10-05-2014, 12:12 PM
Serial Killer Team in California
![[Image: serial-murder-arrests.jpg?w=625]](http://cbsla.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/serial-murder-arrests.jpg?w=625)
These pieces of shit are registered sex offenders who are charged with working together to stalk, rape and kill four women in Orange County, California -- all while supposedly being monitored by court-mandated GPS monitoring devices.
Story: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/police-men-w...d-4-women/
I was surprised and frustrated when that freak David Renz was able to rape a little girl and kill her mother even though he was a sex offender required to wear a GPS tracker. The investigation uncovered that his tracker had given off an alert many many times, but not for long enough for the monitoring company to alert New York police. Thread: http://mockforums.net/showthread.php?tid...e+bracelet
Apparently, the devices malfunction so much that it was company policy to ignore them unless the alert continued for a certain duration. Messed up. Now, I'm wondering if the New York case wasn't an exception, but an example of a systematic problem that really needs to be reviewed nationwide for the sake of public safety.
![[Image: serial-murder-arrests.jpg?w=625]](http://cbsla.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/serial-murder-arrests.jpg?w=625)
These pieces of shit are registered sex offenders who are charged with working together to stalk, rape and kill four women in Orange County, California -- all while supposedly being monitored by court-mandated GPS monitoring devices.
Story: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/police-men-w...d-4-women/
I was surprised and frustrated when that freak David Renz was able to rape a little girl and kill her mother even though he was a sex offender required to wear a GPS tracker. The investigation uncovered that his tracker had given off an alert many many times, but not for long enough for the monitoring company to alert New York police. Thread: http://mockforums.net/showthread.php?tid...e+bracelet
Apparently, the devices malfunction so much that it was company policy to ignore them unless the alert continued for a certain duration. Messed up. Now, I'm wondering if the New York case wasn't an exception, but an example of a systematic problem that really needs to be reviewed nationwide for the sake of public safety.