Pen and Blood

Pen and Blood

  • Alan R Warren
Publisher:ISBN 13: 9781998680030ISBN 10: 1998680037

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Pen and Blood is written by Alan R Warren and published by . It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1998680037 (ISBN 10) and 9781998680030 (ISBN 13).

The third serial killer who is covered in this book is David Shearing, who murdered a family of six people while the family was camping with girls in British Columbia at Wells Gray Park, Canada, in August of 1982. All three of these murderers had the same primary focus, which was to sexually assault children before murdering them. All three of these murderers wanted to isolate their victims before committing their crimes against them. The one significant difference between Shearing, Brady, and Port was that he was willing to murder others to get to his primary victims, the children. These other victims, who were in the way of Shearing to get to the children, were just collateral damage to him. It didn't matter who they were or what they did. Shearing needed to get them out of the house to reach his chosen victims. When Shearing murdered other people to reach his primary targets, two young girls, for sexual assault purposes, all of these criminal acts are usually viewed as a continuous event. This also means that the deaths that occurred have a strong connection to the sexual assault and may even be a necessary part of his planned sexual assault. In legal terms, what's considered is the overall context of the crimes, not just the immediate cause of death. If it was Shearing's primary intention to assault the two young girls sexually, and he had to commit homicide to do it, then it is considered first-degree murder. Only in this particular case he would only be charged with second-degree murders in all six counts, as detectives had no evidence of how or when these murders took place. This would be the significant difference between Shearing's case and the other two. They all needed to act out their fantasy with the children while being alone, but Shearing was willing to murder the others who were with the children to complete his assault. But all three of these killers needed to do it while they were alone with the children. Another even more critical difference in the Shearing murder case is that, unlike Port and Brady, Shearing goes up for a chance to get parole every two years. Do we think that those who sexually assault children get cured while in prison?