#Robert Ben Rhoades
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randomnessreloaded · 2 months ago
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Robert Ben Rhoades, also known as the Truck Stop Killer, was a sadistic serial killer who hunted victims along America's highways in his torture chamber on wheels. His terrifying crimes, psychological manipulation, and shocking arrest make this one of the most disturbing true crime cases ever recorded. Watch this chilling deep dive into the mind of a predator who turned the open road into a nightmare.
🔔 Subscribe for more spine-chilling true crime stories!
#TrueCrime #SerialKiller #TruckStopKiller #RobertBenRhoades #CrimeDocumentary #HorrorStories #UnsolvedMysteries #KillerTruckDriver #CrimeAnalysis #MurderMystery
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heart-prototype · 5 months ago
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Today I had a stream of curious dreams about a bunch of potential comic ideas. From the point where I was watching a movie in a dingy bar: the movie was a thriller and it had two scenes referencing well known last photos of people. One was of Joe Rogan (lol) before being murdered (double lol, I don't hate Joe Rogan if you wonder) and the other was the actually existing last photo of Regina Kay Walters before being murdered by serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades.
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I thought the references were very smart and wanted to put them in Carnality of Heart. Then it turned out I was actually a black-haired girl who moved to Japan with stereotypical weaboo dreams, but ended up working in this dingy fast-food bar, where her female boss, a disgusting old hag with a buzzcut, raped her on a stove, while she coped with it imagining her boss is showing her off to customers. The story turned up to be told from the perspective of a young PE teacher in high school and a student he was friends with. The student was gay and had a crush on the girl's effeminate brother (who apparently also moved to Japan with her and went to the same school). When I was briefly waking up before returning to sleep, I was planning on abandoning all the other comics I work on for a while and making this dream into a comic I was going to name Weaboo.
Well, I certainly don't plan on doing so, but I liked the idea of referencing well-known creepy photos in Carnality of Heart. With the respect to the victims, there are many memorable true crime images that remain haunting every time I look at them, like the Regina Kay Walters photo or the young John Doe next to Dean Corll's torture toolbox.
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True crime has been a huge inspiration for my works for the longest time, so I may end up using these in scenes of horror in the future. There's no bigger horror than human evil, after all.
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mirandamckenni1 · 2 years ago
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fridaythe13ththeseries · 2 years ago
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Hate on Your Dial
Episode Recap #59: Hate on Your Dial Original Airdate: November 18, 1989
Starring: Louise Robey as Micki Foster Steve Monarque as Johnny Ventura (as Steven Monarque) Chris Wiggins as Jack Marshak
Guest cast: Michael Rhoades as Ray Pierce Vlasta Vrana as Sheriff Robert A. Silverman as Archie Pierce (as Robert Silverman) Melanie Miller as Margaret Pierce Martin Doyle as Steve Pierce Henry Czerny as Joe Nelson Richard Mills as Elliot Marc Gomes as Henry Emmett Gene Mack as Ben Wilten Jackie Richardson as Frances Jan Taylor Hendricks as Waitress / Edna (as Jan Waterhouse) Jamie Near as Young Archie
Written by Nancy Ann Miller Directed by Allan Eastman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It is night time and we are at a modest home. Mr. Sandman on the radio. Two men in a garage cleaning an old car. They are brothers, Ray and Archie. Ray appears to be older and have special needs. His brother teases him. Their old mother comes into the garage with coffee. She doesn't like them reminiscing and leaves. Archie reads the date (May 17, 1954) on the photo, and Ray says it was "Black Monday" when "white folks got in trouble" and their daddy had "no choice."
Just then a little boy named Elliot shows up, admiring the car. Archie is happy to see him, but racist Ray reacts badly, knocking the fundraising candy out of the boy's hands. He pulls a screwdriver on Elliot, then shoves him, causing his engine parts to scatter. Ray gets even madder and pulls a shotgun off the wall, to frighten Elliot, who runs off. Ray says he'll get him another time.
Cut to credits.
Curious Goods, and a woman has brought a box of old items to the store for an appraisal. Johnny doesn't know what to offer, but they settle on $25 for the box. She leaves as Archie enters. He is browsing for a gift for his brother. Johnny takes a car radio out of the box he just bought and Archie identifies it as from a '54 Chevy. He says him and Ray have their daddy's '54 Chevy and Ray is always working on it. He wants to buy the radio, but he doesn't think he can afford it. Johnny gives him a good deal on it.
