• Complain

Lee Edward - Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands

Here you can read online Lee Edward - Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2008, publisher: Pinnacle;Kensington Publishing Corp, genre: Non-fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Lee Edward Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands

Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

The Darkest Urge. . .

To his friends and neighbors, Jeffrey Mailhot was an ordinary, law-abiding motorcycle enthusiast with a fondness for 80s rock n roll. But there was a dark side to Mailhot--and an urge he couldnt control...

The Vanished Bodies. . .

Rhode Island detectives knew they had a serial killer in their town. But the victims were women who lived and worked in a sexual underground--and whose bodies were never found. Then, prostitutes began to talk about a man who played too rough. Police arrested Jeffrey Mailhot, and an incredible duel of wits began...
The Confession Of A Serial Killer. . .
A brilliant police interrogation led to a chilling confession. Now, this insiders account of a modern-day Jack the Ripper takes us into the room where Jeffrey Mailhot, in his own words, told police how he killed women with his bare hands, cut their bodies into pieces, and then went out to kill again...
Includes 16 pages of shocking photos!
Linda Rosencrance has twenty years of experience as a reporter, writing for both The Boston Globe and the Boston Herald as well as many community papers in the Boston metropolitan area. She is the author of An Act of Murder and Murder at Morses Pond and has also written an anthology examining various crimes on college campuses. She lives in the Boston area.
Edward Lee, Jr., has been a police officer in Woonsocket, Rhode Island since 1988. In 1997 he was promoted to the rank of Sergeant and became patrol supervisor for the morning platoon. He went on to work as a Municipal and District Court Prosecutor as well as Sergeant in the Day Detective Division before being promoted to Lieutenant of the Day Platoon in October 2004. Promoted to Captain in June of 2006, Lee is responsible for the Uniform Division, which is the largest and most visible division of the Woonsocket Police Department. He lives in Massachusetts.

Lee Edward: author's other books


Who wrote Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make
Table of Contents Acknowledgments Many thanks to everyone who helped me - photo 1
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Many thanks to everyone who helped me with this project, especially my coauthor, Captain Edward Lee, Jr., Lieutenant Steven Nowak, Detective Gerard Durand and all the members of the Woonsocket Police Department. I would also like to thank the families of Audrey Harris, Christine Dumont and Stacie Goulet for their help.
Last, but not least, special thanks to my agent, Janet Benrey, of the Benrey Literary Agency, and my editor at Kensington, Michaela Hamilton.
LR

I would like to recognize the hardworking men and women at the Woonsocket Police Department. Without their dedication and professionalism this case would not have been possible.
EL
Also by Linda Rosencrance:

