Download Mobi Anyone You Want Me to Be: A True Story of Sex and Death on the Internet By John E. Douglas,Stephen Singular
Download Mobi Anyone You Want Me to Be: A True Story of Sex and Death on the Internet By John E. Douglas,Stephen Singular
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Ebook About JOHN DOUGLAS -- THE BESTSELLING AUTHOR OF MINDHUNTER AND THE UNDISPUTED MASTER PROFILER OF SERIAL CRIMINALS -- TELLS THE CHILLING TRUE STORY OF JOHN ROBINSON, THE INTERNET'S FIRST SERIAL MURDERER. In Olathe, Kansas, a balding, pudgy father of four sits in prison convicted on three counts of homicide -- two of capital murder -- and suspected in at least five other disappearances. During the last half of the 1990s, John Robinson exploited the Internet's active world of sadomasochism with horrific results. By haunting chat rooms, he pinpointed vulnerable women who were looking for romance and stalked them on-line, nefariously convincing them of his maturity, sensitivity, and financial stability. He seemed like the perfect man. He enticed these women with offers of a solid relationship and a lucrative job, persuading them to move to his hometown. Once they arrived in Kansas, the women invariably disappeared. After a dramatic trial and days of intense jury deliberation, Robinson now faces the death penalty. Disturbing as his crimes may be, what's most alarming is how he selected and lured his victims and how willingly they responded. John Robinson expanded the hunting ground, the techniques, and the technology of the sexual predator. He is the world's first-known Internet serial killer. Law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and the coauthors of Anyone You Want Me to Be have struggled to unravel the enigma that is John Robinson. They reveal what can go wrong in a world where relationships are devoid of physical contact, showing how easily mainstream Americans can be drawn into the dark underground of cybercrime. The Internet has drastically expanded the realm of fantasy -- from the limited confines of physical reality to the worldwide stage of virtual reality -- and anyone can become involved in an on-line seduction. Erotic fantasies, which were once socially off-limits and extremely private, are now instantly accessible. This rapidly growing community masks a sinister truth: With only a computer, an Internet connection, and a knack for creativity, criminals have the power to reach millions of unsuspecting victims while remaining in complete control of their own -- often false -- image. John Robinson was a true innovator in this variety of crime. Through interviews with law enforcement specialists, Web experts, and others, John Douglas and Stephen Singular illustrate, with this case, a much larger -- and more frightening -- pattern of Internet sex and violence. As technology proliferates in the twenty-first century, so do opportunities for enterprising criminals like John Robinson. No one is better equipped than John Douglas and Stephen Singular to expose the underworld of the Internet and to warn people about the dangers of cyberspace. A cautionary and educational tale about being wary of strangers and false intimacy, Anyone You Want Me to Be is also a terrifying, high-tech story of crime and punishment.Book Anyone You Want Me to Be: A True Story of Sex and Death on the Internet Review :
When I read a true-crime book, I generally hate it when I get to the trial phase, usually towards the end. It tends to be the most boring part of the read and I always think about simply skipping it. The problem is, I tend to write reviews on the books that I read, and I think that I need to give the author a fair shake when I give a rating for that review. And so I make a cappuccino, lay back down with my Kindle reader, and trudge through the ending as if it's a death march. That way I can be more fair when I write that review.Surprisingly, with "Anyone You Want Me to Be" (AYWMTB) I actually think the trial phase is the BEST part of the book.While I cringed a few times during the reading of that trial phase, I laughed out loud quite a few times as well, just like the jurors did during moments of comic relief while John Edward Robinson -- the "Edward" to differentiate him from all the other John Edward Robinsons out there, and I'll guess there are many -- was being tried for being supposedly "the first Internet serial killer." In particular, if you take my fairly strong recommendation to buy and read AYWMTB, during that trial phase there was a line that really cracked me up: "Thirty-nine minutes is a very long time." This may not seem very funny right now but believe me when I write that it is, when taken in context. But it's right around Location 4007 in the book as the Kindle version