Smith is a very typical type of random murderer: unemployed/underemployed,
unable to live up to his high I.Q. Abusive childhood on the outskirts of wealthy
surroundings, in a limited family situation punctuated with too little money.
O.J. Simpson, on the other hand, is a very unusual murderer, at least regarding
the type of murder he was accused of. Highly successful people do, of course,
commit murder, but they seldom do it themselves. The motive, as in the Simpson
case, is always hubris: their experience tells them they're smarter than
everyone else and that they can actually get away with murder. I've always
thought there was a lot more to the Simpson murder than ever came out. The glove
did not fit, remember. Others were likely involved.
hmm. so that's why I've been having these very dark, anti-social urges
regarding O.J. and the glove, my theory is that the cops tried to frame a guilty man
John Lau
Vaya con Carné
-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick King <abrasax93@yahoo.com>
To: rara-avis-l@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, Jan 25, 2010 9:15 am
Subject: Re: RARA-AVIS: They won't have Parker to kick around anymore...
Anyone know if
Smith is writing under a pseudonym? He is a very good writer and it's hard to
believe he's somewhere delivering pizza if he could be churning out crime
stories.
he's publishing under the nom de plume of O.J. Simpson
John Lau
Vaya con Carné
*************************************
Very funny. Actually, Smith moved to California to be a TV star. There he
murdered another girl, and ran to Buckley for help. Buckley quickly turned him
in to the police. Edgar Smith has been serving a life sentence in California
since the late 70s. He's tried continually for parole, but no chance. The judge
who cut him the 2nd degree deal in New Jersey was sanctioned for incompetence.
Smith has suffered from several heart attacks. He should be dead soon. He's an
excellent argument for capitol punishment.
Smith is a very typical type of random murderer: unemployed/underemployed,
unable to live up to his high I.Q. Abusive childhood on the outskirts of wealthy
surroundings, in a limited family situation punctuated with too little money.
O.J. Simpson, on the other hand, is a very unusual murderer, at least regarding
the type of murder he was accused of. Highly successful people do, of course,
commit murder, but they seldom do it themselves. The motive, as in the Simpson
case, is always hubris: their experience tells them they're smarter than
everyone else and that they can actually get away with murder. I've always
thought there was a lot more to the Simpson murder than ever came out. The glove
did not fit, remember. Others were likely involved.
Patrick King
------------------------------------
RARA-AVIS home page: http://www.miskatonic.org/rara-avis/
Yahoo! Groups Links
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : 25 Jan 2010 EST