AN ACT OF MURDER

MURDER AT MORSES POND
Epilogue
Ed Lee and Steve Nowak did what they set out to dohelp bring the person who murdered Audrey Harris, Christine Dumont and Stacie Goulet to justice and restore the citizens faith in the Woonsocket Police Department.
But their efforts just werent enough. In fact, the Woonsocket police are under even more scrutiny than they were in the months and years leading up to the Mailhot case.
For one thing, prostitutes still walk up and down Arnold Street and the surrounding area, hoping to get the money for their next fix. And johns still drive up and down the streets, looking to get lucky. Despite the best efforts of police to curb prostitution in their city, its two steps forward, one step back.
And as for the department itselfnot much good has happened since the Jeffrey Mailhot case.
In November 2007, five Woonsocket police officers were disciplined for not properly searching a woman they had arrested. That woman was able to smuggle a loaded gun into a jail cell, where she was held overnight until her arraignment on drug possession charges the following day. The police found the gun the next day as the woman was getting on a van headed to district court in Providence for her arraignment.
The gun, a Colt .380 automatic, apparently fell out of her pants.
After an internal investigation Police Chief Michael L. A. Houle reprimanded the officers who processed the woman. Two officers, who faced charges of unsatisfactory performance and lack of knowledge of police directives, each received a two-month suspension with-out pay. One officer received a four-day suspension without pay, and another received a two-day suspension with-out pay for unsatisfactory performance and lack of knowledge of police directives. An additional officer received a letter of reprimand for unsatisfactory performance.
The police department then ordered all its officers to be retrained in search and seizure procedures, as well as procedures for custody and control of prisoners.
That incident was just the latest in a series of incidents that resulted in investigations and suspensions in the police department. All of the incidents caused people to question the departments leadership.
In May 2007, Police Chief Michael Houle was suspended for two days without pay after he admitted destroying drug evidence that he said was tainted with broken blood vials and uncapped hypodermic needles.
The citys public safety director, Michael Annarummo, issued a report on the incident saying Houles decision to dispose of the evidence was not well-thought-out and that his actions were unbecoming of the chief of police.
The investigation was launched after Houle admitted incinerating eight large cardboard boxes filled with bags of drugs because he wanted to clean out the evidence room.
In the report Annarummo said that an internal audit revealed that evidence concerning ten out of 110 pending drug cases was missing. He said instead of destroying the evidence, the chief should have contacted the public works department and the fire department after he found what he considered to be a biohazard.
Annarummo recommended that the chief develop written policies for destroying controlled substances, as well as for handling contaminated or hazardous evidence. He also said the department had to hire an expert to look at the way the evidence room was run, as well as establish a computerized system for tracking evidence. The public safety director said the department also had to employ a full-time evidence officer.
Houle said he was going to remedy the situation.
Then in July, Houle suspended two officers, Captain Walter Warot and Lieutenant Timothy Paul, who was involved in the Mailhot case, on charges of violation of department operational policies and insubordination for their part in an investigation of another officer.
The two officers were investigating Patrolman Steven Fairley, who was the officer who actually found Stacie Goulets remains in the landfill, for allegedly tampering with a police department computer to embarrass another officer. Those charges were later dismissed in superior court.
Then, of course, on January 14, 2008, Christine Dumonts fifty-two-year-old brother hanged himself with his shirt in a jail cell at the Woonsocket police station forty-five minutes after he was arrested and incarcerated for breaking and entering his landlords apartment. Robert Dumont lived across the hall from his landlord, who was on vacation at the time. After his arrest police brought Dumont back to the police station and put him in a holding cell.
Dumonts sister Madeline Desrochers, who has had her problems with the Woonsocket police in the past because of the way they initially handled Christines disappearance, said her brother would still be alive if the officers on duty had been doing their jobs and watching him.
Deputy Police Chief Richard Dubois defended his officers, saying they followed departmental procedures regarding prisoners. According to Dubois, police use surveillance cameras to monitor prisoners in holding cells. In addition, he said, an officer is required to check on prisoners every hour.
In this case, at around 10:45 P.M. , about forty-five minutes after Dumont was placed in the cell, the dispatcher who was monitoring his cell noticed that he seemed to be pressed up against the bars of the cell doorsomething that happens regularly, Dubois said, because prisoners grab hold of the bars, then yell or spit.
But several minutes later the dispatcher observed that Dumonts body was still in the same position, so an officer went to check on him and discovered that he had used his shirt to hang himself. Efforts to revive Dumont failed.
The RISP and the internal affairs department of the WPD are investigating Dumonts death.
I just cant believe this, Madeline Desrochers told the local paper. What is going on with this police department? He would still be alive if they were doing their jobs.
Dumont was the third person to die in the custody of Woonsocket police since 2003.
In 2006, forty-one-year-old Timothy Picard died after a Woonsocket police officer trying to subdue him during a struggle in the booking area shot him twice with a Taser. Police had arrested Picard on domestic assault charges. Emergency personnel took Picard to the Landmark Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
In September 2003, forty-six-year-old Janet Barr, of Woonsocket, choked on a concealed object she tried to swallow while she was being held at the Woonsocket police station on drug charges.
According to the attorney generals office, she choked while she was involved in a brief but violent confrontation with Woonsocket officers. She lapsed into a coma, was taken to Landmark Medical Center and died five days later. After the medical examiner ruled that Barr died of cardio respiratory collapse due to acute cocaine intoxication, the attorney generals office cleared the Woonsocket Police Department of any wrongdoing in her death.
Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands»

Look at similar books to Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands»

Discussion, reviews of the book Ripper: His Deadly Weapons Were His Own Bare Hands and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.