Posts

An endorsement

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Back in 2020, fellow Bundy researcher Tiffany Jean (this being her main Facebook handle) referred to me as a “crazy bitch” who “can do fine research”, in a conversation she had then with Rob Dielenberg, drawing Dielenberg’s attention to the Hanson letters which I had just shared publicly. Zoom in on the screenshot below to view Tiffany's reference to me in her conversation with Dielenberg:   I’d say it’s an interesting, albeit colorful endorsement, so I’m sharing it here. Lots of people have endorsements, and this is mine! I’m always happy to bring rare Bundy-related materials to a broader audience and I sure do like to see my research skills being praised! Tiffany Jean’s real name is Tiffany Gilman (publicly displayed online).

Bundy-related records from the King County Sheriff’s Office

  For the past several months the King County Sheriff’s Office Public Disclosure Unit has been sending me the installments of Bundy-related records that remain in-office, and I’m sharing them on Internet Archive. On my Internet Archive page I constantly post in depth/rare/valuable information related to Bundy. And I’ll keep uploading more KCSO records there in the coming months. For now, here are the installments of records that can be perused on my Internet Archive page: https://archive.org/details/2082717-82-162398-roll-43-1.jpg https://archive.org/details/untitled-01_202202 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-19-13a https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-17-12 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-12-13 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-14-5 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-16-4 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-13-1 https://archive.org/details/74-096644-roll-15-11 https://archive.org/details/2104446-bundy-slides-59.jpg All the i...

Ted Bundy on the relationship between mental illness and violent criminal behavior

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Ted Bundy reasoned along these lines: a murderer who manages to not get caught and who leaves very little in the way of clues, cannot be mentally ill, but a rational individual. Bundy discussed the issue of “mental illness” in the context of murder investigations, and more specifically in relation to the Green River murders, when he consulted with the King County Sheriff’s Office in the Green River case. In Bundy’s opinion, the distorted mental processes which underlay the Riverman’s violent behavior would appear, from the facts and circumstances of the case, which Bundy analyzed, to be as well integrated as they were hidden from the view of those around him. Bundy shared these views in a February 5, 1985 handwritten letter he sent to Dave Reichert, in reference to a mental patients printout that the detectives included in the data that was being analyzed at the time in the Green River investigation. The detectives were compiling various lists meant to help them identify the likeliest ...

A flag-waving "anonymous" person made some derogatory remarks about my Bundy-related content

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On March 18, a flag-waving anonymous person who stressed that he/she is a US citizen, left me a one-star (poor) review on my Internet Archive channel, deriding or pretending to deride the Bundy-related content published on my IA channel and accusing me of “theft”, but without providing evidence. He / she also wrote that I “only heard of Bundy when Zac Enron’s movie came out”... Here is the link to this one-star review: https://archive.org/details/bandicam-2021-09-28-04-22-42-514 And also my screenshot of the review: Flying the flag when giving a review to a Bundy research page hosted by Internet Archive, and being fixated on the researcher’s nationality, kind of gives accurate representation as to what kind of person has left the review. And on the same day, March 18, Youtube notified me that a “Lena Lena” left this other review to one of my videos: ... also writing that I wasn't "alive or knew Ted Bundy until Zac Efron released his film in 2019". Lena is the w...

Defense witnesses who aided and bolstered the State’s case against Bundy

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  “The commander must decide how he will fight the battle before it begins. He must then decide how he will use the military effort at his disposal to force the battle to swing the way he wishes it to go; he must make the enemy dance to his tune from the beginning and not vice versa.” - Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, "The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery", 1958       George Dekle, the prosecutor in the Kimberly Leach case, co-authored a book entitled “Cross-Examination Handbook: Persuasion, Strategies, and Techniques”, which I’m   sharing on Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/cross-examination-handbook-persuasion-strategies-and-techniques        The other authors of the book are William S. Bailey and Ronald H. Clark.       The chapter “The Ted Bundy Illustration - Concession-Seeking Cross” illuminates the context and circumstances in which Bundy’s prosecutors enjoyed a significant advantage o...

Ted Bundy’s unease at being looked at by strangers

Larry Peoples, former correctional officer at Florida State Prison, said in a 2019 interview that Bundy was a very quiet person who kept to himself and didn’t like to be looked at: “On the outside of the cell block, we had this catwalk, we called it... where people can walk down in case we’d have to fire tear gas or whatever, or get scolded by staff or whatever... And people would come in for tours at the prison, and the very first thing they wanted to see was Bundy, of course. So they would walk down the row and every time they walked down the row, Bundy would have a sheet up over his bars, because he didn’t want to be seen. And he would get angry and say, ‘look, I’m not an animal in a zoo, I don’t want you coming down here and looking at me! Why don’t you just turn around and go back!’... And he’d close the sheet, and that would be the end of that. So after a while, they just stopped taking the tours down there because he just kept putting the sheet up over his bars. So he was very...