Wednesday, August 18, 2010

SERIAL KILLERS FROM HELL!!!


"SERIAL KILLER SISTERS-98 VICTIMS"

Delfina and María de Jesús González (known as "Las Poquianchis") were two sisters from the Mexican STATE of Guanajuato, located some 200 miles north of Mexico City. The sisters ran Rancho El Ángel, called the "bordello from hell."

The police picked up a woman named Josefina Gutiérrez, a procuress, on suspicion of kidnapping young girls in the Guanajuato area, and during questioning, she implicated the two sisters. Police officers searched the sisters' property and found the bodies of eleven men, eighty women and several fetuses, a total of over 91.

Investigations revealed the scheme was that they would recruit prostitutes through help-wanted ads; though the ads would state the girls would become maids for the two sisters.

Many of the girls were force fed heroin or cocaine. Then, when the prostitutes became too ill, damaged by repeated rape, lost their looks, or stopped pleasing the customers, they killed them. They would also kill customers who showed up with large amounts of cash. Tried in 1964, the González sisters were each sentenced to forty years in prison. In prison,

Delfina died due to an accident, and Maria finished her sentence and dropped out of sight after her release. Although they are often cited as the killers, there were also two other sisters who helped in their crimes, Carmen and Maria Luisa. Carmen died in jail due to cancer; Maria Luisa went mad because she feared that she would be killed by angry protesters.

The sisters were the subject of the 1977 book Las Muertas by Mexican author Jorge Ibargüengoitia.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

WOMAN FIGHTS CLERK BECAUSE THEY RAN OUT OF MC NUGGETS AT MCDONALDS

Chinese Super Missile Shifts Pacific Power Balance



ABOARD THE USS GEORGE WASHINGTON – Nothing projects U.S. global air and sea power more vividly than supercarriers. Bristling with fighter jets that can reach deep into even landlocked trouble zones, America’s virtually invincible carrier fleet has long enforced its dominance of the high seas.

China may soon put an end to that.

U.S. naval planners are scrambling to deal with what analysts say is a game-changing weapon being developed by China — an unprecedented carrier-killing missile called the Dong Feng 21D that could be launched from land with enough accuracy to penetrate the defenses of even the most advanced moving aircraft carrier at a distance of more than 1,500 kilometers (900 miles).