Dawn Falbe

Were the people involved in this home schooled kids? Not from what I've
read. Victorino was a career criminal and to have a career in most things
you have to work at it. That's what this guy did. Worked at being a
criminal. I think I would know if my sons were being criminals.



Also those who flew into the twin towers and the pentagon were religious
zealots who absolutely believed they were dying for their religion. I
remember when I emigrated to the US in 1982 and my step-father (who was in
the military at the time) was going on and on about the Russians and the
problems they posed (turns out he was wrong about that - amongst other
things he's wrong about). My mother and I, coming from England, and being
used to hearing international news that doesn't have a US slant on it, knew
something like this would happen. I remember saying to him "you need to be
worried about the religious zealots in the middle east because they will die
for their religion unlike most Americans".. Of course he said I was wrong
about that.. Seems I wasn't..



Namaste



Dawn







If you need a particular example, The Deltona Murders was over an Xbox, and
the deaths contributed to a style of killing from one of the games.
Was it a games influence? Probably not as most people wouldn't emulate video
murder in real life.
Why did it happen? The debates could last forever (and have)
9/11 terrorists were said to train on a flight simulator that had the exact
pattern they flew.
In the game, you are to fly between the towers but as it's a game, you can
fly into the towers.



From The Daytona Beach News Journey

Victorino was a career criminal. So much of his adult life was spent in
trouble, in a courtroom and then behind bars. When someone crossed him,
Victorino responded with violence. In 1996, he beat a man so severely that
doctors needed more than a dozen titanium plates to rebuild the victim's
face. The victim believes Victorino shoved a walking cane down his throat.

In the killings of these six people, "motive" has been hard to pin down.

Investigators say trouble began the day Belanger found Victorino squatting
in her grandmother's unoccupied home, across town. She removed his things --
some clothes, CDs, a video game system -- and Victorino wanted it all back.

But a friend would later say he wanted his cocaine back.

And others close to him would offer a deeper motive, one that cuts to the
core of what ignites a killer's rage: It was all about disrespect.





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