Next we are back in the garage, and Ray is finishing installing the radio his brother gifted him, saying it will now be just like when their daddy had it. But Archie says their father never drove it much, he went away cause he killed a man. Ray says the man was a "colored sharecropper" and thinks a black lawyer who got some mystery witness was the reason their dad got executed. Archie tells Ray he doesn't like how racist he is, especially to his friend Elliot. Ray says Archie may be slow, but he doesn't have to be stupid. He pulls out a photo album of their father in full KKK gear, and crosses they had burned. Ray obviously idolizes this time in history and his father's role in it.
At the store, Johnny is cleaning when Micki comes in. She says Jack's flight has been delayed a couple of hours. Johnny tells her about the car radio he bought and then quickly sold. Micki, already anticipating the answer, asks if he checked the manifest first. As she checks she finds a '54 Chevy radio listed. Johnny can't believe it and Micki seems to cut him some slack, but then Jack arrives home. From the looks on their faces, he knows it's bad news. Johnny says what he did, and Jack is frustrated at him. But Johnny remembers the car wash logo on Archie's shirt. Johnny and Micki head out, but Johnny stops to apologize again to Jack, who is clearly ticked off.
Next, we see Elliot playing alone at a basketball court. Ray pulls up in the old Chevy, clearly drinking as well. He gets out with his bottle, taunting Elliot, who doesn't trust him. Ray pulls a gun and shoots the hoop, then at Elliot's feet. Ray continues his racist rant, scaring Elliot as he waves his gun, shooting. Elliot is panicked and falls as Ray shoots again, this time hitting the kid. Ray touches him, gets blood on his hand and at the sound of police sirens, takes off.
Driving away, he is nervous and goes to turn on the car radio, getting Elliot's blood on the dials. This activates the curse, and the radio glows, then it envelops the car in a blinding light. Suddenly, Ray and the Chevy are in black and white, having traveled back in time. The radio says it is night in Mississippi as Ray cruises the streets, surprised. He stops the car and checks a newspaper, happy to realize where and when he is.
He goes in to a diner. He asks about his parents, and as the waitress gives directions, the place falls silent as a black man enters. He just wants to buy a loaf of bread, but the racist waitress refuses, telling him to go. He makes the mistake of grabbing her arm, and a man stands up, calling him "boy". He confronts the man, continuing the racist bull, even slapping the man. Fed up, the black man picks up the other and slams him in to a table, but the other man present gang up on him. Ray, who is loving all of this, hits the man himself until the sheriff arrives and pulls him off. He tells the black man to go, and merely chastises the group, Ray included. Another man introduces himself to Ray and buy him a shake.
Jack is still researching the radio when Micki and Johnny come back. They found where Archie works, but he won't be back until Monday. They also learned his name and that he has a brother, which further irritates Jack. Johnny tells him to rip his head off, but Jack is still snippy. Micki is shocked, Johnny says he look for it himself, but Jack calls out. He says he isn't angry with Johnny, just their situation, and that they done the same thing he did. Johnny says it all just keeps on happening.
Back to the past and Ray and his new friend are walking. Ray loves how "pure" the place feels and warns the other man things will change, going into yet another racist rant. He takes Ray to a meeting of men at a house. These men are already mad about the Supreme Court decision and think "their" colored people aren't unhappy and know their place. Ray realizes the man is his father when his wife comes in and recognizes his mother, pregnant with himself. Archie is there too, a young boy. Ray is introduced to his father and told what happened in the diner. He's invited along on their mission that night.
In the present, Johnny and Micki arrive and see Archie with his mother. Johnny says he wants to buy back the radio, but Archie says it's already in the car, and their mom says he's out driving and sometimes isn't back for days. They leave their card with Archie and leave, but decide to wait outside for Ray to return.
In the past, the men are in full KKK robes and burning a cross and an effigy of a judge to protest the end of segregation. They head off to teach the black man a lesson. Ray realizes what is about to happen is what got his father executed and tries to warn the men. But they say they'll kill the lawyer, too. Ray says they have to make sure they kill the woman who was a witness, too. The men agree, too amped up to understand what Ray's saying.
Later, they are dragging the black man, Ben Wilten, to a barn, his hands tied up and hooked up so they can beat him and lash him with a whip, just for touching the waitress. His hands get loose and he is able to hit the mask off, revealing the face of one man, and he is beaten more for that. He collapses and is whipped again.
