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Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories
Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories
Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories
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Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories

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It doesn't matter who does the killing or why, Murder's Always Murder!

 

A woman accepts a ride from a truck driver in Pennsylvania, a teenager hops into a blue Chevy pickup truck for a ride home from school on a hot day in North Carolina, while in Denver, a woman and her boyfriend take their new dog for a walk.

 

These three innocent decisions prove fatal.

 

Murder's Always Murder.

 

And that's just the first of more than 60 Shocking True Crime Stories waiting for true crime aficionados like you. For instance, there's the story of a man who wanted to serve his neighbor's almost-beating heart with fried potatoes to his family. Needed to "release the demons," he said.

 

Serial killers, serial rapists, teenagers who are planning massacres, bank robbers, stone-cold who-done-its, and the victims of these heinous crimes; you'll read about them all in Murder's Always Murder.

 

And, then there's the story of a woman who believes she's receiving threatening messages written in her jailhouse peanut butter. 

 

There are more shocking true crime stories like The Denver Suitcase Killer, Scottsdale's Torso Killer, Boiling Mommy's Head, and Poisoned at Church.

 

Let's not forget the Martial Arts Momma, who discovered a delivery driver taking a dump in her backyard garden, or France's most prolific serial killer, The Ogre of Ardennes.

 

There's also an encounter between one of the author's ancestors and none other than the infamous Wild West outlaw, Butch Cassidy.

 

And, you'll wrap it all up by reading a warning about Your Brain on True Crime.

 

 Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories that you'll never forget.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRod Kackley
Release dateMar 30, 2021
ISBN9781393330875
Murder's Always Murder: Shocking True Crime Stories
Author

Rod Kackley

It’s all about the story, as far as Rod Kackley is concerned. Whether it’s Shocking True Crime Stories or one of his many works of fiction. Rod wants to keep you turning pages and reading incredible tales of criminals, their victims, and their capture. Spoiler alert: No matter how long it takes, the bad guys rarely win. But it’s the criminal who is often the most compelling character. That’s true whether it’s “Mommy Deadliest,” the story of a woman who kills her children, or “The Murder of Thora Chamberlain,” the story of a teenage girl and her kidnapper. In Rod’s world of fiction, he spins yarns about “The Coffee Shoppe Killer, a woman who kills her lovers when they disappoint her. A teenage girl wraps a serial killer around her finger in “Go Big or Go Dead.” Then there’s “The Murder of Emma Brown,” where two young women go out to party one night, and one only returns home. Written in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Rod’s books and stories allow his readers to brush up against the world of crime without getting hurt. And it’s a heck of a ride!

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    Book preview

    Murder's Always Murder - Rod Kackley

    The Murder of Isabella Thallas

    MICHAEL CLOSE WAS BEHIND the wheel of his black Mercedes SUV careening through the streets of Denver. The man had substance abuse problems — he drank far too much, too often — and an undiagnosed personality disorder.

    But he’d never had any trouble with the police. There was not one single arrest on his record. Hell, Michael didn’t even have a history with the Denver P.D.

    That changed today, just before noon.

    It was 11:40 A.M.to be exact. Michael heard a man by the name of Darian Simon outside his ground-floor apartment telling a dog to dump its load.

    Just go poop, the man said. Then, the woman who was with  the dog walker, Isabella Thallas, said it too, Just go poop, baby. Again. And again.

    For some reason, Michael, who had been on edge all morning, snapped.

    He’d been waiting for a friend to take him to a therapist. Michael’s skin had crawled as he waited for his friend, thinking about sitting across from a stranger, talking about the way he’d been abused as a child, what his parents had done to him.

    He hadn’t eaten a thing today and not much last night.

    Michael opened his window and hollered, Are you going to train that f—-king dog or just yell at it?

    Actually, Michael wasn’t just yelling; he was holding a rifle. The people outside didn’t look at him. A man and a woman, both in their twenties, Michael figured. If they had glanced his way. They might have seen the business end of the rifle pointed at them.

    They might have run.

    She might have lived.

    But they were focused on the dog. The dog that still hadn’t pooped.

    Michael couldn’t take it. He squeezed the trigger.

    Not once. Not twice. But twenty-four times. Michael fired twenty-four rounds at the couple. Both of them went down.

    Michael froze. He felt like he stared at the scene outside his window for an hour. But it was only moments. He carried the rifle and ran outside. To the garage. To his Mercedes. All he could think about was getting away as fast and as far as possible.

