Murder in the suburbs - original works Sliding white windows of pearls in the open window, bringing traffic to central London. When falling over the window doors, the head is biased toward one side as if it were in an unstable state. A boy with a blonde wavy hair lying on his bed. When his dark eyes tried to adapt to the intense sun that caused the room to drown, his eyes cramped. He just raised his head. Then the black monster roared roughly from the other side of the room, summoned his will to Trek, alarmed on his head, and silenced it for 24 hours.
The murder of Ginovis influenced the song "Outside Friends Circle" by Folk singer Phil Ochs originally released from the album "The Fun of the Harbor" (1967). The song contains five different situations and the narrator should be asked to take action, but in any case the talker "I am convinced that someone other than a small group of friends will not be interested I conclude that. Joey Levine and Artie Resnick wrote "All's Quiet On West 23rd" (1967). This explains the imaginary murder based on the Genovese case. Between 1967 and 1968, it was released by musicians such as Levin's The Jet Stream, US Julie Budd, Britain's Liza Strike.
The first story of Genoa's murder was centered on the cruel nature of an innocent witness, but it turned out that some serious aspects were flawed. Behavioral scientists Rachel Manning, Mark Levine, and Alan Collins were most thoroughly deleted in the 2007 American Journal of Psychologists. After analyzing the handwriting of the murder trial and other related legal documents, the study team confirmed the three major drawbacks of the first report of Times. There were no 38 witnesses. In sensational 1964, one of 38 witnesses called, "37 people who saw the murder did not call the police," he said. However, one of the assistants of the district attorney involved in the trial said, "At the time we were only able to find 6 people who knew what was going on and could not use it," Stated.