Jack arrives at Micki and Johnny's stakeout with some food. He says he found some clippings Lewis had from 1954, and is thinking time travel.
Back in '54, the men are all hyped up from their attack, Ray included. He thinks maybe he changed things in his father's favor. They all drive off. As Ray drives, he notices Elliot's blood still on the radio. He wipes it off and him and the car are transported back to the present. Micki and the guys see his happen. Ray is pissed, pulling into his garage. Jack thinks Ray just came from the past.
Inside, Ray tells Archie to be quiet and asks his mother where his father is, hoping he changed things. But she says Mississippi hung him. Jack eavesdrops while Micki and Johnny attempt to slip into the garage. Ray says there was no witness back then, but he can't understand why their daddy didn't survive. Ray looks in the old album to see what the lawyer from back then looked like, so he can try again to change the past. Archie tries to talk to his brother, but Ray heads outside.
Micki sees Ray coming and her and Johnny hide. Archie keeps trying to get his brother's attention, but Ray ignores him and heads into the garage, saying he needs to kill another of his little black friends, shoving Archie, who realizes his brother killed Elliot. He grabs a hammer, but Ray takes it. Johnny and Micki try to get in as Ray beats his brother with the hammer. Johnny and Jack try to stop Ray as Micki goes to Archie. Ray jumps in the Chevy and wipes his brother's blood on the radio. It begins to glow and is transported back to Mississippi in 1954, this time with Ray, Johnny and Jack. Ray speeds off, leaving them in the road.
Ray goes to his parent's house, trying to warn his father to get out of town. His mother and Archie are their, and she listens as Ray tells them about the judge and what's going to happen. As Ray continues to try and get through to his father, Archie starts repeating over and over "Daddy killed a Negro." Ray tells his father this all going to ruin him unless they get the clan together to kill the lawyer. The man agrees and Ray goes to find the lawyer. Archie continues ranting and his father hits him hard, his mother too late to help.
Jack and Johnny are shocked to be in 1954, but Jack thinks Ray wants to change his father's fate. They see a commotion at the courthouse, townsfolk angry about the lawyer here to get justice for the murder of the sharecropper, Ben Wilton. The sheriff arrives to break things up. The lawyer, Henry Emmet, and he wants the sheriff to arrest the clan. But the sheriff wants him to have some witness or there is no case, but then goes on to threaten this supposed witness. Things break up, Johnny is shocked by this, but Jack says the present isn't much better.
Jack goes to speak to the lawyer, but the man and his friends are understandably wary. Jack tries to warn them about the men in town, and that his life is in jeopardy. But Emmet thinks Jack's warnings are really veiled threats. Jack is speechless.
In the present, Micki is telling the cops as much as she is able about Ray's disappearance after killing Archie. She tries to comfort the mother, who says she knew something like this would happen.
In the past, we see the mother comforting a hurt Archie. Ray arrives looking for his father, but she says he's at work. He is happy to have found the lawyer, but she isn't happy. She doesn't seem to carry the racism like her husband, and Ray. He asks what's up with Archie and she says his daddy hits him, and one day it will be too much.
Jack finds Johnny, who says he'll need a screwdriver to get the radio out. Jack says no, it is their only way home. They need to stop Ray before heading back. Johnny has the album from the car, and Jack recognizes some of the men from town. He takes off.
Later, after having shown the sheriff the album and identifying the man who killed Ben, Jack is surprised the sheriff doesn't head right off to arrest him. Jack then sees the clan dragging the lawyer into a car and goes to help, but is tossed into the car, too. The clan speed off.
In a field, with another cross on fire, the men in robes arrive and drag Jack and Emmet out. The grand dragon tells the others they also have a spy in their midst, who has been lying to them about helping. Johnny slips out of the trunk of Ray's Chevy. The spy is identified as Ray, who the man thinks is their to turn them in to the FBI. Ray is tied up as he protests.
Johnny hotwires the Chevy, turns it on and drives toward the group, causing them to scatter. He jumps out and shoots off the shotgun, and Jack tells Emmet they need to get in the car. Johnny again shoots the gun, stopping one of the men so they can drive off. The clan decides to deal with things here first, and tie up Ray and his friend from the diner, thinking they are traitors. They light the men on fire as Ray begs his daddy for help. As Ray burns, his father realizes the witness must be his wife.
