Root of Corruption: Index / Table of Contents / Overview
Previous:
Buckle up, we're going on another purple rooftop roadtrip...
(to be continued in comments)
ITT:
- Analyzing Jason Vorhees and the Friday The 13th movies.
- Looking deeper into Corey Feldman's situation.
- Person of interest: John Wayne Gacy
- Looking deeper into the West Memphis 3
- Ongoing suspicion of collusion between Ottoman/Saud, Israel/Mossad, Scientology, & Clinton/DNC/Weinstein/Disney with regards to global corruption and human rights violations
Music for the road: Tool Live Philadelphia 1992 Remastered (JC Dobbs) FULL CONCERT
please await final music sign-off before commenting
Definitions:
Preface
This is where the synchronicity is at overdose levels... I did not see this one coming at all and had indeed kept a distance from any deep investigation into Corey Feldman. Incidentally, indeed even ironically, prior to RoC Part 8, I stipulated that Rob Zombie was dropping hints about John Wayne Gacy and I brought up the subject of JV & F13 and recently stated that part 10 of this series would be about JV... then the Feldman shilling hit v/pizzagate hard...
Particular elements of this 'case' resonate with me on a level that, well... honestly, it doesn't look good for me at first and I expect major pushback, but, keep an open mind and read on when you see it...
Note: Freddy Vs Jason: Jason Vorhees, awoken/revived by dream-bound Freddy Kreuger posing as Jason's mother, arises covered in moss.
Jason Michael Moss (February 3, 1975 – June 6, 2006) was an American attorney who specialized in criminal defense. He was best known as the author of The Last Victim: A True-Life Journey into the Mind of the Serial Killer (1999), a memoir about his exploration of the minds of incarcerated serial killers, which started as a research project in college. He corresponded and conducted personal interviews with several notorious killers.
Struggling with depression, Moss committed suicide in 2006. His book was adapted and produced as a film, Dear Mr. Gacy, released in 2010.
The Last Victim
While writing his honors thesis at UNLV, Moss established relationships with convicted, imprisoned serial killers John Wayne Gacy, Richard Ramirez, Henry Lee Lucas, Jeffrey Dahmer, and Charles Manson. He conducted research in order to learn what would most appeal to each of his subjects, and adopted the role of disciple, admirer, surrogate, or potential victim as necessary. He initiated the relationships through correspondence. According to Kottler, Moss studied devil worship and Satanic rituals before contacting Ramirez.[3]
Moss later said that he formed the strongest relationship with Gacy. Their exchange of letters led to regular Sunday morning phone calls, during which Gacy reiterated his innocence. In his book, Moss explored the development of his correspondence with Gacy, shortly before the killer was executed. Moss asserted that he became Gacy's "last victim" during their face-to-face meeting. While he understood that he had deliberately lured Gacy, he felt overpowered and manipulated by him, in the same way that he might have manipulated and controlled his victims. Moss felt that his overall experience allowed him to gain an understanding of how a serial killer's mind works.
John Wayne Gacy(read: Waterloo & Dylan Voorhees)
In 1966, Gacy began to manage the three KFC restaurants his father-in-law purchased in Waterloo.[40] The offer was lucrative: Gacy would receive $15,000 per year ($114,044 in 2017 dollars), plus a share of profits earned via the restaurants.[41] Gacy accepted the offer and, following his obligatory completion of a managerial course, he and his wife relocated to Waterloo later that year.[42]
First offenses
In August 1967, Gacy committed his first known sexual assault upon a teenage boy. The victim was a 15-year-old named Donald Voorhees, the son of a fellow Jaycee. Gacy lured the youth to his house with the promise of showing Donald pornographic films.[49] Gacy plied Voorhees with alcohol and persuaded the youth to perform oral sex upon him. Several other youths were sexually abused over the following months, including one whom Gacy encouraged to sleep with his wife before blackmailing the youth into performing oral sex upon him.[48] Several teenagers were tricked into believing Gacy was commissioned with carrying out homosexual experiments in the interests of "scientific research", for which the youths were each paid up to $50.[50]
In March 1968, Voorhees reported to his father that Gacy had sexually assaulted him. Voorhees Sr. immediately informed the police and Gacy was arrested and subsequently charged with oral sodomy in relation to Voorhees and the attempted assault of a 16-year-old named Edward Lynch.[51] Gacy vehemently denied the charges and demanded to take a polygraph test. This request was granted, although the results indicated Gacy was nervous when he denied any wrongdoing in relation to either Voorhees or Lynch.[52]
Gacy publicly denied any wrongdoing and insisted the charges against him were politically motivated – Voorhees Sr. had opposed Gacy's nomination for appointment as president of the Iowa Jaycees.[53] Several fellow Jaycees found Gacy's story credible and rallied to his support. However, on May 10, 1968, Gacy was indicted on the sodomy charge.[52]
On August 30, 1968, Gacy persuaded one of his employees, an 18-year-old named Russell Schroeder, to physically assault Voorhees in an effort to discourage the boy from testifying against him at his upcoming trial. The youth agreed to lure Voorhees to a secluded spot, spray Mace in his face and beat the youth with the promise that if he did so, he would be paid $300. In early September, Schroeder lured Voorhees to an isolated county park, sprayed the Mace supplied by Gacy into the youth's eyes, then beat him, all the while shouting that he was not to testify against Gacy at his upcoming trial.[55]
Voorhees managed to escape, and immediately reported the assault to the police, identifying Schroeder as his attacker. Schroeder was arrested the following day. Despite initially denying any involvement, he soon confessed to having assaulted Voorhees, indicating that he had done so at Gacy's request. Gacy was arrested and additionally charged in relation to hiring Schroeder to assault and intimidate Voorhees.[56] On September 12, Gacy was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation at the Psychiatric Hospital of the State University of Iowa.[54] Two doctors had examined Gacy over a period of 17 days and concluded he had antisocial personality disorder (a disorder which incorporates constructs such as sociopathy and psychopathy), was unlikely to benefit from any therapy or medical treatment, and that his behavior pattern was likely to bring him into repeated conflict with society.[57] The doctors also concluded he was mentally competent to stand trial.[57]
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter is a 1984 American slasher film directed by Joseph Zito and the fourth installment in the Friday the 13th film series. Following the events of Friday the 13th Part III, Jason Voorhees returns to Crystal Lake and continues his killing spree on a family and a group of neighboring teenagers after being revived from his mortal wound. The film stars Corey Feldman, Ted White, Kimberly Beck, and Crispin Glover.
Plot
Tommy, having disguised himself to look like Jason as a child, distracts him long enough for Trish to hit him with the machete, but she merely whacks off his mask. As Trish stands horrified at Jason's deformed face, Tommy takes the machete and whacks Jason in the side of the skull, causing him to collapse to the floor and split his head upon impact. When Tommy notices that Jason's fingers are moving, he continues to hack at his body screaming, "Die! Die!" while Trish repeatedly yells out his(Tommy's) name.
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argosciv ago
Corey Feldman | Stand By Me(1986 film):
Rob Reiner
The rest of the wiki entry for Rob Reiner, is worth reading in full
Act III Productions (redirects to Norman Lear)
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