumped and ready for action – nerves heightened.  He showed restraint, but clearly wanted to unleash mayhem. 

“Where’s the little girl?”  Rick Lopez demanded with his jaw clenched. 

“I… I… don’t know who you mean.”  The man’s voice wavered and he couldn’t keep eye contact.

“You know where she is.  Give me the address.  Now!”

Rick pushed the skinny, young man backward against the wall.  Cornered.  Sweat saturated his receding hairline of straggly, sun-bleached hair as his shoulders slumped forward making him appear older.  Weakening, he would cave in and spill the truth.

Time stood still for the trapped man. 

He rubbed his stubby fingers tightly against one another on the bottom fabric of his loose Hawaiian shirt.  The bright yellow pineapples and colorful surfboards twisted and morphed on the garment beneath his sweaty hands. 

Rick took a deep breath.  He backed up a couple of feet from the man and averted his gaze for a few seconds, hands slightly trembling; obviously he wanted to pummel the guy’s face out of pure hatred. 

Time ticked away for a nine-year-old girl. 

The corner of the cramped depot conveniently used for storing small sailboats, catamarans, and kayaks remained still and silent.  Cluttered with miscellaneous parts, the room waited, quiet like a strange fiberglass tomb. 

A calming breeze wafted in with a comfortable, steady eighty-degree temperature.  Trade winds never disappointed in the time of need as the distinct trace of Kauai’s moisture integrated into the atmosphere, from the concentrated outside plant growth, daily rainfall, and close proximity to the Pacific Ocean. 

Emily stood in the corner, shifting her weight somewhat from side to side, and continued to observe her partner’s interrogation.  She surveyed Rick closely as his frustration level accelerated.  All of his typical warning signs radiated in the room with his clenched jaw, brusque voice inflection, prominent vein in his forehead, and a stare that could stop an angry mob dead in its tracks. 

She loved Rick for his skill and perseverance; but most of all, making her passion of hunting down serial killers, child abductors and pedophiles his own. 

She loved him

She knew Rick felt at a disadvantage without his trusted Glock pressed firmly in his right hand.   

The exhausting clues for three days led them to Kauai from the San Francisco area; the island provided a stopping point for child slavery brokers.  They were able to determine that this man provided transportation and they weren’t leaving until he gave them all of the information he knew.  They hoped that they weren’t too late and that the little girl wasn’t already on her way to another country, only to disappear into the mass culture of black market slavery.

Emily’s fists clenched as her knuckles protruded an ashen white.  Occasionally, her hands brushed by her side out of habit.  Absent of her own Beretta, she couldn’t get used to being unarmed and vulnerable on the island paradise.  Her petite body braced.  She waited for the right moment to move into the conflict, as her unwavering eyes never averted from the weakening man.  

The young man began to weep.  “Look, I don’t know…” He slowly sank to the floor with his head in his hands. 

Forcefully, Emily stepped forward with purpose and thrust a photograph into the suspect’s face.  “Where is she?”  In the picture, a beautiful little girl with long brown hair and wispy bangs smiled sweetly at the camera.  The photo represented a much happier time taken during a family picnic at the Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. 

The man couldn’t bear to look at her, but finally focused his gaze on the innocent, shining face. 

The man knew.  Eventually he would break. 

Emily slapped his face with the photo and insisted, “Where is she!”  The picture with dog-eared corners and moisture damage from the humidity shook slightly in her hand as she waited for an answer. 

* * * * *

Darkness

The sickly sweet, rotted tropical fruit and moldy earth filled her nose and burned her eyes.  Tears welled up and spilled over, falling down her tender cheeks.  She clenched her fists against the dank soil underneath her.  Tightening and releasing her tiny hands and slim fingers, she held her breath.  Each compressed grip helped to stable her heightened fear and kept her from screaming, but it didn’t stop an escaped whimper or two.  She didn’t want to alert the bad men. 

Cassie Thompson listened for them, frightened of what they were capable of doing to her.  Knees pulled up in front of her weak body, she pressed her spine up against the weather beaten foundation of the basement.  The cool, mustiness of the structure chilled her bones even though she was hot to the touch.  Her teeth chattered slightly.  The sound of her stomach grumbled from the lack of food for the past several days.  Her lips were dry from thirst.  She managed to find a piece of a mango that wasn’t rotten, but that was hours ago. 

Her time neared. 

Cassie listened, poised, not ready to accept the terrible things in the mind of her captors.  The floors creaked and groaned above her, one set of beams moved with a heavy footing. 

When they had removed her blindfold and tight plastic restraints after the long plane ride, the stocky, dark haired man with black, smeared tattoos on his neck, face, and arms tried to touch her in a groping manner.  His long ponytail mesmerized her and she thought about how she wanted to grow her own hair longer, but her mom had said no. 

The other man, tall, clean cut with a slight British accent looked like someone’s dad, stopped the burly man and stated he shouldn’t touch the girl.  He stressed the importance of untainted merchandise and receiving top American dollars.   

The weakening floorboards stopped momentarily just above her head.  Muffled voices engaged in casual conversation with idle laughter and raised voice inflections every other sentence.  Wooden chair legs scraped across the floor, stopped, and then followed with a heavy affirming creak.  Lighter, quicker footsteps moved away and faintly disappeared to another part of the house, perhaps out the front door. 

Silence.

Desperation filled Cassie again.  She crawled cautiously on her hands and knees to the one area of the basement that revealed a crack of light filtering through.  Dust particles swirled around like delicate confetti through the spotlight of freedom, which drew the little girl closer to its precipice.  She stopped for a moment to listen for any incoming danger. 

Nothing

Wiping her tear stained face with grains of putrefied earth, she willed herself to continue.  She softly told herself that she could do it.  Remembering a story about a young girl, about her age that survived under the rubble of a building after an earthquake.  Cassie could survive this horrible situation too. 

Letting out a breath stifled from a whimper, she inched toward the light as the crawlspace narrowed above her head.  The native island soil pushed between her little fingers and packed down firmer into the earth, it felt warmer to the touch than from the other side, and the distinct odor increased in intensity to more of old garbage and feces. 

A few small gnats and flies buzzed about their business, swooping around her head.

Cassie leaned toward the tiny crack, focused her eyes and prayed it was a way out.  At first she couldn’t see anything but a brown color and a blinding light.  Realizing that it was a palm tree trunk, she moved her gaze farther to the left and surveyed the yard and saw miscellaneous junk, tires, and an old car mixed between the overgrown jungle foliage. 

Humid heat and daily rainfall deteriorated and molded anything in its wake.  It appeared to be the back yard of a home, long forgotten and neglected. 

Her heart sank. 

Who would ever find me now?                

Her right hand touched something smooth and cool poking up from the dirt basement.  Looking down, she gasped in horror as she followed the outline of a small skull, smooth, whitish, and right beneath her vantage point. 

Thoughts of horror flashed through her mind.  There were vivid, gruesome thoughts that no nine year old should ever have to realize or contemplate.  Cassie’s breathing quickened and she fought to keep from fainting.  Faint light specs floated around her vision like tiny, blinking stars.

The soft whirring of a motor broke her defeated attitude.  Her vision cleared.  The sound was faint and then the engine stopped altogether, but Cassie knew she had heard a car approaching up through the back way of the property. 

Someone drew near.  

Help

She willed herself to peek out through the prisoner’s spy gap again. 

Please help me. 

 
Excerpt from Dark Mind
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2011 Jennifer Chase
 

Available in ebook and paperback 

AMAZON 

BARNES & NOBLE

SMASHWORDS

Posted in Dark Mind | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment