guilty
Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time; a look into all aspects of a guilty verdict from the burden of proof to conviction to the judge’s sentence and more.
The Winter Code: Rise and Fall of Viktor Malenkov. AI-Generated.
Viktor Malenkov was born in 1968 in the bleak industrial city of Nizhny Tagil, deep in the Ural Mountains. His father worked in a steel factory; his mother, a nurse who never stopped praying for her only son. But Russia in the late 1980s was a land in turmoil — the Soviet Union was crumbling, and so were the rules. Factories closed, wages disappeared, and the streets filled with hungry men who learned that survival depended on strength, not honesty.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
Title: Blood Oath: The Rise and Fall of Salvatore Ricci. AI-Generated.
The story of Salvatore Ricci, known across the underworld as “The Gentleman Butcher,” began in the narrow alleys of Palermo, Sicily. Born in 1954 to a humble fisherman and a devout mother, Salvatore’s childhood was marked by hunger, silence, and the sound of waves breaking against the docks. His father dreamed of an honest life, but honesty didn’t feed a family of six. By sixteen, Salvatore had already learned that survival demanded compromise — and in Sicily, compromise meant the Mafia.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
did ed gein kill his brother in real life. AI-Generated.
Did Ed Gein Really Kill His Brother? Ad Gein? Edward Theodore Gein, born in 1906 in Wisconsin, became infamous for his horrific crimes that shocked American society. He murdered women, exhumed corpses, and fashioned human remains into household items and clothing. But long before his gruesome deeds were discovered in the 1950s, there was a mysterious event in 1944: the death of his older brother, **Henry Gein**.
By America today 6 months ago in Criminal
The Heartwarming Domino's Welfare Check: How a Concerned Employee in Oregon Saved a Life. AI-Generated.
The Heartwarming Domino's Welfare Check: How a Concerned Employee in Oregon Saved a Life Imagine grabbing your usual slice after a long day, only to realize that one familiar face—or in this case, one steady order—has vanished from the routine. In 2016, that's exactly what sparked a chain of events in a quiet Oregon town. A Domino's Pizza employee grew worried when a regular customer, who had ordered almost every day for years, suddenly went silent.
By Story silver book 6 months ago in Criminal
Reason First: William Wallace
The inspiration behind the film Braveheart (1995), William Wallace had been discovered as a murderer and thief by Westminster Hall officials. His punishment? Officials stripped him naked. They then put him on two horses to be hanged. But that wasn’t enough. Trash and filth landed on his body during the trip to the gallows.
By Skyler Saunders6 months ago in Criminal
Beyond the Screen: The Legend of the Lost Server. AI-Generated.
When an Online World Became More Than a Game For many gamers, video games are not just entertainment—they are entire worlds, rich with friendships, rivalries, and memories that feel as real as life itself. Few stories capture this better than the legend of the “Lost Server,” a true tale from the early days of online multiplayer gaming that shows how digital spaces can create bonds stronger than reality.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Last Don: The Life and Death of Giovanni Brusca. AI-Generated.
Few Mafia figures in modern history inspire as much fear and controversy as Giovanni Brusca, a Sicilian boss whose violent legacy earned him the nickname “The Pig” for his brutality. For years, he was one of the most feared men in the Cosa Nostra, responsible for hundreds of murders—including some of Italy’s most shocking assassinations. But in the end, Brusca betrayed the very code of honor that bound the Mafia, turning informant and exposing the inner workings of the organization.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The American Boss of Bosses: The Rise and Fall of Salvatore Maranzano. AI-Generated.
The history of organized crime in America is filled with betrayals, bloody wars, and shifting power. Among its earliest architects was Salvatore Maranzano, the man who briefly became the “Boss of Bosses” of New York’s Mafia in the 1930s. Though his reign was short-lived, his influence changed the structure of American organized crime forever.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Sicilian Ghost: The Rise and Fall of Bernardo Provenzano. AI-Generated.
When the world thinks of the Sicilian Mafia, names like Lucky Luciano or Salvatore Riina often dominate the conversation. But perhaps the most fascinating—and elusive—boss of all was Bernardo Provenzano, the man who ran the Cosa Nostra from the shadows for nearly forty years. Nicknamed “Binnu u Tratturi” (Binnie the Tractor) for his ability to “plow over” anyone in his way, Provenzano’s reign marked one of the Mafia’s most secretive eras.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal
The Global Sumud Flotilla and the Shadow of Arrests
Waves of Defiance: The Global Sumud Flotilla and the Shadow of Arrests The Mediterranean was calm that morning, its blue waters shimmering under the October sun. On the horizon, a cluster of small boats sailed steadily forward, their sails painted with words of hope, their decks carrying boxes of medicine, food, and blankets. They called it the Global Sumud Flotilla—“sumud” meaning steadfastness in Arabic.
By Wings of Time 6 months ago in Criminal
Reason First: The Traitorous David III
To be dragged through the streets to the scaffold, hanged, disemboweled and his innards set ablaze because the homicides occurred during the time of suffering of Jesus of Nazareth, and in a botched plan to kill the king, loyalists chopped off David III’s head.
By Skyler Saunders6 months ago in Criminal
The Chicago Outfit: The Ghost of Al Capone’s Legacy. AI-Generated.
When people hear the name Al Capone, they think of fedoras, speakeasies, and Tommy guns blazing across Chicago’s streets. Yet what many forget is that Capone’s reign was only the beginning of a criminal dynasty that has lasted for nearly a century: the Chicago Outfit. Unlike other Mafia families tied to Sicily, the Outfit was uniquely American, born from the chaos of Prohibition and adapted to survive long after Capone’s fall.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Criminal








