Quick round of professional fields, tell me which one the victim belonged to:
Aviation, arts, business, law enforcement, media, medical, service industry, teaching, technology, other.
Actually, let me make a WAG. Negligent doctor?
Quick round of professional fields, tell me which one the victim belonged to:
Aviation, arts, business, law enforcement, media, medical, service industry, teaching, technology, other.
Actually, let me make a WAG. Negligent doctor?
Was the stabbing an act of revenge for the deaths of the wife/children?
Were the deaths purely accidental? A result of clear negligence? Intentional?
Aspidistra already asked if the victim’s actions contributed to the deaths- if so, was it the victim alone or were other people in the same profession involved? If not, was someone else from the same profession involved and the perpetrator was just going for anyone of that profession?
Is the profession something where people may often die as a result of their (accidental, negligent, or intentional) actions or where it might be perceived that way (like police officers or doctors or possibly people who drive for a living)?
edit: apparently I took a long time to write this. Ignore things that have already been answered. I promise I’m paying attention.
kk
Alright, so someone responsible for an aircraft crash?
Pilot?
Mechanic?
Air Traffic Controller?
**Air Traffic Controller
**
Anyone want to put it all together?
Jesus. Two years of prison for murdering a guy in front of his family? I’m all for lenient sentences, but that’s just nuts.
ATC tells a plane they’re cleared to land or takeoff when he shouldn’t have, and then they crashed?
Yep, you got it. It should be noted the ATC was overworked and had to do double the work of a normal ATC, which created the accident.
Vitaly Kaloyev, who used a private investigator to hunt down the air traffic controller whose overworked situation created an accident that killed his family. He then found his address and found him and stabbed him to death.
He was convicted of premeditated killing(between murder and manslaughter), but got out in 2 years, which is ridiculous.
His quote is hauntingly creepy:
A woman puts some work equipment onto the local train to deliver to a co-worker at another job site. While the train is one of the fastest ever built, it takes the equipment over an hour to arrive. It was a short distance, left on time, and made no other steps. What is going on?
Was the work equipment measuring something about the train?
About the surrounding environment?
Did the presence of the equipment cause the train to go slow?
Was other transport than the train involved?
Was the item somehow misplaced, so they had to search the freight car for it?
Did the item have to go through customs/security check?
kk
Is some sort of time shift involved, like the crossing of time zones or DST?
Did the train cross into a time zone?
Was the equipment really heavy?
Was it bigger than the train?
Was the train part of the equipment?
Did the train have to go to a high elevation?
**A woman puts some work equipment onto the local train to deliver to a co-worker at another job site. While the train is one of the fastest ever built, it takes the equipment over an hour to arrive. It was a short distance, left on time, and made no other steps. What is going on?
**
NO
With an hour, you mean literally 60 minutes?
Was the equipment inside one of the trains wagons?
Did the hour happened between the time the train left the place where it was until the moment it arrived?
**A woman puts some work equipment onto the local train to deliver to a co-worker at another job site. While the train is one of the fastest ever built, it takes the equipment over an hour to arrive. It was a short distance, left on time, and made no other steps. What is going on?
**
Was the ‘short distance’ , distance as the crow flies between start and end?
Did the train travel a much longer distance on the actual train track?
Was the train going much slower than it usually would?
kk
Was it a railroad train?