Murder!: Made by - Tamara Markovska - Matea Filevska Please Keep All Your Questions For The End
Murder!: Made by - Tamara Markovska - Matea Filevska Please Keep All Your Questions For The End
Murder!: Made by - Tamara Markovska - Matea Filevska Please Keep All Your Questions For The End
Made by
-Tamara Markovska
-Matea Filevska
*please keep
all your questions
for the end
Why do people do it?
Reasons for killing
• Revenge
• Financial Gain
• Illness / Mental Instability
• Relationship Problems
• Self-protection
• Organized crime
Types of Murder:
First Degree:
• Premeditation!
• Fully conscious of the act.
• Killing deliberately and
intentionally
Second Degree
• VOLUNTARY and
MANSLAUGHTER:
• First Degree:
• Death Penalty possible
• Nebraska insists on “victim suffering” to be proved before
given.
• Life in Prison
• As little as supervised probation.
Second Degree
• Rare cases: Life
• More usual: 10 years
• “Extreme”: 20 years
Manslaughter:
-Probation to 10 years is USUAL penalty
Unsolved murders
• Murders are always disturbing, but some are
even worse than that. These killings were
brutal, almost unimaginable in their depravity.
The crimes horrified communities and stumped
police — leaving questions that lingered for
decades afterward, as years passed without an
arrest or even a credible suspect.
• Here are two of the most vexing murder
mysteries of all time:
1. Jack the Ripper terrorized London
• London’s most notorious serial killer prowled the
East End over a century ago, preying on prostitutes
and terrorizing the area. He made his mark as Jack
the Ripper by killing and mutilating at least five
women. Dread grew as the dead bodies began to
pile up near each other within a three-month
period in 1888. The neighborhood was “horrified
to a degree bordering on panic,” when news broke
of a second female victim, The Morning Post
reported at the time. The local newspaper called
the killing “barbarous,” and said the manner of the
murder was “too horrible for description.”
Local authorities at first wondered whether the suspect was a
butcher or a doctor due to his signature and gory method of
murder — and his skill with a knife. The victims of the so-called
“Whitechapel Murders” — Mary Ann Nichols, Annie Chapman,
Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes and Mary Jane Kelly — all
had their throats slashed, and most of them had their stomachs
slit and organs ripped out before being dumped on the streets,
according to author Dave Yost, who explores the five deaths in
his book Elizabeth Stride and Jack the Ripper.