Some true background stories about the killer Kuklinsky

Carter 2022-01-05 08:01:16

Miku.com> Reasoning Academy> Detective Class>
http://www.miku360.com/xueyuan/zhentan/743.html
Analysis of the Cause of Death in Scientific Investigation (4)
Author: Colin Evans

Richard Ku Franklin Chomsky

time: 1983

Location: New York, Orangeburg

sense: experts convinced Cook Linsky used poison to kill a partner on some business, then how they prove it?

In September 1983, in the wilderness of Rockland County, a male body was found tied up with rope and wrapped in a plastic bag. Rockland is located three kilometers north of the New York and New Jersey border. The male corpse was injured by a bullet in the brain. It gave people the first impression that this person had just died, but when Dr. Frederick Zokibi, a state medical examiner, performed an autopsy, he discovered two rare phenomena: the male body’s organs were fresh, and the body was from the outside. Start to rot, which is just the opposite of the normal order. When checking the heart, he found ice cubes. He immediately suspected that the corpse had been frozen. It seemed that the murderer was trying to mess up the time of death. (The body has melted before being abandoned. In this case, the time of death is impossible to determine.)

Wash your hands with water and glycerin and dry them to get fingerprints. They determined that the man's body was named Louis Masquey, the owner of a Pennsylvania store, 50 years old, and disappeared on July 1, 1981. When the body was found, he was still wearing the clothes he wore when he was seen on the last day, indicating that he was killed on that day. Such a ruthless and terrifying murder is definitely not done by ordinary murderers.

They investigated and found that on the day of Masqueh's disappearance, he had arranged to negotiate a batch of blank tapes with businessmen in New Jersey. Muskete was cautious, and he hid the $95,000 that he had to pay for the deal in the panel of the concealed door of his Ford. The car was later found abandoned, the panel of the concealed door was pried open, and the money was missing. According to the phone records of the day, Masquey’s business partner at the time was Richard Kuklinski. Richard Kuklinsky has a beard and is in his forties. He likes to call himself a foreign exchange speculator. But his way of making money is insidious, cunning, and unscrupulous. Under his seemingly noble appearance lurked an executioner's heart. He is arguably the cruelest executioner in American history. He murdered innocent people, always for himself and for money. Executioner to kill a hundred people

in addition to himself, no one knows how much Cook Linsky had ruined innocent. According to some statistics, there are more than one hundred. A lot of information shows that he started murdering as early as high school. His first victim was George Mary Burrard, a three-hundred-pound business speculator from Pennsylvania. On February 1, 1980, Mary Burrard unfortunately quarreled with Kuklinski because he was in debt of more than 50,000 U.S. dollars. Four days later, the bullet-scarred body of George Mary Burrard was found in a gallon drum in New Jersey.

Anyone who associates with Kuklinsky is tantamount to risking death. In 1982, he met the pharmacist Paul Hoffman, and Kuklinsky asked him to provide some stolen ulcer drugs at reduced prices. Kuklinsky was so shrewd, he waived Paul Hoffman's appetite until finally he begged Kuklinsky to make a deal with him. On April 29, 1982, the two people met for the last time. Hoffman brought $2,500 in cash and Hoffman also brought a gun. Since then, Hoffman and the money have disappeared. Kuklinsky himself mentioned that the pharmacist was thrown into a canister full of concrete.

Although Kuklinsky is withdrawn by nature, he occasionally engages in car stealing with murderous villains. One of his accomplices was named Daniel Dipler and the other was named Gary Smith, and it was difficult for him to choose between them. Both of them are not very bright and both attracted the attention of the police. So he decided to take thirty-six strategies as the best strategy. His response is typical of this type of person. In order to take care of Dipler, who was easily fooled, they negotiated to let Smith go first. They hid in the Berpa County motel. Smith was hungry. He gobbled up the hamburger that Kuklinsky asked him to take. After a few big mouthfuls, Smith felt that the whole house was spinning. When Smith choked on his throat while eating a cyanide burger, Kuklinsky and Dipler laughed loudly at him. In the end, Kuklinsky couldn't wait any longer, he strangled the helpless Smith. He threw Smith's body under the bed. It was not discovered until four days later, on December 27, 1982. During that time, the house was still rented out every night, and the guests in the restaurant seemed to smell a certain smell, but no one looked under the bed.