After dropping Emmet off, Johnny and Jack drive the Chevy to where they arrived in the past. Johnny wipes the blood off the radio. The car glows and they go back to the present, appearing in front of Micki and the mother of Archie and Ray, who realizes both her sons are gone.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My thoughts:
Heavy, to say the least. I wrote a huge summary because it felt wrong to leave off details here. But I hated writing so much of Ray's racist nonsense. Just felt so skeevy doing it. I can't fathom how a person could think that way about other people.
But Jack is right. Johnny calls the past bad, Jack says the present isn't much better, and here we are another 30 something years even from that and there are still monsters among us.
The time travel radio is cool, but the usage is so dark. Poor Elliot. Kid did literally nothing wrong, and Ray hated him. Sad, to say the least.
And Archie, too. I'm actually surprised his mother let Ray stay with them, when we find out she was the one who told about her husband in the past. I guess she ended up relying on Ray, but I'm surprised she didn't snap before then.
Weird how Ray's prophetic information was just laughed at by the clan. I would think the other men would have thought he was insane. And how shocked was the sheriff by the album when Jack brought it in. And who was taking the photos at those clan burnings?
I like how Micki was easy to cut Johnny some slack about the radio. Her and Ryan sold a ton of antiques when they first got to the store. But it made sense that Jack would be ticked off, at least at first. Johnny learned a lesson here, for sure.
Near the end, when the father had the thought of his wife being the witness, I thought we were going to see that the future had changed, but it apparently went no where. Odd to include that, then.
Dark episode. But kudos for the show in taking it on.
Next week: Night Prey
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kwebtv · 5 years ago
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Billions  -  Showtime  -  January 17, 2016 -  Present
Drama (45 episodes to date)
Running time:  60 minutes
Stars:
Paul Giamatti as Charles "Chuck" Rhoades, Jr
Damian Lewis as Robert "Bobby" Axelrod
Maggie Siff as Wendy Rhoades
Malin Åkerman as Lara Axelrod
Toby Leonard Moore as Bryan Connerty
David Costabile as Mike "Wags" Wagner
Condola Rashād as Kate Sacker
Asia Kate Dillon as Taylor Amber Mason (recurring season 2, starring season 3–)
Jeffrey DeMunn as Charles Rhoades, Sr. (recurring season 1–2, starring season 3–)
Kelly AuCoin as "Dollar" Bill Stern (recurring season 1–3, starring season 4–)
Recurring
Dan Soder as Dudley Mafee
Malachi Weir as Lonnie Watley
Terry Kinney as Hall
Glenn Fleshler as Orrin Bach
Stephen Kunken as Ari Spyros
Nathan Darrow as Mick Danzig
Ben Shenkman as Ira Schirmer
Sam Gilroy as Michael Dimonda
Dennis Boutsikaris as Kenneth Malverne
Jerry O'Connell as Steven Birch
Christopher Denham as Oliver Dake
Daniel K. Isaac as Ben Kim
Rob Morrow as Judge Adam DeGiulio
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morbidological · 5 years ago
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DRIVEN TO KILL - Full Episode| Morbidological
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weirdletter · 6 years ago
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Shallow Waters Vol.1: A Flash Fiction Anthology, edited by Joe Mynhardt, Crystal Lake Publishing, 2019. Cover art by Ben Baldwin, info: crystallakepub.com.
Shallow Waters—where nothing stays buried. With twenty-two dark tales diving beneath the surface of loss, love, and life. Shallow Waters is the official monthly flash fiction challenge hosted by the award-winning Crystal Lake Publishing. Every month a new challenge is posted online, with authors submitting via email. The best submissions are then posted on Crystal Lake’s Patreon page, where patrons read daily entries and vote for the winner. What you’ll find in these Shallow Waters anthologies include the most popular of our finalists. Volume one includes horror, thrillers, suspense, and stories of love lost, death, 2nd chances, the monsters within, and the beauty beneath it all.
