I took these screenshots from this article about Dwayne Stafford, the guy who beat Dylann up in jail. Honestly I’m losing my mind laughing.




I took these screenshots from this article about Dwayne Stafford, the guy who beat Dylann up in jail. Honestly I’m losing my mind laughing.




Richard Scott Baumeister was a spree killer who murdered 5 people in April, 2000. The crime spree was heavily racially motivated. Baumeister’s first victim during the spree was his jewish neighbour, who he shot and killed before setting her house on fire. He left that site in his Jeep and continued on to his neighbours synagogue, where he shattered the windows and spray painted red swastikas on the walls.
His next target was an Indian grocery store where he shot and killed a customer who was picking up groceries on his lunch hour, and then shot the store manager in the neck, paralysing him. From the he went on to another local synagogue, committing more vandalism, and continued on to a Chinese restaurant where he would fatally shoot two Asian Americans, the manager and the cook.
His last target was an African American who was exercising in a Karate centre with a friend. While Baumeister initially pointed the gun at this friend, who was European American, he hastily changed his target and shot 22 year old Gary Lee, instantly killing him.
After his arrest the previous extent of Baumeister’s racism became evident. Police discovered a document in his home that was similar to a manifesto, which outlined how European Americans were being outnumbered by ethnic minorities. A website that he ran was also found, which called for an end to non-European migration to the states.
Despite a lengthy psychiatric history Baumeister was found guilty of five counts of murder and received five separate death sentences, with an additional 112 years.
Kelly Ann Tinyes was a 13-year-old student at Woodmere Middle School, living in a seemingly perfect suburban block in Valley Stream, New York. On the 3rd of March, 1989, she was babysitting her younger brother, Richard, when the house phone started to ring. Richard replied and the man at the other end of the line identified himself as “John” and asked to speak to Kelly. Following he call, Kelly told her brother she needed to go to a friend’s house and that she would be back momentarily.
When Kelly never returned, Richard walked to the friend’s house where Kelly claimed she was going. The friend told Richard that Kelly hadn’t been there that day. Another neighbour told Richard that he had seen Kelly go into the nearby home of Robert Golub, 22, who lived with his brother, John, and mother and father. Richard knocked on the Golub’s door but received no answer so went back home to wait for his parents to return home. They too knocked on the Golub’s door but to no avail.
The following morning, investigators went to the Golub household and got the chance to interview several family members. After obtaining a search warrant, investigators searched the home and came across a gruesome scene. In the basement of the home was the body of Kelly; she had been beaten, strangled, and sexually mutilated before being stuffed into a sleeping bag. Robert Golub was apprehended after investigators found a bloody hand print matching his at the crime scene and when the phone call to Kelly was linked back to the Golub household. He was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.
The murder became a landmark case in New York State as the first in which DNA was used to win a murder conviction. It became nationally known when the trial of Robert Golub was televised. In 2009, the case was reopened to investigate the possibility that an accomplice was involved in the slaying, presumably Robert’s brother, John. It has been long suspected that John - who was in the home at the time of the murder - was always involved in the murder.
Kelly Ann Tinyes was a 13-year-old student at Woodmere Middle School, living in a seemingly perfect suburban block in Valley Stream, New York. On the 3rd of March, 1989, she was babysitting her younger brother, Richard, when the house phone started to ring. Richard replied and the man at the other end of the line identified himself as “John” and asked to speak to Kelly. Following he call, Kelly told her brother she needed to go to a friend’s house and that she would be back momentarily.
When Kelly never returned, Richard walked to the friend’s house where Kelly claimed she was going. The friend told Richard that Kelly hadn’t been there that day. Another neighbour told Richard that he had seen Kelly go into the nearby home of Robert Golub, 22, who lived with his brother, John, and mother and father. Richard knocked on the Golub’s door but received no answer so went back home to wait for his parents to return home. They too knocked on the Golub’s door but to no avail.
The following morning, investigators went to the Golub household and got the chance to interview several family members. After obtaining a search warrant, investigators searched the home and came across a gruesome scene. In the basement of the home was the body of Kelly; she had been beaten, strangled, and sexually mutilated before being stuffed into a sleeping bag. Robert Golub was apprehended after investigators found a bloody hand print matching his at the crime scene and when the phone call to Kelly was linked back to the Golub household. He was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.
The murder became a landmark case in New York State as the first in which DNA was used to win a murder conviction. It became nationally known when the trial of Robert Golub was televised. In 2009, the case was reopened to investigate the possibility that an accomplice was involved in the slaying, presumably Robert’s brother, John. It has been long suspected that John - who was in the home at the time of the murder - was always involved in the murder.
““I always remember my brother trying to impress everyone, and myself thinking what a waste of time that would be.””
— Eric Harris (via thecolumbineblogwithrebandvodka)