jury
The right to trial by an impartial jury is a defendant's constitutional right; explore this pivotal duty to assess the evidence, deliberate and deliver a verdict.
Girl Stabbed to Death on North Carolina Train: What We Know So Far
The Incident On a routine NC train ride through Charlotte, tragedy struck when Iryna Zarutska, a Ukrainian refugee, was fatally stabbed. Witnesses reported chaos on board as passengers attempted to intervene and authorities rushed to respond.
By KAMRAN AHMAD5 months ago in Criminal
The Rise of New Powers After World War 3
The Rise of New Powers After World War 3 How Global Conflict Could Reshape the Balance of Power If a Third World War were to break out, the devastation would not be limited to battlefields and bombed-out cities. The conflict would also dismantle the political and economic order that has defined the modern age. Nations that survive the opening strikes would likely emerge wounded and exhausted, leaving room for new players to step forward. History reminds us that every great conflict rearranges the balance of power. After the First World War, vast empires collapsed. After the Second, the United States and the Soviet Union rose to dominate global affairs. Should another world war erupt, a similar shift—though perhaps far more dramatic—would be inevitable.
By Wings of Time 5 months ago in Criminal
From Defense to War: What a U.S. “Ministry of War” Would Mean
What if the United States government announced tomorrow that it was renaming the Department of Defense to the Ministry of War? At first glance, it might seem like nothing more than a change in language. But in politics, language is never just language—it shapes perception, frames policy, and influences how nations see themselves and one another. A shift in terminology from “defense” to “war” would represent a dramatic transformation in America’s identity and global posture.
By Muhammad Ibrahim5 months ago in Criminal
Is Luigi Magione Inspiring Other Shootings
Federal prosecutors in New York City are pursuing an extraordinary strategy in the case of Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing a United Healthcare CEO. Rather than framing the crime as a singular act of violence, the government is attempting to expand its significance—arguing that Mangione’s actions were ideological, symbolic, and deliberately designed to inspire others. The latest court filings even attempt to tie Mangione’s alleged influence to unrelated acts of violence, raising questions not only about his guilt but also about whether he should face the death penalty.
By Lawrence Lease6 months ago in Criminal
The Shadow in the Alley: A Story of Crime and Consequence
M Mehran Every city has its hidden corners—alleys where streetlights flicker, abandoned lots where silence weighs heavy, and faces you don’t look at too long. In those shadows, stories of crime are written—stories not just about criminals, but about choices, chances, and consequences.
By Muhammad Mehran6 months ago in Criminal
The Clean Exit
Cleo Vance didn’t mind blood. Not anymore. After ten years of scrubbing crime scenes for a living, the shock had worn off. The way people stared when she showed up in her van marked “Hazmat Response Solutions” still amused her. They didn’t know the real work she did.
By Solene Hart6 months ago in Criminal
Inside the Mind of Robin Westman: The Disturbing Obsession Behind the Minneapolis Catholic School Massacre
On the morning of August 27, 2025, the quiet calm of the Church of the Annunciation in Minneapolis was shattered when a lone gunman opened fire during a back-to-school Mass. By the time the shooting ended, two children ages eight and ten were dead, and seventeen others lay wounded, most of them schoolchildren and elderly parishioners. The perpetrator, identified as Robin M. Westman, twenty-three years old, died by suicide at the scene, leaving behind a violent manifesto, disturbing videos, and a community struggling to understand why.
By Lynn Myers6 months ago in Criminal