Contents: Introduction by Joe Mynhardt “Closure on a Bed of Nails” by Chad Lutzke “Fast Car” by Tracy Fahey “Tears of Buddy” by Patrick R. McDonough “Puzzle Pieces” by Armand Rosamilia “Pretty Like Butterflies” by Tim Waggoner “S1:E7” by Robert Ford “Pain is Your Teacher” by Michael Harris Cohen “Memory Lane” by Red Lagoe “The Silence of the Sirens” by Loren Rhoads “It’s Me Not You” by Jonathan Winn “Sisters of Loss” by Mark Allan Gunnells “Talisman” by Jezzy Wolfe “The Melting of Your Gods” by Mercedes M. Yardley “Charms” by Dino Parenti “Not Your Average Monster” by Kenneth W. Cain “Where the Children Run in Darkness” by Guy Medley “Tunnels” by Tom Over (winner) “The Truth about Dani” by Joe Mercer “Baby Savannah” by M.J. Sydney “Rats Scratched in the Linen Cupboard” by Dani Brown “Raining” by John Boden “The Death Experience” by L.A. Story
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mirandamckenni1 · 2 years ago
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Liked on YouTube: What's The Largest Sofa That Can Fit Around a Corner? || https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUNl_jJMTOw || Sign up to Brilliant to receive a 20% discount with this link! https://ift.tt/fxTdsP1 Recommended course: Advanced Geometry Puzzles https://ift.tt/c7rtFuM Mathematica Notebook and animations can be found at the bottom of Dan Romik's page https://ift.tt/09fThq4 And more here by Simon Mackenzie https://ift.tt/uSIcyba Hi! I'm Jade. If you'd like to consider supporting Up and Atom, head over to my Patreon page :) https://ift.tt/mPxuqTl Visit the Up and Atom store https://ift.tt/n9WdYkz Subscribe to Up and Atom for physics, math and computer science videos https://www.youtube.com/c/upandatom For a one time donation, head over to my PayPal :) https://ift.tt/dawZnH2 *A big thank you to my AMAZING PATRONS!* Jonathan Koppelman, Michael Seydel, Cy 'kkm' K'Nelson, Thorsten Auth, Chris Flynn, Tim Barnard, AndrewA, Izzy Ca, Millennial Glacier, Richard O McEwen Jr, Scott Ready, John H. Austin, Jr., Brian Wilkins, Thomas V Lohmeier, David Johnston, Thomas Krause, Lynn Shackelford, Ave Eva Thornton, Andrew Pann, Anne Tan, David Tuman, Richard Rensman, Larry Nixon, Ben Mitchell, Steve Archer, Luna, Viktor Lazarevich, Tyler Simms, Michael Geer, James Mahoney, Jim Felich, Fabio Manzini, Jeremy, Sam Richardson, Robin High, KiYun Roe, Christopher Rhoades, DONALD McLeod, Ron Hochsprung, Aria Bend, James Matheson, Kevin Anderson, Alexander230, Tim Ludwig, Alexander Del Toro Barba, Justin Smith, A. Duncan, Mark Littlehale, Tony T Flores, Dagmawi Elehu, Jeffrey Smith, Alex Hackman, bpatb, Paul Barclay, 12tone, Sergey Ten, Damien Holloway, John Lakeman, Jana Christine Saout, Jeff Schwarz, Yana Chernobilsky, Louis Mashado, Michael Dean, Chris Amaris, Matt G, Dag-Erling Smørgrav, John Shioli, Todd Loreman, Susan Jones, Antony Birch, Paul Bunbury, Kent Arimura, Phillip Rhodes, Michael Nugent, James N Smith, Roland Gibson, Joe McTee, Dean Fantastic, Bernard Pang, Oleg Dats, John Spalding, Simon J. Dodd, Tang Chun, Michelle, William Toffey, Michel Speiser, Rigid Designator, James Horsley, Brian Williams, Craig Tumblison, Cameron Tacklind, 之元 丁, Kevin Chi, Lance Ahmu, Tim Cheseborough, Markus Lindström, Steve Watson, Midnight Skeptic, Dexter Scott, Potch, Indrajeet Sagar, Markus Herrmann (trekkie22), Gil Chesterton, Alipasha Sadri, Pablo de Caffe, Taylor Hornby, Mark Fisher, Emily, Colin Byrne, Nick H, Jesper de Jong, Loren Hart, Sofia Fredriksson, Phat Hoang, Spuddy, Sascha Bohemia, tesseract, Stephen Britt, KG, Hansjuerg Widmer, John Sigwald, O C, Carlos Gonzalez, Res, Thomas Kägi, James Palermo, Chris Teubert, Fran, Christopher Milton, Robert J Frey, Wolfgang Ripken, Jeremy Bowkett, Vincent Karpinski, Nicolas Frias, Louis M, kadhonn, Moose Thompson, Rick DeWitt, Andrew, Pedro Paulo Vezza Campos, S, Rebecca Lashua, Pat Gunn, George Fletcher, RobF, Vincent Seguin, Shawn, Israel Shirk, Jesse Clark, Steven Wheeler, Philip Freeman, Jareth Arnold, Simon Barker, Lou, and Simon Dargaville. Chapters 0:00 The Moving Sofa Problem 2:06 Hammersley's sofa 3:15 Gerver's Sofa 3:55 Why is it so hard? 5:34 How Gerver came up with his sofa 9:50 Thank you Brilliant! 11:23 Will you find a bigger sofa? Creator - Jade Tan-Holmes Script - Alexander Berkes Animations - Daniel Kouts and Simon Mackenzie Music - epidemicsound.com
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killermovespodcast · 2 years ago
