Obsessed with True Crime discussion

This topic is about
In Plain Sight
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archive
>
Group read of In Plain Sight
message 51:
by
Fishface
(new)
-
rated it 3 stars
Jun 04, 2018 05:11PM

reply
|
flag
message 54:
by
Lady ♥ Belleza, Gif Princesa
(last edited Jun 05, 2018 07:52AM)
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Kathryn wrote: "That's the Whitaker case. So tragic. "
It took me until now to realize you were talking about the case I posted about. Duhhhhhh, my brain is frozen I think.
Now if I hear you wrote the book I'll just have to show myself out!
It took me until now to realize you were talking about the case I posted about. Duhhhhhh, my brain is frozen I think.
Now if I hear you wrote the book I'll just have to show myself out!

It took me until now to realize you were talking about the case I posted about. Duhhhhhh, my brain is frozen I think.
Now if I hear you wrot..."
No me, but I think there are a couple of books on the case, including one written by the dad.

I run into this. It's pretty funny. But sometimes it's the package, the charisma and the looks, and in person people find them irresistible while that doesn't come through in the photos. Ana Trujillo in POSSESSED is like that. People found Ana intoxicating, but in the photos - especially the later ones of her - she doesn't look at all beautiful.

I, personally, am thrilled to be reading about another multiple murderer nickn..."
There are others?

I think a lot of folks compare the descriptions and the photos. The last three books have had the photos scattered throughout rather than in a special section. Overall readers seem to like that.
Kathryn wrote: "Lady♥Belleza★✰ wrote: "Kathryn wrote: "That's the Whitaker case. So tragic. "
It took me until now to realize you were talking about the case I posted about. Duhhhhhh, my brain is frozen I think.
..."
Savage Son was the one I read. I found, interestingly enough, by looking at the footnotes in the wiki article.
It took me until now to realize you were talking about the case I posted about. Duhhhhhh, my brain is frozen I think.
..."
Savage Son was the one I read. I found, interestingly enough, by looking at the footnotes in the wiki article.

I, personally, am thrilled to be reading about another multip..."
Only one I know of. I followed his case because he got busted right in the town where I grew up. There's no book on him but here's his Murderpedia page:
http://murderpedia.org/male.A/a/armst...
They both go by Eric, too!
Kathryn wrote: "Corey Mitchell, right? Corey passed away years ago. Really sad."
I think I posted about that when it happened. Heart attack right?
I think I posted about that when it happened. Heart attack right?

I think I posted about that when it happened. Heart attack right?"
I had totally forgotten that Corey died.


***Possible spoiler alert***
Apparently she is not too bright. I have not seen her intelligence addressed but I'm not buying the excuse that it is her drug-addled brain. I'm about 220 pages in and he has just killed Mike and Cynthia so I'm guessing there is more to come about her.


This is all a bunch of rambling and I'm only about 200 or so pages in, so I guess I have plenty of time to form a concrete opinion.

Just finished the book. I would recommend you wait until you get to the end before you form an opinion about Kim. You might be surprised. I was expecting she would use the excuse of being under the influence of drugs to try to get off. Well...I wont say anymore...
On the subject of Kim's drug use...I was curious about how she kept on getting all the drugs. Was Eric getting them for her? It hardly seems like she had the ambition to go to the doctor and make up all the stories she would have to do to get that many drugs. In my experience as a nurse, it seems like it is getting harder and harder to get that many narcotics legitimately.


I think I posted about that when it happened. Heart attack right?"
Yes. Very sad. Corey did die of a heart attack.

There are issues in this books readers are going to have to decide for themselves about, like whether or not Eric was over-prosecuted for the computer monitors. Was he treated fairly? (Not that anything justifies his actions.) Another is Kim's role. I personally see her as part dupe, part victim, and part cheerleader. I don't know if Eric would have done this without her. He seems to have craved having an audience. What do you think?
As to the emails at the end: No one has solved the puzzle yet. Perhaps they're totally benign, some kind of game Eric played, but when I showed him those emails he sincerely blanched. He looked shocked. So I do wonder.


On the street you can get a year's supply of heroin for the same price as a small handful of Oxys or Percodans or whatever. Of course the heroin may have been cut with anything from rat poison to Drano, but we all have budgets to worry about.


Kathryn,
Your comment wondering if Eric would have done this without Kim and how he seemed to need an audience really seems right on target to me. I hadn’t considered that aspect of it before.
I still can’t see how she could hear the threats and not tamp it down
or take action, but Eric ultimately made the choice to kill. Thanks for your insight!

About the opioids: we're just coming out of a crazy phase in medical history when the common belief was thar you have a "right" to be pain-free at all times. When I was in college, a person in agonizing pain with 2 days to live still wouldn't be given opiates "because they might get addicted." Somehow the pendulum has swung all the way to doctors saying bat-crap-insane things like "if you're really in pain, you can't get addicted" and "I can tell you're not an addictive personality, so there's no danger." And now look where we are. Now that we're knee-deep in bodies they're finally startung to see the problem. But I think many, many MDs still don't realize that opioids inherently create dependency. Kim could just be a doctor-shopping painkiller seeker or she could just have one of those clueless doctors.

Thanks, Koren. Yes, the reviews are amazing. I'm truly grateful. Readers are just the coolest people. Thanks for reviewing, when you're ready.

She told me the drugs were all from one doctor, and that every time she complained about pain, he wrote a new prescription. It's interesting that she got off them with relative ease and now just takes an anti-inflammatory when she has a rough day. I do wonder if she hadn't been so sick and so addicted if she would have made better choices. She could truly have stopped Eric at any time. But perhaps she wouldn't have. You know, there is this whole thing about toxic couples, who perhaps wouldn't kill as individuals, but they become lethal together.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeon...


Thanks, Koren. Yes, this is a strange one.



There was a lot of talk about this when Dungeons and Dragons first came out -- well before the first violent video game, I think we were all still playing Pong in those days! -- and there have been several studies. None of them show any clear connection between real life violence and video-game or RPG violence. Everyone asks about it all over again when the newest Adam Lanza comes along. The truth may be simply that violent people are unlikely to enjoy Candy Crush as much as they enjoy Black Ops, but mainly because they were already violent people.

There was a lot of talk about this when Dungeons and Dragons first came out -- w..."
Good point.

Hi all. Sorry I haven’t been posting. Been sick since Friday and haven’t been doing much if anything but play video games and watch Netflix. Watching a docu-series about Michael Pererson. I have read a little of the book and am taking it with me to read on the subway so I should get back on track really soon.

Koren wrote: "I did a double take when I saw there is actually a town called White Settlement. Curious about how the town got its name I did a google search and found this article from the New York Times if anyo..."
THE STORY OF WHITE SETTLEMENT
THE STORY OF WHITE SETTLEMENT


There was a lot of talk about this when Dungeons and Dragons first came out -- w..."
I read some studies recently, and the conclusions were that children predisposed to being aggressive display increased aggression with exposure to violent video games. So it may be one of multiple factors. I think with Eric it was more the role playing that instilled this duplicity in him. He was one thing on the outside, but had this secret personality he hid from most people.


Do you suppose that's why the courts went after him so big in the first place? So much of the legal system, in spite of all the rules and regs, is about your public image and the way people see you.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.