The Bayou Strangler: Race, Invisibility, and a Decade of Serial Murder in Louisiana
  The Bayou Strangler: Race, Invisibility, and a Decade of Serial Murder in Louisiana
Titolo The Bayou Strangler: Race, Invisibility, and a Decade of Serial Murder in Louisiana
AutoreRiocard Kelly
Prezzo€ 3,99
EditoreMARK KELLY
LinguaTesto in
FormatoDRMFREE

Descrizione
The Bayou Strangler: Race, Invisibility, and a Decade of Serial Murder in Louisiana Between 1997 and 2006, Ronald Joseph Dominique, the Bayou Strangler, killed at least twenty-three men across six Louisiana parishes while law enforcement failed, repeatedly and catastrophically, to recognize the pattern connecting their deaths. His victims were poor, Black, homeless, and socially marginal: the people Steven Egger called "the less dead," whose deaths the American justice system is structurally organized to underinvestigate. The Bayou Strangler is not simply a true crime account of a serial killer. It is a forensic, sociological, and moral reckoning with the institutional architecture that enabled a decade of killing, the parish-based governance structure that prevented cross-jurisdictional pattern recognition, the coroner system that misclassified homicides as accidental drownings, the forensic evidence that waited eight years in an archive for the investigative will to deploy it, and the racial and economic hierarchy that rendered twenty-three men invisible long before Dominique found them. Drawing on criminological theory, developmental psychology, behavioral forensics, and Louisiana's specific history of racial violence, this book treats every victim as a complete human being, reconstructing their lives with the biographical care the historical record permits, while building a structural argument that demands institutional accountability. Twenty-three men died. One predator killed them. A society failed them first.