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Our upcoming podcast will focus on Robert Ben Rhoades, the Truck Stop Killer. Robert Ben Rhoades is suspected of raping and murdering more than 50 women over a 15-year period in the 70’s and 80’s as he road his semi-truck up and down the highways trolling for victims. Rhoades may have picked his sadistic tendancies up from his father, who molested a 12-year-old girl and killed himself before he could be put on trial. #truckstopkiller #robertbenrhoades #yallstaysafeoutthere #letsgetintoit #kmp #killermovespodcast #crimecon #truecrime #truecrimecommunity @buzzsprout @applepodcasts @patreon @spotify @googlepodcasts @amazonmusic @iheartradio @podchaser @podcastaddict (at Council Bluffs, Iowa) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpeJ32_MJLg/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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truecrimeguru · 6 years ago
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Phillip Jablonski serial killer dubbed the “Deadly Urges” killer. Approximately 8" x 10" painting of a serial killer, Robert Ben Rhoades. Titled on the top right, Robert Ben Rhoades (sic) and hand signed on the front, Carl Phillip Jablonski San Quentin Death Row. Hand signed again on the back, Phillip Carl Jablonski San Quentin Death Row. https://www.instagram.com/p/BvpQgzglKmFaO5RmoRg-3uWHTExamkOcWDpYzA0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=p4am8cijwvkc
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longform · 5 years ago
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When she was a 15-year-old runaway, the writer was nearly killed by a truck driver. Twenty-seven years later, she investigates whether her attacker was truck stop serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades, who often kept his victims chained in the back of his truck for weeks before killing and dumping them.
Vanessa Veselka | GQ | Oct 2012
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thegreatwordologist · 7 years ago
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A Recent Realization
Most of my life, I’ve heard the statement that “people think in pictures” and taken it as fact.  I’ve never really questioned it, or argued against it, and I’m not sure I would even now.  But mostly I just never really sat down and thought about it, because so much of the rest of my life has been such a mask that it was just one more part.
You see, I don’t think in pictures.  Often even when I have access to visuals, they don’t pop up in my head.  And I only really realized this thanks to a true crime podcast. 
To make a short story long, the podcast “All Crime No Cattle” was doing a piece on Robert Ben Rhoades - a Texas serial killer I only knew of vaguely.  But I’d seen a heartbreaking picture of one of his victims, and when they started to describe the victim, I could see that picture in my mind’s eye just as clear as if I had the image right there in front of me spread across my dash (because I was driving at the time.)  
I marveled over this strange feeling, and how good it felt to know I could so immediately recall something so visual, and it stuck with me for a few days.  And so I started trying to dissect it.  And I started to realize that it stuck with me so hard because it hadn’t ever really happened to me before.  I can quote lines from movies.  I can recognize voices pretty damn well.  But visuals just aren’t a thing for me.
And then I started to remember all the times I’d lied about it when people asked.  And I didn’t even really have to lie about it, but people would just ask me what I saw when I thought of X, Y, or Z, and I’d make something up.  And I thought of writing teachers and mentors who would tell me that you have to see what you’re describing in order to describe it well.  So I’d hide that I didn’t see things, and I’d avoid writing things like fight scenes because I can’t visualize them.  
And that led to another realization:  I like reading and writing the fics I do precisely because they’re character and emotion-driven, and I relate best to that.  I may not always understand the emotions, but they make sense in a way that visuals just... don’t.
But it’s more than that, because when I went to my daughter, who draws and paints, and talked with her about it, she revealed to me that she has the same problem with creativity.  Like me, she doesn’t visualize anything.
