Finding the suspect will require a sharp mind and a keen wit.
I think that the simplest explanation is that Occam did it.
That can’t be real. I mean, have you seen what razors cost these days? Cheaper to buy fentanyl.
One of the accused is on record as saying the low grade brought down his GPA.
After decades of hearing about razor blades in candy and decades of hearing that it’s never actually happened, I always worried that the near constant reporting was going to give someone the idea to do it.
Imagine what a murder conviction will do to it.
IIRC, there have been actual documented cases, but EVERY ONE OF THEM was intended for ONE specific individual, with other “random” ones given out to try to hide the culprit.
Hmmm. Per snopes, there actually have been cases… (show how much I actually know!)
So, like the Tylenol killings.
North Carolina Karen calls the cops because her barbecue pork was pink.
Truly a WTF moment. What an ignoramus. If it’s pink then they did a great job of smoking it.
The irony is that the lady’s name is Cooke.
At the hole-in-the-wall BBQ joint here we had a woman in front of us reject her brisket because of the smoke ring but she didn’t call the cops, just left after saying, “I’m not paying for that!” without the meal. I was alternating between looking puzzled andgiving the counterman sympathetic looks as she was ranting at him.
Not mentioned: her threatening the staff of a sushi restaurant for not cooking their seafood enough.
Joe Rogan admits he lied about a friend of his wife saying there were furry litter boxes in her school.
Unrelated, but I scrolled down a bit to the next article, about voter intimidation. One person said that “ballot watchers” were up so close to him they got a picture of his name and address on the envelope. “…Now that have my Information recorded will they show up at my house… Do I need worry about my family being killed now if the results are not what they wanted.”"
That’s a genuinely scary thought.
If you know where to look, you can find the owner of a vehicle by the plate number. Using that, you can find the name and address of the owner and if you know how to navigate the assessor’s webpage, you can find a property value, all tax info and get pics and a description of all buildings and fences. All of this is public information in Arizona.
Personal privacy hasn’t been a reasonable expectation anywhere for many years.
Misuse of those databases is a big deal, one case even went to the Supreme Court.
I’m a state government IT guy and a number of my folks have access to this stuff. It’s not something you casually use.
Though as seen in the SCOTUS ruling, federal law doesn’t do a very good job of defining what a violation is. (State laws can be strict though.)
I have been retired for many years, I have NO access to any sort of non-public data bases. I have a LOT of time on my hands and I know how to connect dots. I get all of my information legally and often just through googling names and addresses which points me in the right direction.
I’m not sure why you are doubting me, but if you want I can send you a whole lot of publicly available links so you can dance your way through property, tax and parking ticket records too. My info will only apply to Yavapai county but that’s only because I don’t have any interest or reason to go further.
Because there’s a law protecting that info.
While you might not be breaking the law, you may very well be getting some of your info from people that do.
I also doubt you because…
“Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.”
-Carl Sagan
I don’t make a habit of trusting unsupported sensational statements on the internet. Otherwise I’d probably go hang out with Qanon folks.