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Rule - A Tangled Web: A Cyberstalker, a Deadly Obsession, and the Twisting Path to Justice

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Rule A Tangled Web: A Cyberstalker, a Deadly Obsession, and the Twisting Path to Justice
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A Tangled Web: A Cyberstalker, a Deadly Obsession, and the Twisting Path to Justice: summary, description and annotation

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In the tradition of her acclaimed mother, Ann Rule, author ofThe Stranger Beside Me, bestselling author Leslie Rule delivers a riveting true story for our time--as she exposes the years-long trail of a sadistic sociopath, identity thief, and killer at the dark heart of a real-life fatal attraction . . .
It was a bleak November in 2012 when Cari Lea Farver vanished from Omaha, Nebraska. Cari, thirty-seven, was a devoted mother, reliable employee, and loyal friend--not the type to shirk responsibilities, abandon her son, and run off on an adventure while her dying father took his last breaths. Yet, the many texts from her phone indicated she had done just that.
It appeared that Cari had dumped her new boyfriend, quit her job, and relinquished custody of her son to her mother--all by text. While Caris boyfriend, Dave Kroupa, and her supervisor were bewildered by her abrupt disappearance, they accepted the texts at face value. Her mother, Nancy Raney, however, was alarmed and reported Cari missing. Police were skeptical of her claims that a cyber impostor had commandeered her daughters phone and online identity.
While Nancy was afraidforCari, Dave Kroupa was growing afraidofher, for he believed Cari was stalking him. Never seen or heard, the stalker was aware of his every move and seemed obsessed by his casual girlfriend, Shanna Liz Golyar, often calling her a fat whore in the twelve thousand emails and texts he received in a disturbing three-year deluge.
How did the stalker know Daves phone numbers immediately after he changed them, the names of his lady friends, even what he wore as he watched TV? He and Liz reported death threats, vandalism, and burglaries, but the stalker remained at large. The threats were vicious, vile and often obscene, sent mostly via text and always in Caris name. There was some truth in the messages, but all of them contained one big lie. The culprit was not Cari -- but had killed and planned to kill again.
With mesmerizing detail and compelling narrative skill, Leslie Rule tracks every step of the heart-pounding path to long-awaited justice--from a sociopaths twisted past to the deadly deception and the high-tech forensics that condemned the killer to prison, where the tangled web of manipulations still draws trusting souls into danger.

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Also by L ESLIE R ULE NOVELS Whispers from the Grave Kill Me Again - photo 1
Also by L ESLIE R ULE

NOVELS

Whispers from the Grave

Kill Me Again

NONFICTION

Coast to Coast Ghosts: True Stories of Hauntings Across America

Ghosts Among Us: True Stories of Spirit Encounters

When the Ghost Screams: True Stories of Victims Who Haunt

Ghost in the Mirror: Real Cases of Spirit Encounters

Where Angels Tread: Real Stories of Miracles and Angelic Intervention
A TANGLED WEB
A Cyberstalker, a Deadly Obsession, and the Twisted Path to Justice
LESLIE RULE
A Tangled Web A Cyberstalker a Deadly Obsession and the Twisting Path to Justice - image 2
CITADEL PRESS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
A Tangled Web A Cyberstalker a Deadly Obsession and the Twisting Path to Justice - image 3
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents

CITADEL PRESS BOOKS are published by

Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018

Copyright 2020 Leslie Rule

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

CITADEL PRESS and the Citadel logo are Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-0-8065-3997-3

Library of Congress Control Number: 2019944526

Electronic edition:

