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Scotland Yard
Scotland Yard: A Bloody History | Simon Read
1 post | 1 read
From the victims of a teenage murderess to dismembered corpses in train station luggage racks, London is home to some of the most macabre and gruesome murders in history. And for more than 200 years, Scotland Yard has built its name and reputation pursuing death merchants, psychopaths and serial killers. From its inception in 1829 up to the eve of World War II, Scotland Yard: A Bloody History tells the full story of how the Yard developed and advanced modern crime-fighting techniques one infamous case at a time. Following detectives in pursuits across the sea, midnight hunts through Whitechapel and a grand manor death that inspired many a murder mystery, this enthralling book shows how the Yard helped pioneer bloodstain analysis, criminal profiling, fingerprinting, ballistics and more to 'catch their man' (or, sometimes, woman). Filled with stories of devious poisonings, drownings, stabbings, decapitations, shootings and - of course - Jack the Ripper, Scotland Yard is a thrilling look into some of the most horrific crimes in history - and what it takes to bring a murderer to justice.
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tokorowilliamwallace
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Mehso-so

Audiobook. The development of a new kind of policing, crime detection, and they were the early pioneers and examples for the world to follow. Only follows the first century, up to the 1920s, though, and not up to today. Dismembering bodies seems to have been a kink or something, there was a lot of it, and then trying to play innocent around all of it. Sounds like a little bit extreme. Interesting comparing it with a CIA counterintelligence book.