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Searching the globe for ...truth, honesty, integrity and equality!
Unsolved Mysteries

So, you want to play detective for a little while do you? Justice Junction is here to keep pour readers happy. We've compiled some of the best know true life unsolved mysteries for you to try your amateur detective skills on. Read the mystery, then let us know who you think "done it"

A word of caution, some of these crimes are gruesome in nature, so if you've got weak stomach, I would suggest you pass on playing detective. These cases will take you back in time, some back to 1922 when forensics didn't even exist, but murder was prevalent.

During those times, it was nearly impossible to convict for murder unless someone credible actually witnessed the event. We will begin our Amateur Detective Theater with a not so well known murder that was committed in 1922.

 
The Hall-Mills Murder
Upstanding Reverend Edward W. Hall of the Episcopal Church of St.John the Evangelist in New Brunswick was found with a bullet in head. Next to him, poised after death was his mistress, Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, 34 who had been shot in the head and had her throat slashed from ear to ear. Who do you think "done it"?
A Viewers Comment Regarding the Hall-Mills Murder:
Did anyone think to find out if any of the suspects were left handed as it would most likely take a left handed person to shot people in the right side of both their heads. Also the murderer wanted them to look like lovers, was this to make someone else look guilty, or was it out of frustration and anger.
Read A Viewers Possible Explanation To The Hall Mills Murder
 
A Trail Left Cold
7 murders, four left unsolved. Four little girls all snatched near their homes, all beaten to death with rocks, all dumped in wooded areas. Four killings, three decades old, none of them solved. Fast forward to 1972, 52 year old Harold Mead confesses to murdering three mentally retarded residents of the Greater New Haven Regional Center. Their skulls of all three were smashed with rocks and left in the woods, eerily similar to the previous unsolved murders in May of 1969. Years later Harold Mead would be allowed to leave prison on furloughs. On one of those weekends more bodies turned up, murdered exactly the same way as those before. This story is coming soon!
 
 
 
   
     

This site was last updated on: Sunday, July 4, 2004 11:01 PM