On Apr 1, 10:54 am, David Bernier <david...@videotron.ca> wrote: > haha doh wrote: > > On Mar 31, 3:15 pm, Joe Snodgrass<joe.s...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > [...] > > > > >> As to which crime was being committed, I'm going with numbers running > >> or loan sharking. There's no reason for any crook to keep any record > >> of any other crime, except prostitution, where phone books come in > >> handy. > > >> Thievery is not an honest business, and records of what went down, > >> where and with whom can only hurt you. Unless of course, it's a grand > >> list of felonies that he was using to blackmail the participants. > > >> But I can't see gathering that much info from blackmail. I always > >> thought it involved one guy blackmailing one victim. This would imply > >> a factory scale process, and he'd need some way to lure his prey into > >> the trap. > > >> Of course, that WOULD be a good way to get murdered. > > This is him > >http://img851.imageshack.us/i/4d93ac54b10bcimage.jpg/ > > True indeed! , according to a story posted on March 30 on the > website of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: > <http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/ad567e00-5b13-11e0-8ed4-0012...> > . > > That web page has a link to a 1999 article on the discovery of the body: > <http://www.stltoday.com/news/article_bcc02074-5b1a-11e0-b199-0017a4a7...> . > > An officer with the local Major Case Squad unit is quoted there. I quote > from the 1999 story: > > << "We cannot find any motive for his death, " he said. > "We're not absolutely sure that this is a homicide." >> .
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