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March 8th, 2012

1986 Cold Case Follow-Up

In 2009, I posted about an LAPD detective Stephanie Lazarus who was arrested for the 1986 murder of Sherri Rae Rasmussen (the wife of her boyfriend).  The picture below (by Kevin Scanlon) is from the LA Weekly article I’d read about the case.

For people interested in a fuller account of the case, Clarence Walker wrote an article about it last year which can be read here.

lazarus 

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February 6th, 2012

NYPD Tweeting About Cold Cases

This was a first! I look over and see a tweet from the NYPD about a recently solved cold case. You can read about the case here.

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December 31st, 2011

Crime Reporting

There’s an interesting article about crime reporting in the New York Times today, and the NYPD’s occasional reluctance to make official reports about crimes.

My own experience of this happened in 1990’s when my company’s computers had been hacked. Enough expensive damage had been done, so I wanted to report it even though I didn’t think the NYPD would be able to do much to track the hackers down (this was around 1995).

I called the 1st Precinct and was told they couldn’t take the report because “hacking is not a crime.” I cited the law, but he still refused to make an official report and his CO backed him up. “Okay, so if I were to hack into the NYPD’s computers right now,” I said in frustration, “and download everyone’s personal email, and all your case files and then publish everything I found on the internet, no one would arrest me?” That stopped him for a few seconds, but he still refused and I had to make a lot of phone calls before they would finally make a report.

There are of course, valid reasons for not making an official report. In any case, here’s to a better year, however good or truly bad this year was. I post this picture every December, and it’s a little sad, but I still love it.

NYPD Plays Santa Claus

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November 10th, 2011

Depressing Article about the DOJ’s Cold Case Initiative

An excellent, but disheartening AP piece by Allen G. Breed appeared everywhere last Sunday. From the article:

“The Department of Justice, under its 5-year-old “Cold Case Initiative” and the 2007 Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act, has combed through that dark period of American history, seeking any cases that could still be prosecuted. Isolating 111 incidents involving 124 deaths, investigators have sought to determine whether those who died were victims of racially motivated crimes — and then whether there’s anyone left to charge.”

“In about two-thirds of those cases, FBI agents have hand-delivered letters to next of kin, informing them that the government had taken things as far as they could.”
 
“In some cases, all of the suspects are dead; in others, suspect individuals have been acquitted in the past and cannot legally be retried. In a few, the agency can find no evidence that a crime was racially motivated — or even that the death resulted from foul play.”

The rest of the article can be read here (the original link is gone now, but I found a similar article).

The 1964 Mississippi State Highway Patrol file booking photo of James Ford Seale, one of the murderers mentioned in the article.

James Ford Seale

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