doesn't seem to have page equivalents.I guess that some FBI profilers like to call serial killers (SKs) who kill for financial gain "comfort killers." I've heard them called different names but I'll stick with that for this review. But I was surprised a bit when neither of the writers of AYWMTB -- John Douglas and Stephen Singular -- didn't really compare Mr. Robinson to other SKs from the past. In particular the MO of Mr. Robinson reminded me a bit of H. H. Holmes, or rather Mr. Herman Mudgett. Mr. Holmes killed mostly for money, but he would go to extraordinary lengths to confuse his victims by moving them from place to place before killing them. Mr. Robinson had a similar MO although the signatures of the two killers are surely different. Mr. Holmes tended to like to incinerate his victims in the basement of his hotel, while Mr. Robinson tended to like to dump his victims inside of 55-gallon barrels. But either way they both killed mostly for money. (Mr. Robinson also assaulted his victims in horrible ways first, but I don't believe he generally killed most of his victims because of it. Because of his "lifestyle," and the "lifestyle" of his victims, he had a built-in excuse in a way for torturing many of his victims. At least he thought that he did.)I have read many books from Mr. Douglas but this is my first read from Stephen Singular. I know Mr. Douglas' writing style well enough that I could usually guess which parts of AYWMTB that Mr. Singular wrote. And I will write that I believe that Mr. Singular is a singularly-excellent writer. I will give some of his other books a chance in the future because of it.If you're a fan of Mr. Douglas' work I'll recommend "Anyone You Want Me to Be" to you. You should enjoy it. And oddly, if you're a true-crime fan and you accept my recommendation, you just might find the trial phase of the book not only maybe the best part but darkly humorous as well. I know I laughed, even though someone's not supposed to laugh while reading a book about a horrible serial killer such as John Edward Robinson. But I dare you to keep a straight face yourself while reading. The thing about corroborations between two writers is that they should be equally good at writing.In this book, Stephen Singular shines through with details and clear organization showing the depravity of John Edward Robinson.John Douglas's writing, on the other hand, spends more time talking himself than about the case.This book is entirely about the murders, rapes, and violence of a man named John Edward Robinson who lived in Kansas City, Kansas and committed his crimes from the 1970s through the 1990s. He was finally caught in 2000 and went on trial in 2002 after many delays. He was convicted and sentenced to death and is still awaiting execution in the state of Kansas.What is striking about this case is the way Robinson conned these women into becoming sex slaves for him, even though he was short, ugly, fat, and balding with a completely lack of personality. He was prone to angry outbursts and broke. That these intelligent beautiful women would even give him the time of day is a wonder, but that's why he lured most of them via the internet. On the internet he could be anyone he wanted to be. It's unknown how many women he actually murdered because the only ones who anyone knew about had left a trail behind them for loved ones to follow.Two things deeply disturbed me about this story. 1. The detectives on this case were anxious for Robinson to be arrested. They already had a string of women who'd been abused by Robinson and had filed complaints, but the Kansas City District Attorney Paul Morrison refused to allow Robinson to be arrested because these were grown women who he said had put themselves in this situation. :0 I was shocked at reading that. This man's job is to protect and serve. And these women were lured to his city under false pretenses then beaten and raped. His refusal to arrest Robinson sickened me. 2. In Missouri Robinson was given a lesser sentence in exchange for a plea deal. Why? That never should've been accepted. They had the evidence to execute him a second time in a state that had a long standing reputation for actually executing death sentence prisoners unlike Kansas. :0 Of course none of this was the author's fault, but it was aggravating and frustrating to read such a callous view of women's lives. It wasn't until a woman with an infant became a possible victim that Morrison acted.This was my first Stephen Singular book but I enjoyed his writing. He sticks to the facts.This was not my first John Douglas book but I won't be reading his anymore. He strikes me as someone who doesn't like women and has a really huge ego. 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