Now all this rambling has a point, so please listen up, because it’s something I wish someone had told me about 35 years ago or so:  You don’t have to see a picture in your head to be creative.  You don’t have to see what you’re describing in order to write well, and you don’t have to see a picture in order to create beautiful artwork.  It might be a little harder for you than for people who can see.  I dunno, because it’s a struggle for me to write, but that’s often just as much because my brain is a fucking asshole that likes to mess with me.  It might be different for you.
But just because others say, “people think in pictures” and you don’t?  You’re not broken, and you’re not some sort of freak.  There’s someone else out there like you.
<3
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foxdeal951 · 4 years ago
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Serial Killer Crime Scene Images
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VINTAGE CRIME SCENE PHOTOS DEATH IN THE 1930s and 1940s. MOREAlbert Fish, 1934 NYC, Mob hit, 1936 NYC, Mob related, 1937 Jumped out of a car, 1938 NYC, Murder victim, 1940 NYC jumper, 1941 1947. This picture was taken by serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades. 14-year-old Regina Kay Walters was one of the numerous women held in an 18-wheeler equipped with a torture chamber in the back. The photo was taken in an abandoned Illinois barn, where Rhoades killed Walters after cutting off her hair and making her wear a black dress and heels.
Gainesville Serial Killer Crime Scene Photos
Green River Serial Killer Crime Scene Photos
Crime Scene Pictures
Chillling final photos of murder victims taken by their killers.
Last minutes of the victim’s agony perpetuated forever on pictures.
Frank Scherschel/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images Curiosity-seekers peer through a window into the house of serial killer Ed Gein in Plainfield, Wisconsin. The bright lighting in the side ground floor window is part of the illumination for the on-site crime lab.
The Moors murderers were British serial killing duo Ian Brady and Myra Hindley who killed five children between 1963 and 1965. Three of the bodies were buried in graves dug on Saddleworth Moor near Manchester. Pictured above with the twisted couple is Hindley’s younger sister, Maureen, who was unaware of the couple’s hidden evil. When Maureen was a teenager, she fell in love with.
Harvey Glatman
Harvey Glatman was an American serial killer. He exhibited his antisocial behavior and sadomasochistic sexual tendencies from an early age. Media quickly nicknamed him 'The Lonely Hearts Killer'. Glatman started when he moved to Los Angeles, where he posed as a professional photographer to lure girls into his hotel room with the promise of easy money and work. There, he tied them up, photographed them, and eventually killed and dumped their bodies in the desert.
Warning! This page might contain graphic language, images and videos that some viewers might find disturbing. Not appropriate for children under the age of 18.
Robert Ben Rhoades and Regina Kay Walters
This picture was taken by serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades. 14-year-old Regina Kay Walters was one of the numerous women held in an 18-wheeler equipped with a torture chamber in the back. The photo was taken in an abandoned Illinois barn, where Rhoades killed Walters after cutting off her hair and making her wear a black dress and heels.
William Richard Bradford
Bradford was incarcerated in an maximum security San Quentin State Prison for the 1984 murders of his 15-year-old neighbor Tracey Campbell and barmaid Shari Miller, making them the only official victims. In Bradford’s apartment, authorities found 54 different women in modeling poses. Because he had lured Shari Miller with the promise of a modelling career and took pictures prior murdering her, police have reason to believe Bradford was, in fact, a serial killer and the photos represent the girl’s last moments before their deaths.
Bradford died in 2008, taking the secret with him to his grave.
Robert Berdella
Robert Andrew 'Bob' Berdella was an American serial killer from Kansas City, Missouri. He raped, tortured, and killed at least six men. Berdella was conscious of his homosexuality. In 1984, he started dating Jerry Howell, a good-looking 19-year-old male prostitute. On July 5th, 1984, Berdella invited Howell to his house, where he drugged him with sedatives for animals and immobilized him by binding him to a bed. In the following hours he repeatedly raped his victim, wrote carefully about the process into his diary, and took several pictures to relive his fantasy later. This was the beginning of his torture and murder spree.
Robert Sheldon
Next year, a friend of Berdella, 18-year-old Robert Sheldon, came to stay with him for a few days and found himself drugged and held captive in the basement just like Howell before him. He was killed after 3 days of torture by suffocation.
Todd Stoops
21-year-old Todd Stoops was kidnaped because Berdella felt sexually frustrated at him. The torture he endured prior to his death included electric shocks via a spatula placed across the eyelid in an unsuccessful attempt to blind him. Stoops died due to a combination of blood loss and an infection.