ISBN-13: 978-0-8065-3999-7 (e-book)
ISBN-10: 0-8065-3999-2 (e-book)
The best of friends stick with us through the darkest of times,
and laugh with us when the sun comes out.
I dedicate this book to my friend, Anne Bradley Jaeger,
who laughed with me in the sunshine
and walked beside me when the shadows grew long and cold.
P REFACE
I will never forget the first time I felt a killers eyes burning into me. Yes, the first time. It happened more than once, because it was my job to photograph murderers on trial, and they were not always pleased when I walked up to them and boldly aimed my camera. I was true crime author Ann Rules photographer and research assistant. Im also her daughter.
I was seventeen when my mom started bringing me to trials to take photos for the articles she published in the pulpy-paged detective magazines sold in supermarkets. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, she saw over a thousand of her articles appear in True Detective and its sister publicationsarticles she typed on an old-style typewriter in the middle of the rec room with the TV blaring and four noisy kids playing around her. She wrote under male pen names because her editor told her, No one will believe a woman knows anything about crime. When I started working with her, I was studying photography at a vocational school where I spent half of my high school day, and my teachers tried to discourage me from pursuing a career in a male dominated field. Female professional photographers were rare at the time.
There may not have been many women working as crime reporters and photographers, but, unfortunately , there were plenty of murderesses. While the majority of killers are male, cases of females who kill go back as far as history can reach. Cynthia Marler was the first murderess I met. She looked more like a movie star than the hit woman she was. The twenty-eight-year-old Hayward, California, mother of three stood 50, weighed ninety-five pounds, and her thick waves of dark hair spilled past her shoulders.
On August 10, 1980, Marler boarded a Seattle-bound plane under an assumed name and prepared to earn the $3,000 and the 1976 Chevy pickup truck shed been promised for putting an end to an ugly divorce dispute.
The petite killer disguised herself in a blonde wig and stalked Wanda Touchstone, following the thirty-four-year-old University of Washington student to a parking lot where she fatally shot her in the neck and head.
Witnesses saw Marler fleeing the scene and later picked her out of a police lineup. Testifying in court, one witness remarked that she was very, very small and had a hard stare. I found myself the recipient of that hard stare soon after I approached her during a trial break in a stuffy Seattle courtroom and asked if I could photograph her. Yes, Marler replied, but dont take a picture of me when Im smoking. I took a few shots and was so nervous I forgot her stipulation. I snapped a photo just as she held a Camel cigarette near her face after exhaling a cloud of smoke. Marler reprimanded me, her voice chilled and unforgiving. I told you not to take a picture of me smoking! Her dark eyes bore into me, and I squirmed as I felt the uncomfortable prickle of a killers wrath.
Ann wrote Cynthia Marlers story twice, once for a magazine and then years later as a case included in her book, A Rose for Her GraveAnn Rules Crime Files: Volume One. The photo I shot of the petite killer with cigarette in hand appeared in the book. Shes smiling brightly in the image, but an instant later, she was angry. I wish I had captured that on film!
It might seem odd that my mother exposed her teenage daughter to killers, but she herself met a murderess when she was only nine years old. In fact, the woman taught her to crotchet! Viola was a prisoner in the Mom and Pop jail run by my mothers grandparents in Stanton, Michigan. My great-grandfather, Chris Hansen, was the sheriff, and Anna, my great-grandmother, cooked for the residents. When little Ann spent her summers there, it was her job to carry trays of food to the female prisoners.
In addition to the crochet lessons, Viola gave her advice, warning, never trust those women who pluck their eyebrows into itty-bitty lines.
Young Ann wondered why such a nice lady was behind bars awaiting trial for murder. It was justifiable homicide the prisoner explained. Yes, she had shot and killed her husband, but shed caught him in the arms of her best friend in the truck shed bought for him with tips she made waitressing.
The explanation didnt satisfy Anns curiosity. How could someone take the life of another? The question intrigued her, and shed one day explore it in the three dozen true crime books she authored. She was also fascinated by the methods her family used to solve crimes. Not only was her grandfather the Montcalm County sheriff, an uncle was the undersheriff, another uncle was the medical examiner, and her aunt worked in the juvenile court.
How do they do it? little Ann wondered as she watched her grandfather and uncles solve crimes. How do they take a button and trace it back to the killer? Sometimes she was allowed to watch them work, and sometimes she helped . She was about eleven when her grandfather and uncle recovered the remains of a John Doe. The man had apparently gone missing a long time before and had been reduced to a pile of bones by the time he was discovered. Ann helped spread the bones out on a table as they attempted to identify him.
While forensic science has changed tremendously since my great-grandfathers day, evil has not. It still comes in all shapes and sizes, and he saw his share of it when he hosted some of the Midwests most dangerous criminals at his jailhouse. He treated them all with respect, and that might be one of the reasons he was legendary for his uncanny ability to coax confessions from killers. He was also famous for the fact hed never fired a gun in the line of duty in his twenty-four-year career, a distinction so unusual that the story was picked up by wire services in November 1939 and published in dozens of newspapers, along with the caveat, he still is mighty quick on the draw and a tolerably good marksman.
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