I love good detective movies; my favourite ones are Hitchcock’s Dial M for Murder and the entire Columbo series. In all of those films, the murderer conceives one fantastic plan, and the audience thinks “This plan is perfect, they will never find any evidence against him”, but then he does one little mistake, and that gets him to the court. When the killer at the end says something liek “And I thought this was the perfect murder”, the TV investigators often point out that “a perfect murder is not possible”. But would a real “perfect” murder be possible? Of course, it’s difficult, especially with modern genetic technology that allows your identification with one hair or whatever. But if I paid very much attention and cleaned up the locatiobn very carefully, couldn’t I destroy everything that points at ME? Or would this 100.00000 per cent perfectness be utopic? What do you think?
[sup]Not that I were planning something like this; I’m just curious :-)[/sup]