In May of the following year, a cyclist along Clunton Avenue in Milford, Western New Jersey noticed a large wood on the tree. He approached and saw a plastic garbage bag with a head staggered outside. . Dr. Gisele Nataraj, a medical examination specialist in New Jersey, performed an autopsy. Although she found light red bruises on the corpse's shoulders and chest, which may have been caused by carbon monoxide poisoning, a band mark on the neck indicated that the cause of death was obvious. A wallet was found in the trouser pocket of the deceased, which contained motel receipts and family photos. It is concluded from the photo that the body may be Daniel Dipler, another partner of Kuklinsky. The bodies of the victims were piled up like a mountain, and the authority concluded that Richard Kuklinsky was a killing machine. But they could not produce evidence that would stand in court. In order to make up for the deficiencies in investigative work, starting from September 1986, the General Administration of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Weapons and Equipment sent a representative Donimic Polyfran to contact Kuklinsky under the pseudonym. The undercover operation was called " Action Iceman". After initial bargaining, Polyfran agreed to provide 10 kilograms of cocaine at a price of US$31,500 per kilogram. At the same time, Kuklinsky gradually relaxed his vigilance and told him vividly how to get rid of the "rich youth" that made him feel troublesome. He didn't notice that every sentence of his was recorded, and Kuklinsky admired the advantages of cyanide. "Quiet, no mess, no noise... Just spray some mist around... You spray it on people's faces and they fall asleep...". He even described a murder experiment in the street. Step into the crowd, put a handkerchief on your nose, spray on a certain person, and that person immediately falls to death. All the people around thought that the man died of a heart attack. He continued, "The best way is to spray against their right nose, then he can inhale his lungs. Once he inhales his lungs, he will definitely die."

Undercover operation

Kuklinsky ran out of the cyanide he had on hand, but he couldn't get it right away, and Polyfran agreed to provide him with a deadly poison. On December 17, 1986, they met in a truck parking lot near Thun Pike, New Jersey. According to the plan, Polifron gave him three sandwiches with scrambled eggs and a bottle of cyanide. In fact, Polifron brought him a condiment cinchona. Kuklinsky's plan was to meet a so-called "rich young man" in a motel and poison him.

Kuklinsky left with the sandwiches and went aside to make preparations. The people who were monitoring Kuklinski did not expect that Kuklinski would take such an action. They were worried about Polyfran's safety and decided to take an arrest in advance. A few minutes later, Kuklinsky was taken to the police station. The poison research department of the New Jersey Crime Laboratory found "cyanide" (actually cinchona) in the sandwich, and Kuklinsky was charged with a fifth degree murder.

The trial was held on January 25, 1988. Although the prosecutor is in control, he used circumstantial evidence. The defense lawyer claimed that Kuklinsky's boasting must be supported by facts. However, neither Smith nor Dipler found traces of cyanide at the autopsy, the supposed poison victims.

In order to refute the defense's point of view, the prosecution invited New York medical examination expert Dr. Michael Baden to testify. He explained that cyanide is quickly converted into carbon and nitrogen in the body, and you will find nothing in a few days. This is why cyanide is a good murder tool. You can smell a faint bitter almond scent on the fresh corpse, but cyanide can't even find the shadow, but it can make the skin discolored. A thorough investigation of the ins and outs of the case and autopsy photos, Baden pointed out that Smith and Dipler both had patches of bruising, which were the same as the situation after cyanide poisoning. Baden’s testimony emphasized that the bluish purple on his body may be caused by cyanide. Indeed, no toxicologist can be sure that it must be caused by cyanide. Nevertheless, Kuklinsky was charged with the murder of Smith and Dipler. On May 25, 1988, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. He later confessed to killing Mary Burrard, Masqueh and Hoffman.

in conclusion

This assassin, known as the Iceman, used endless methods to kill people-poison. Guns, ropes, iron blocks. Stick-everything in his hands can be a tool for murder. He is still imprisoned in Trenton State Prison. He was over a hundred years old before he was eligible for parole.

View more about The Iceman reviews

Extended Reading

The Iceman quotes

  • Deborah Pellicotti: I was working across the street, and uh, Richie would come over every break he had, and he would bring me flowers and candy. And then it got really awkward, because I didn't know who he was, and I just started making any excuse I could to say no. And then one day, out of the blue, he walks in and he tells me I'm making a big mistake. And I didn't know what to say, because he seemed so convinced. So I went out with him.

    Terry Franzo: All because he wouldn't leave you alone?

    Deborah Pellicotti: No. Because he knew what I needed more than I did.

  • Deborah Pellicotti: Well you know, honey, there's just too many people in the world God to care about everyone. So that's why we look after each other.