Scotland Highlands 1713, Rob Roy is the head of a Highlands clan that herds cattle. Rob takes a loan from the Marquis of Montrose to survive the winter, but Rob Roy's retainer,Alan McDonald, is murdered by one of the Marquis's guests,Cunningham. Rob is turned into a fugitive, and he finally confronts Cunningham after Rob's wife is raped by him. Rob Roy tries to sell the audience another sympathetic, Scottish hero.…
Detectives Abdalla and Napper responded to 51st and A Street Southeast for a report of a stabbing. Upon arrival on the scene Detectives were briefed in reference to the incident. Detective Napper spoke with Alisha Carrington(C-1) who reported that she was involved in a verbal argument with her ex-boyfriend Alvin Young(S-1) about her no longer wanting to be in a relationship with him. During the argument Robert Carrington(C-2) became involved in the argument and asked S-1 to leave his home. The argument spilled into the rear yard.…
The detective saw an opportunity. She grabbed the waitress's arm and said “You are coming with me, do not worry you are not going to jail. We just have to ask you some questions.” It was a cold winter morning in New York City, America.…
If you never heard of the saying, “Pulled my heartstrings” then you haven't read Brady Udall’s “He Becomes Deeply and Famously Drunk”. This is about a seventeen year old cowboy named Archie. Archie has spent most of his life working on a ranch in Arizona that used to be his fathers. The sad part is that his father died when Archie was just five years old. Can you imagine just five years old.…
Brothers and sisters, comrades and friends: The trial of Arnold Rampersaud on the charge of alleged murder is a serious affair. It is a serious affair because murder is always serious. It is serious because it is the murder of a policeman. It is serious because of its political implications. It is serious because racial and racist implications are involved.…
Tommy Murphy is a nine-year-old boy who has been medically diagnosis of AD/HD and he takes medication for. Tommy is in the 4th grade and attends Parkview Elementary School. He currently has an Individual Educational Plan because of a learning disability. He also receives speech services at school twice a week. Tommy is currently placed in a Special Day Class (SDC)…
Jane who is an independent consultant of the California Bureau of Investigation (CBI) based in Sacramento, California. Although not an officer of the law, he uses skills from his former career as a successful psychic medium to help a team of CBI agents solve murders. The real reason for Patrick Jane's involvement with law enforcement is to track down the serial killer known as Red John, who was responsible for the brutal murders of his wife and his daughter. Before the murders, Jane had a lucrative career as a comman, successfully posing as a psychic medium and enjoying near - celebrity status. Five years before the events in the show's pilot episode, he appeared on television to claim that his paranormal…
Private investigator Kinsey Millhone, an unmarried, licensed, bonded, white woman of age thirty-two from Santa Teresa, California, investigates the homicide of Lisa Osterling’s husband, Rudd Osterling, who was previously a cocaine dealer. She also explores the disappearance of the Parker shotgun, a rare and beautifully crafted shotgun that is no longer produced anymore because the company went out of business. Lisa believes that the police wrote off the murder as a failed attempt at Rudd’s drug dealing, and she is determined to figure out the convict before the birth of her son. Initially, Kinsey heads to the gun shop located on a narrow side street in Colgate to elaborate with the owner, Avery Lamb, about the appraisal he completed on the…
Racial Profiling Stereotypes Racial profiling is a long- established and profoundly internal national problem that refers to the use of discrimination towards specific groups of people, especially those of color. People are constantly being discriminated due to their perceived race, ethnicity, national origin, or religion. It occurs on a daily basis, from cities to towns all across the country, people are facing racial profiling.…
Officer Ryan and his partner Officer Hanson arrive at a scene of a crash. Officer Ryan shows reaction and shock when he stares into the eyes of the same woman he molested in the car accident. As a policeman, he enters the car that is flipped upside down and finds a woman stuck in the car. He tries to help her but once they made eye contact, the woman, Christine, rejects his help and screams, “Not you!…
The Overlook On the news, we hear about someone being murdered daily in which detectives are on the case to find out who committed the crime. Murder cases are always a grueling process with many clues to try and find the one who committed the crime. “The Overlook” by Michael Connelly is an example of that, in which he gives detectives a murder case that leads him and the reader in many different directions, trying to figure out who killed Dr. Kent. Connelly starts off with a detective named Harry Bosch, who receives a call at midnight about a murder case.…
Later, he is working and sees an accident that is an extremely dangerous situation. A car has flipped on the road and is leaking gas while there is a fire nearby. Officer Ryan immediately goes to help and when he gets into the flipped car, he sees that inside driving is Christine. She immediately is hysterical and instead of worrying about him saving her life she tries to force him away in fear that he will hurt her again. Ryan eventually gets her to calm down and pulls her out of the car just in time, but he changes from this.…
Susan Mcconnell is going to crack up first during the investigation. This is because in chapter 9 page 103 paragraph 2 Susan says, ¨we can get to my house and get my dad, ¨Susan said. ¨He'll help us.¨ This quote shows us that Susan wants to spill the information to her dad. This is because she is frantic when she saw Mr. Griffin dead.…
In society, criminals are portrayed as people who are mentally disturbed and deserve to be punished for what they did. They are shown as violent people that should be avoided at all times but in reality they are most of the time normal people that would never be suspected to be dangerous and bad people. So for those reasons it can be hard to spot them out in the crowd when they are living there life like a normal person. In the novel Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King the readers can really see how this is true with the character Brady. As Brady’s character shows a killer thinks the way that they do and fit in so well in society without anyone suspecting a thing for the following reasons.…
Neil Hughes, an essentially ordinary child from a Liverpool suburb, has a high-spirited way of life at seven. He attends a public school with fellow participant Peter, and shows normal behavior for a child of his age. At fourteen, Neil is attending a comprehensive school and has similar aspirations as his seven-year-old self, but, like an adult would, puts much thought into his speaking. At age twenty-one, Neil plummets downward and is squatting in London. He drops out of Aberdeen University following one term, and begins working unsatisfying hard labor.…