On the Times website you can find a crime map of 1947 L.A.,
showing real crimes and their locations around the city in that one year.
Not exact matches
-- Ted Farnsworth, CEO of RedZone, a GPS - driven,
real - time
crime and navigation map app that uses proprietary geo - fencing technology to
show users where recent
crime has taken place in order to navigate through safer neighborhoods while avoiding risky
crime areas deemed «red zones.»
The series isn't exactly easy to watch — these are
real violent
crimes, after all — but the
show gives a look at the failings of the justice system while also offering a somewhat unsettling character study.
By implication, however, if it could be
shown that the fetus is a separate life from that of its mother (for example, having its own genetic code from the time of conception), then even by liberal criteria there would be a
crime with a
real victim, hence prohibited by the social contract with its minimal requirement of protection of innocent persons.
[The] report served the time - tested purpose: Whenever the system is in crisis (or
shows signs of becoming transformed); whenever blacks get restless (or
show strength); whenever whites in significant numbers
show signs of coming together with blacks to confront their mutual problems (or enemies), the trick is to shift the focus from the
real struggle for political and economic empowerment to black «
crime,» degeneracy, pathology, and — in Moynihan's innovative twist — the «deterioration» of the black family.
I started watching it a few months ago after listening to the
Real Crime Profile podcast a bit with one of the writers (and former FBI profiler) Jim Clemente and the casting director of the
show.
The thirst for headlines and the inflation of ineffective bureaucracy and legislative hyperactivity distract the Government and successive Home Secretaries from the
real job at hand: getting more police on the street with the single imperative of cutting
crime, and a dedicated border police force to reverse our current vulnerability, which has seen the street value of cocaine and heroin slashed by almost half, while estimates
show that the numbers of young women and girls trafficked into prostitution have quadrupled.»
«I think that not only are Cameron and Osborne two posh boys who don't know the price of milk, but they are two arrogant posh boys who
show no remorse, no contrition, and no passion to want to understand the lives of others — and that is their
real crime.»
While DNA is the lodestone for
crime stories on TV
shows, it isn't always in
real life.
Torres told reporters that the city is «unquestionably» better off now than it was four years ago, that
crime is at historic lows, that job growth at historic highs and that police - community relations «
show real signs of improvement.»
Maryland - Bob Ehrlich (R): There was a
real temptation to move this one even higher — a Baltimore Sun poll done last month
showed Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley (D) with a 15 - point bulge over Ehrlich — but Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan (D) has begun to bash O'Malley on
crime rate statistics in Charm City — a point of potential weakness for the presumptive nominee.
Events for the younger set included a tour of «the fourth dimension» — a room full of hypercubes and other higher dimensional objects that gave me a touch of vertigo; a chamber of robots that you could teach to play football; a demonstration of forensic science involving (
real) guns and a (fake) cadaver in a staged
crime scene; a live cooking
show in which physicists, chemists, and anthropologists explained the science and origins of food; and a walking tour through the natural history of excrement featuring — you guessed it — a dizzying array of animal feces.
How this all happens is absolutely fascinating, beginning with the arrival of the FBI and Special Agent Richard DesLauriers (Kevin Bacon), who uses a warehouse to re-create entire city streets and the
crime scene; Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis (John Goodman), who runs the
show with nerves of steel; Sgt. Jeffrey Pugliese (JK Simmons), the Watertown cop who finds himself in the middle of a shootout with the culprits; Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (Michael Beach); Dun Meng (an excellent and scene - stealing Jimmy O. Yang), the young Chinese man who was carjacked and kidnapped by the pair, only to turn the tables on them; and of course the Tsarnaev brothers, Tamerlan (Themo Meilikidze) and the younger Dzhokhar (Alex Wolff), who both look and act so eerily like the
real thing it is positively chilling to watch them.
Informed by a
real life gold bullion heist in London, the
show centers on a group of twenty - something, up and coming hustlers who stumble upon a truck load of stolen gold bullion and are suddenly thrust into the high - stakes world of organized
crime.
With my nonfiction hat on, I wrote a book on 19th - century murder and how
real - life
crimes were used for entertainment purposes: Where today we have films about the Boston strangler or whatever, they had plays and novels and even puppet
shows.
From there, they grew up to become a triforce of strength, skill, and smarts that would
show big time
crime lords and their meathead bosses how
real heists were pulled, all the while dodging a foxy detective who very much wanted to spend some quality time with the suave Raccoon... in her interrogation cell.
On May 5, 2016
Real Fake Film, ZenDog Productions and Anderson Contemporary will co-host a unique group
show exhibition to celebrate the upcoming release of filmmaker Jeff Oppenheim's new documentary «
Real Fake: The Art, Life &
Crimes of Elmyr de Hory.»
A human crib sheet, Bacon's model wrestlers, and
crime scenes
real and imagined — a new
show at the Michael Hoppen gallery examines documentary photography in all its complexity
It might not make for such interesting TV
crime shows, but in
real life, if a guy is found with blood on his clothing then he's the one who's guilty.
For those of you «armchair lawyers» who like to follow
real - life trials, watch TV
crime shows, or even just read books by John Grisham, here's an interesting question for you:
That's not a new TV
crime show, but the
real - life Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation.
Showing their own homes may make FSBOs potential
crime targets — explain the risks of going it alone and the benefits of working with a
real estate professional.
I was surprised to learn that the
show was not a
real estate
show, but The Mentalist, a detective
show whose main character, based on the Amazing Kreskin, uses psychic power and ability to observe to solve
crimes.
We want to
show you that despite the problems that the U.S. has with the past recession,
crime, and corruption, it's still the safest place in the World to live, work, raise a family and invest in
real estate.
-- After the near fatal stabbing of Toronto RE / MAX salesperson Wendy Carroll while
showing a house, RE / MAX offered a no - cost
crime protection course to all licensed
real estate salespeople in the Greater Toronto area.