Kitty's car


I wonder how much Kitty's red, foreign sportscar contributed to her death, by
(a) drawing Moseley's attention to it (and then her as she egressed) and
(b) stirring instant resentment ("wealth & privilege!")?

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I would have to say none. It's been reported that Moseley told the police that "his wife was working that night" or that "he had a fight with his wife that night." In any event, he told the police that he just decided he wanted to go out and kill and rape (in that order) a woman. He was trolling for a woman. Any woman. Kitty got out of her car alone. He admitted that this wasn't the first time he had raped, and that he had committed "30 to 40" burglaries.
I just watched "A Crime to Remember" episode called "38 Witnesses" on ID. It tells some of the story that wasn't previously known.

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The psychopathic killer had a higher standard of living than the woman he stalked, stabbed, and then raped. Because that was one of his things--raping the nearly dead, his kills.

He had a good job, was married with children, and owned his home. He also had already committed many, many crimes prior to this without being caught. And he was not caught for this crime either.

To cry from prison how he was such a victim and how he continued to be a victim is just one great example of the depth of his sociopathy.

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[deleted]

http://a4.files.biography.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,dpr_1.0,q_80,w_620/MTM5MTAzNDU0ODk0MjM2NzU5.jpg

Trivia. The car Kitty was photographed sitting on was her 1954 Nash Rambler. Her Fiat was a 1963 model.

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