Aaron Kosminski: The Disturbed Barber Who Became A Jack The Ripper Suspect Public DomainAn image of a potential Jack the Ripper suspect from the Illustrated London News. 1888.
Who was he? Aaron Kosminski was a Polish-born immigrant residing in Whitechapel at the time of the murders and working as a barber. Little is known about Kosminski’s life, but records suggest that he was born in 1865 and moved from Poland — then controlled by Russia — to London with his brother, Isaac, sometime in the early 1870s.
Ross Sullivan: A Notorious Suspect In The Death Of Cheri Jo Bates TwitterSome believe that Ross Sullivan has a strong link to possible Zodiac victim Cheri Jo Bates.
There are a couple of reasons why some believe that Ross Sullivan was the Zodiac Killer. But the most compelling has to do with the murder of Cheri Jo Bates, who some consider a potential Zodiac victim, in 1966. Then, on Halloween, Bates’ body was discovered on the Riverside City College campus, where the 18-year-old had just started her freshman year.
Animals suspected of wrongdoing were entitled to lawyers and fair and speedy trials, not to mention human-like executions such as hanging if they were found guilty. Wikimedia CommonsA sow and pigs on trial.
Rat infestations can be a pesky and all-too-common problem. However, the upside of the frequency with which humans have to deal with rats is that by now, everyone’s learned the only surefire way to get rid of them: Send them a polite, but stern, letter of warning.
These Jackie Kennedy quotes reveal the iconic first lady's wisdom on everything from history to sex to her husband's assassination.Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis is likely the most iconic first lady in American history. Embracing the role, she transformed the White House with museum quality paintings, a French chef, and many glamorous parties. Her fashion sense was religiously imitated by women around the globe, her popularity abroad once prompting John F. Kennedy to say, “I am the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris — and I have enjoyed it.
From impalement to the blood eagle, these execution methods prove that they mastered the art of pain in the Middle Ages.Medieval execution was a horrifying and gruesome prospect. During the Middle Ages, the unspeakable cruelty of capital punishment was only matched by the creativity of the torture techniques. To put things into perspective, decapitation was seen as the least painful way to go.
The Medieval period spanned about 1,000 years between the fall of the Roman Empire and the beginning of the Renaissance.