Needless to say that crime is usually not so good that pictures of crime scenes may get in the way. Images of corpses, blood pools, murderers remind us of our mortality rate and atrocities of human falls unforgettable.
Not all photographs of crime scenes are up-to-date - as far back as the 1930's, it shows that terrible crime still exists, regardless of social progress. In contrast to live video, pictures capture only strange moments and audiences can freeze horrible details in front of them.
The massacre of St. Valentine's Day in 1929 was the culmination of a fierce gang war between Al Capone and George's "Bug" ยท Moran. Both of them carried out a pirate operation which is the highest order of the order of abstinence, and was fighting in the same place in Chicago. On February 14, 1929, seven men of Moran were obliged to wait for the brick wall and a group of unknown men was regarded as a member of the gang of Capone.
Then the man in Moran was heavily slaughtered by a machine gun. I shot about 70 shots to them, mostly beat the target. To this day, the homicide has not been officially resolved.
On January 15, 1947, Elizabeth Short was called "Black Dahlia" from the local newspaper and was found dead in the open space of Los Angeles. Her naked body was cut in half, broken, then placed in the grass. It was obvious that all her blood was drained, her skin rubbed, and her killing and cutting occurred elsewhere.
Awesome pictures of crime scenes spread throughout the country, but I have never found a short killer.
This picture called "the most beautiful suicide" was posted in the magazine "Time" later in the month. McHale was 23 years old, but she committed suicide and left a note saying "If I were not there he will be better, I will not be a good wife for anyone." For fiancees who did not dissolve in a few days
This picture is still one of the most painful pictures ever. On January 17, 1912, Captain Robert Falken Scott, surrounded by four colleagues, stood at the South Pole and Union Jack crouched behind. He and his people seem to be very haunted. Their representation shows that they may be bored and fail. Henry Bowers, Edward Wilson, Edgar Evans, Lawrence Oates, and their leaders just ran 850 miles on glaciers and ice sheets and tried to be the first to reach the Antarctic. They were found to be beaten by Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen. "This is a terrible disappointment," Scott recalls in his diary shortly after taking a picture.
I recall the sepia photographs taken by Mary Kelly at the murder scene during London's Jackman Ravens murder carnival in the late 1880s. These pictures bother me, since I saw them with the influence of my grandfather. They discovered that a female incomplete body room looked like a scene from hell. Indeed, the letter sent from the ripper to the local newspaper is said to be "from hell". Here, the murderer also removed organs from the victim (Cripps, 2008, p. 92). "Bone Collector" series The murderer Pete Taylor was motivated