The Strangler laughed, his eyes fixed on the ceiling. "Do you hear that? Perfection."
In the annals of American true crime, the late 19th and early 20th centuries were a breeding ground for what criminologists call the "moral panic." Before the term "serial killer" was coined by FBI agent Robert Ressler in the 1970s, newspapers used far more florid language to describe the monsters walking among us: Fiend, Vampire, Werewolf, and perhaps the most terrifyingly specific of them all, Red Garrote Strangler
In reality, the garrote has been used in a number of high-profile cases, often to devastating effect. Its use has led to widespread outrage and condemnation, with many calling for stricter laws and harsher penalties for those who would use such a device. The Strangler laughed, his eyes fixed on the ceiling
(a handheld strangling device) and leaves a signature "red" mark or uses a red-colored weapon. Its use has led to widespread outrage and
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