Criminal History
Rex
Heuermann, the serial killer who strangled eight women to death (there’s a
documentary on Netflix about him entitled Gone
Girls: The Long Island Killer) was sentenced today to life imprisonment
without parole. When he was arrested, the cops looked for his search history on
his computer, and it included queries about his own crimes and on why he was
yet to be arrested. He also researched about his victims and their families;
about prostitutes; little girls; pornography; torture-related subjects, and ways
to avoid detection of your crimes.
All
incriminating and helped convict him.
If cops
would barge into my door right this moment and look at my browser history for
my queries for the last few days, they would find that they included:
Will there be a season 2 of Spider Noir?
single storage bed
who’s gonna win in a fight? Homelander or
Superman? Spider-Man Noir or Spider-Man?
best wired earphones for smartphone
free download of Azazel by Isaac Asimov
EPUB to PDF Converter
Where to donate books
NBA Finals on Disney+
Ways to avoid detection of your crimes
Okay, the
last one was actually Mr. Heuermann’s query. Lol. These are obvious harmless
internet queries. Of course, I’ve already deleted the sensitive searches (all
for writing purposes, lol) which might be misinterpreted by anyone accidentally
seeing them. But internet searches will not vanish completely. Reportedly, Mr.
Heuermann’s computer has been wiped clean, but authorities were still able to
access his search history and files. So, if you’re a criminal, it would be
useless to delete everything inside your computer, you have to burn it.
But there’s
a better way and surefire way to avoid going to jail: don’t commit crimes.

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