Wine and Gun

Chapter 61

Herstal frowned. "Mr. Bucks, are you implying—"

If the suspect Bart Hardy was trying to arrest dies, of course, no one can prove who killed Sarah Aardman, and Albarino can't get out of it, and obviously he can only go to trial in the end.

But he just didn't expect that this fact would be brought up by Albarino himself.

"Isn't the suburban meaningless to us? Don't you want me to be the butterfly you nailed?" Albarino laughed, a light voice passing over Hesta ear. "Do you hear the passing of time, Herstal? Time won't stop for you, tick-tock, tick-tock..."

"Where am I in your suburban story?" Herstal asked sharply.

"Don't worry," Albarino replied, his voice brisk as if he were in a cage, "I haven't determined your position yet, Mr. Armalette."

The uninhibited smile in his voice made people want to wipe the gān clean with their own hands. Herstal's mouth twisted into a sneer, and then hung up the phone silently, without saying goodbye to the other party.

He stood there for a while, then walked in the direction of the banquet host.

——He needs to find a decent way for himself to leave.

Note:

[1] According to U.S. law, the current process of Albarino’s case is as follows:

After the police determined that Al was the suspect, they applied for a warrant to arrest him, and then proceeded to interrogation, which is the content of the previous chapter.

In such cases involving major incidents of violence, or even the possibility of a death sentence or life imprisonment, prosecutors generally apply for a pretrial hearing (but this article assumes that there is no death penalty in this state). The main content is that the judge will ask whether he is guilty, No bail is allowed by a judge's decision, and both the defendant and the defendant's lawyer are present at the pretrial hearing.

(The pretrial hearing is not a mandatory stage of the bail procedure, because the judge does not need to hold a hearing and can directly decide on bail if the suspect or defendant meets the conditions for bail.)

In Al's case, bail is to take into account the seriousness of the case and the danger of the suspect to others in the community life. If bail is allowed, then Al can go home temporarily after the bail is paid. The meaning of bail is to put it bluntly, "I promise that even if I don't detain me, I will come back on time to attend the court session, and I will never run away." Second-degree murder suspects will have substantial bail amounts.

The official court date for the case is also set during the pretrial hearing.

Chapter 17 The Pianist's Interlude: Serial Killer Bob Langdon

Quote from: Westland Criminal Secrets Network

Release time: 2019-07-18

If it wasn't for the wrong time, Bob Langdon certainly could have become the serial killer that has terrified the city of Westland. He was indicted in April 2016 for violently hurting his ex-wife, and during the six months he was out on bail, he tortured and killed four women who looked and dressed like his wife until Westland piano Shi personally brought an end to his frantic and short-lived murder career.

Today, we can easily imagine the privilege of being a serial killer that Bob Langdon should have had: the long stories in the newspapers, the heated discussions on the Internet, the growing shadows on the foreheads of the WLPD officers, and the rush in the night. The fearful eyes of the pilgrim.

We should have given him fancy names like "Westland Pianist" and "Sunday Gardener" - although these two serial killers have left our field of view, I believe no one can forget the horror they made slaughter.

But even the WLPD didn't notice Bob Langdon's presence when he first started his hunt: because in the first two crimes, Langdon took all the valuables from the victims - to the surety After the man paid 10% bail, he was really cash-strapped - and the two female corpses with multiple stab wounds were classified by the WLPD as products of robbery and murder after the incident.

Between April and June 2016, two of Westerland's most famous serial killers each committed a crime, including one of the Sunday Gardener's most famous cases: the "Bride Boat" case. The serial killer who has committed crimes in Westland for a decade and killed at least 40 people has decorated his victims in an eye-catching way in this case, including a ship A flower boat that flows down the river.

As you can imagine, this case caused a great deal of shock and kept the WLPD homicide cops very busy; these old cases have not been solved before the horrific double murder of the Norman brothers: WLPD finds Victoria The Strand pianist and Sunday gardener are actually responding in a strange way to each other's murders - it was a few months of media spree, and Bob Langdon's first two murders were prioritized by one. It dropped again and again, and it has not been cracked until the beginning of October.

Until October 8, 2016, a gloomy Saturday, a woman named Sarah Aardman was found dead in a narrow alley, stabbed 41 times in the chest. When she was found, she had a switchblade stuck in her chest—the weapon that killed her, and a clear fingerprint was extracted from the handle, which belonged to Albarino S. Bacchus (1982-2017).

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