    Driving through Denver, Michael called his girlfriend, Chelsea Thompson. He had to explain what had happened. Michael needed to apologize. And, he had to say goodbye to Chelsea.

    What are you talking about? Chelsea said. She was even more frantic than Michael because, on top of the fear coursing through her emotional highway, Chelsea was trying to figure out what the hell Michael was talking about.

    You shot two people. You are kidding, right? No. You’re not. Oh, My God! Michael.

    Chelsea had to see for herself. Maybe Michael was hallucinating. He couldn’t have actually shot and killed two people. She knew he had problems. God, she knew that only too well. And yes, Chelsea had seen the rifle. She knew Michael kept the damn thing loaded. Hell, he’d had an arsenal of weapons in that damn apartment. And she knew he’d been drinking and getting back into cocaine, too.

    But, still, she could not, Chelsea would not, believe it until she saw this for herself.

    So, she drove as fast as possible to Michael’s apartment building. Chelsea had to pull over for an ambulance speeding the other way, its lights flashing, and siren wailing. Oh, My God.

    Arriving in minutes, stomping on the brake, slamming the transmission into Park, suddenly Chelsea couldn’t breathe. Time froze.

    She threw up in her mouth and swallowed it back down.

    Cops were everywhere, both uniformed officers and plainclothes detectives. Crime scene tape was up. A lonely yellow tarp was stretched out over the ground. Police were looking under it.

    Oh, My God.

    Two people got shot, a man said as he glanced at Chelsea, the newest on the scene.

    I heard the woman who got hit is dead. The guy she was with will live, said another on the public’s side of the yellow tape.

    Chelsea stood by her car, crying. She couldn’t move. That attracted a police officer’s attention, a woman, who approached Chelsea slowly and asked quietly if anything was wrong.

    That’s all it took. Once Chelsea started talking, she didn’t stop.

    The officer, listening, glanced at a detective, and motioned him to join her.

    Chelsea pointed to the window of Michael’s apartment. Two detectives now were talking to her. Both looked at the apartment window and, knowing that’s where the gunfire originated, took Chelsea to a squad car.

    Inside, sitting in the front seat, listening to the squawking police radio, unable to take her eyes off the colossal shotgun locked to the dashboard, Chelsea gave the detective Michael’s cellphone number. With that, they were able to find him.

    Detective Joseph Trujillo would testify days later that Michael was crying when Jefferson County Sheriff’s deputies arrested him in Pine Junction. The deputies found a rifle and a handgun on Michael’s car floor when they stopped him on Highway 285.

    Michael offered no resistance as he was taken into custody for, among other charges, first-degree murder for the death of the woman who was gunned down two days after her 21st birthday.

    Said Detective Trujillo, He just kept apologizing, over and over, again.

    A month later, Isabella’s mother led a group of friends and neighbors in a renovation of the park near where her daughter died. They also painted a mural of Isabella’s face on a nearby wall.

    Isabella’s mom, Ana, said, looking at the painting of her daughter by a local artist who goes by the name, Detour, I know that her energy and her soul and everything about her and the people that love her the most are all right here.

    March 8, 2021, Michael pled not guilty by reason of insanity.

    Serve Her Heart with Fried Potatoes

    MAYBE LEON PYE WAS worried when he heard a knock at the door of his Chickasha, Oklahoma, home.

    Who's that? Leon probably said to his wife, Delsei.

    She might have shrugged and held their granddaughter, Kaeos Yates, a bit tighter, a little closer.

    After all, nobody got many unexpected visitors these days, what, with the pandemic and its lockdowns. Everybody stayed closed to their knitting.

    But, still, it would be worse than impolite to just leave whoever was out there, out there. So, Leon slowly opened the door.

    And he had to be shocked when he realized who'd come knocking.

    It was none other than his forty-two-year-old nephew, Lawrence Paul Anderson.

    Lawrence, how'd you get out of prison?

    Last Leon had heard, Lawrence was doing a twenty-year sentence for a drug conviction and other related crimes. No surprise to anyone who'd taken the time to read Lawrence's rap sheet. And then there were Lawrence's mental health problems.

    Leon looked back over his shoulder at Delsei. Both of them just smelled trouble brewing.

    After all, how the hell could Lawrence be standing on their porch? Wasn't the system supposed to tell the Pye's when Lawrence got out, so they'd be ready for the trouble that just naturally came with somebody who naturally got into trouble?

    Well, nobody had bothered to tell Leon and Delsei

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