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Chris Bryson
In March 1988, 2 years after killing Todd Stoops, Berdella abducted his last victim. A prostitute named Chris Bryson was tortured on the second floor. His narrow escape happened after he got loose from the ties, removed a picture that was covering the window, and climbed out the window. He hung from the gutters on the second floor until they broke and he fell into bob's yard. He ran to a neighbor's house while wearing nothing but a dog collar around his neck.
Berdella made a deal to avoid the death penalty in exchange for a full confession.
Bob Berdella's interview from prison
Rodney Alcala
The homicide detectives found hundreds of photographs of unidentified women in a storage locker belonging to Rodney Alcala – a convicted rapist and serial killer. The man could be behind as many as 130 murders. Because only a handful of women identified themselves as having posed for the pictures, it's highly likely that some of those photographed were murdered.
Alcala is sometimes labeled The Dating Game Killer, because of his appearance on the television show The Dating Game in the midst of his murder spree. Alcala clinched the dating show by smiling softly into the cameras and saying: 'We're going to have a great time together, Shelly.' Fortunately, they never went on a date. Vray 3.7 for revit crack download.
Read the post about Rodney Alcala on Bizarrepedia to see more pictures.
Asunta Basterra
Asunta Basterra (the story has been covered by Bizarrepedia before) was a 12-year-old girl adopted from China by a wealthy and well respected Spanish family – lawyer Rosario Porto Ortega and journalist Alfonso Basterra Camporro. Her adoptive parents reported her missing on the evening of September 21, 2013, only ten days short of her 13th birthday. Asunta was repeatedly poisoned with benzodiazepine-based sedatives and eventually suffocated by her adoptive parents. The motive was greed – Asunta was about to inherit expensive real estate from her grandparents. The photo below is one of the last photos taken by her parents, where she was drugged and wrapped in a blanket.
Madyson Jamison
This is the last photo taken of Madyson Jamison, who disappeared on October 8, 2009 with her whole family. Their remains were found on November 16, 2013. The photo is believed to have been taken by their killer, whose identity remains a mystery.
While there is no proof the picture was taken by a stranger or the killer, the police accepted it as a strong theory. Madyson's aunt claimed she looks to have been in extreme distress and looking towards her parents. There is also a theory the father murdered the family and then himself. Either way, little Madyson has disappeared.
The Haunting Polaroid
Gainesville Serial Killer Crime Scene Photos
In 1989, a woman pulled off the Route 98 (Florida) into the parking lot of a food store and found what appeared to be a polaroid photo lying face down on the asphalt. When the woman turned the polaroid over, the picture she saw was harrowing.
A young woman and a younger boy lie on their backs on a rumpled pile of mismatched sheets and pillows. Both look directly at the camera with expressions of tense resignation. Their mouths are covered with duct tape, and their postures suggest that their wrists are bound behind them. The space they occupy is cramped and poorly lit. The only source of light seems to come from behind the photographer. The photo could well have been taken in the back of a windowless van with its side door pulled open.
The haunting polaroid has a dedicated story on Bizarrepedia. The origin of the mysterious polaroid has a myriad of theories but the children on have never been identified.
Reynaldo Dagsa
Driver winfast palmtop tv windows 10 64. This photo captures Filipino politician Reynaldo Dagsa's murderer, Michael Gonzales, aiming a gun at him a second before he was shot dead in front of his family. The murderer blamed Dagsa for a lengthy prison sentence. From heaven to hell, a moment caught on a photo forever.
You might be also interested in last phone calls of victims.
Green River Serial Killer Crime Scene Photos
Crime Scene Pictures
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triggerlappy · 4 years ago
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The murderino is me is thinking there's something so Robert Ben Rhoades about this truck. #truckstopkiller #myfavoritemurder @myfavoritemurder #hongkong (at Langham Place 朗豪坊) https://www.instagram.com/p/CMpDTWHnc-p/?igshid=1611l4j9edz75
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gersonmatosway · 5 years ago
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Liked on YouTube: ROBERT BEN RHOADES https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KD3Ue8QFqvA
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necro-tv · 5 years ago
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Серийный маньяк Robert Ben Rhoades сфотографировал жертву Регину Кей Уолтерс (Regina Kay Walters) перед убийством https://necro.tv/serijnyj-manjak-robert-ben-rouds-robert-ben-rhoades-sfotografiroval-14-letnjuju-zhertvu-reginu-kej-uolters-regina-kay-walters-pered-ubijstvom/
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