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Sounds like we ought take all such crime stats with a large grain of salt, then?
He defended Richard Speck? What a claim to fame!
I was living up in Madison at the time of the murders, which were very much the hot news item. What became of Speck in later years is almost as morbidly fascinating as the murders themselves.
A fellow of my acquaintance, who has since shuffled off this mortal coil, was knifed across his face by a neighborhood thug. Left him with a scar.
This fellow, who had an intellectual disability, knew who the assailant was, but had a helluva time getting the Seattle police to do much about it. Much to his credit, he turned up the heat on the heat. What he said, in effect, is there's a person out there casually cutting up people less able to fend for themselves, I know who he is and where he can be found, and you guys are the cops and you're supposed to go get him. The cops finally went and got him. He was tried and convicted and went away for a stretch.
The misty-eyed romantic in me would hope that those on the law enforcement side of the game would see the serving of justice as their mission. I trust, perhaps naively, that most do.