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Discussion in 'Requesters' started by shop3onlinem, May 5, 2013.

  1. shop3onlinem

    shop3onlinem New Member

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    Under the new plan, educational institutions have to get in touch with mother and father as soon as possible within 24 time of the occurrence. If it is not possible to achieve them, they may be approached by email. The mother or father and the university manager must be given duplicates of an itemized review, much like an occurrence review, describing what occurred in referrals to the occasion.There must also be an choice for “debriefing,†if the mother or father so selects, which is a more in-depth knowing of what occurred and is intended to help reduce the chance of a similiar.Debriefing has always been our exercise,†Wray said, describing that for the learners to advantage, they must have “open and sincere interaction with the mother and father.
    Derek Richardson bent down, pretending to tie his shoes, while the jogger’s steps grew louder. When the young woman rounded a bend on the trail, he jumped up, grabbed her by the neck, dragged her into the Missouri woods and strangled her.At least that’s what Richardson recently told police happened years ago, newly released records show.While awaiting trial for strangling two Kansas City prostitutes, Richardson had summoned detectives to the Clay County Jail in February for a second sit-down to admit what they already suspected: He had killed before. And maybe more than once.
    Police haven’t found the jogger’s remains. And now that Richardson has committed suicide, police may never know exactly when he started killing or how many lives he actually took.But it’s hard to believe the prostitutes were his first two, an expert says. Killers often lie or tell only part of the truth to create a particular image of themselves.
    More than six hours of recorded police questioning provide insights into a tortured young man consumed for more than a decade by a compulsion to kill. He had hoped acting out his fantasies would squelch the desire and provide relief from the moral battle raging in his mind. But the murders had no such effect.His drive to kill remained, he calmly told detectives, often answering their questions with short responses as they probed “how†and “why.â€
    In the most revealing moments, Richardson’s voice dropped to a whisper.There probably would have been more,†the 27-year-old father eventually said. “There’s still something that I guess I never could quite fulfill.â€He said he researched serial killers to better understand himself. He claimed he didn’t enjoy killing. He even told one relative that killing made him feel bad.
    But that contradicts what’s known about serial killers — that 95 percent are psychopaths who have no conscience, empathy or guilt.
    Richardson died last month, four days after wrapping a drawstring from his commissary bag around his neck twice and attaching it to his jail cell bunk bed.
    His death closed the criminal cases against him for the October 2011 death of Tamara Sparks, 40, and the August 2012 death of Nicoleone Reed, 24. Both women, who worked as prostitutes along Independence Avenue, had been dumped along Northland roads and doused with bleach or drain cleaner to destroy evidence.
    The possibility of two additional attacks against women were among the biggest revelations in more than 3,000 pages of police records, and more than 17 hours of recorded phone calls and interviews, that The Star obtained through Missouri’s Sunshine Law requests.
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