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Poor leadership behavior
Consequences of bad leadership
Causes of bad leadership
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At a ghastly hour of a blood moon, was the occurrence of the multitude of peculiar events. It was a dusk of chaos yet rain descended from the sky as if it were a meteor shower. The power was out, so the source of the issue had to be investigated. Harrison Garner was the obvious candidate, he was a person a valor and adventure,so he decided to volunteer for the task. The origin was pinpointed at the bleakest part of the city in the power facility on the third level of the building. Harrison ascended to his destination and commenced labor. In the middle of his work, he observed a piece of equipment: a pair of pliers. The pliers were adjacent to the damage which resulted in concluding that the commotion was intended. Harrison came to the realization …show more content…
Flores felt guilty proclaimed,” The location of the body is in the office of the manager so it is his fault.” Mr. Johnson, Mr. Fox, and Mr. Flores stayed at work and continued with their labor and acted as if nothing had happened. After the interrogation was over, Ms. Lucifer went home and the detective continued the investigation by searching the premises. First, he investigated the office of the manager and saw that the body had fallen from a large height. Then, he remembered that the lift malfunctioned so he checked the trucks and found the truck that Mr. Garner died in. The detective observes cut wires in the lift area and saw that the box was very unstable. There was only one possible explanation for Mr. Garner’s death: someone rigged the lift so he would die. Most of the suspicion was leaned towards the manager because he was responsible for the safety of employees and giving them standard equipment to use. Lastly, he checked the transformer which was damaged with cut wires but there was nothing, not even a pair of
The prosecutions story was that Jeff used his fiancé’s car to leave his work, drive home, and kill his wife. He changed his shirt, and shoes but not his pants. He was unable to see any blood splatters and neglected the key piece of evidence. As he was leaving the house, he received a call from the neighbor which placed him in the vicinity of his home. Back at work, he threw the murder weapon on the roof of a building and finished his shift.
The story kicks off right away as Duff is leaving his parents’ house in Richmond, Virginia. He is beginning his journey to Los Angeles to be a computer programmer. He leaves his home town in his used three-thousand dollar, white, Ford Escort. He bought the car from the owner of a pizza shop down the street strictly for the long trip. Duff didn’t care much about cars, as longs as they get him from place to place. Duff pulls onto the highway and drives for about fifteen minutes before something goes terribly wrong. A weird noise came from the front of the car and then a loud bang. The car rolled to a stop near a small exit. Duff looked at the engine, but had no hope of knowing what happened. So Duff called a tow-truck which took the car five miles west to a garage in a small hick town. The mechanics diagnosed that he had thrown an engine rod. This usually happens if the engine doesn’t get oiled enough. Duff had no idea of the last oil change since he had only had the car for two weeks.
Everybody had an opinion on what happened at the Ramsey household on December 25, 1996. Most people believed that the family is responsible for killing JonBenet. Ever since that day, the public has held the Ramsey family under a cloud of suspicion. The family did everything they could do to defend themselves. They believe that an intruder must have done it, but most of the public believes that the family should be held responsible for the killing. The main suspect that police keyed in on was the mother of JonBenet. The reason for the suspicion of the mother was the 911 call made by Patsy Ramsey the day of the murder. In this 911 call, the mother seemed very suspicious. Patsy said “We have a kidnapping” ( McClish). “It seemed like she knew something she was not telling” (McClish 2001).
That night, many witnesses reported having seen a man changing the tire of his van and waving any possible help away angrily while others reported seeing a woman wandering around the side of the dangerous highway. More witnesses reported that Kenneth and his wife were having many violent disputes at their home that usually resulted in Kenneth pursuing an angry Yvonne around the block. The most compelling evidence against Mathison, however, is purely scientific. Detective Paul Ferreira first noticed that the extensive blood stains inside the Mathison van. After hearing Mathison’s original account, he summoned the assistance of famed forensic expert Dr. Henry Lee to analyze what he thought was inconsistent evidence. Blood stains on the paneling and the spare tire in the cargo area reveal low-velocity blood stains meaning that the blood probably dripped from Yvonne’s head onto the floor. The stains found on the roof and steering wheel were contact transfer patterns probably caused by Mathison’s bloody hands. Blood stains on the driver’s side of the van were contact-dripping patterns which indicate that Mathison touched the inside of the van multiple times before and after moving his wife’s body. The final groups of blood stains on the instrument panel of the van were medium-velocity stains which show investigators that Mathison probably struck his wife at least once in the front seat causing the blood to fly from her open head wound. The enormous amounts of blood inside the van lead prosecutor Kurt Spohn to investigate the Mathison case as a murder instead of a misdemeanor traffic violation.
Randall Blighton saw a silhouette of an infant in the vans window which now he says was a car seat. He felt that he couldn’t just pass by after he had just dropped off his own children with their mother. When he first arrived by the van he set out flares to make sure that everybody knew that the van was there. He then went to open the drivers side door and found that a woman’s purse was jammed between the accelerator and the firewall, that would explain the continually motion forward. He could see that a figure was lying across the front seat and that the head was tucked into the chest just over the passenger seat. He could see that the figure had on one loafer type on one foot that looked feminine. As he searched to turn on the emergency flashers and was unable to find them, not knowing that they were over head. He felt the floor to see if there was a baby. However, as he felt around he realized that the floor and seats of the van and realized why it was so hard to see through the drivers side window that was splattered with something dark, blood. Nevertheless, he felt it was more important to keep searching to find the baby instead of stopping. He shuddered and didn’t get how there could be so much blood in the van if it hadn’t been hit by another vehicle. Randall then hopped in the drivers seat and moved the van on to the shoulder of 79th where it met sunset highway.
This break into a direct call to the audience shows the infamy of this colonel or the actions of his government and how anyone reading this must have had enough knowledge on the matter to suspect that what they have all equally heard is true. The speaker continues to describe the house that they are currently in. The description comes in a listing style that creates an image of the speaker sitting and waiting with wandering focus and eyes. The description of the house is all very normal and typical until it screeches to a halt at the mention of the pistol on the pillow next to the colonel. The moon swings on “its black cord over the house” (4-5) like a lamp in a dark room. Given that this poem takes place during an interview of a colonel on his treatment of humans, the moon, as well as the mention of the cop show playing on the TV, could symbolize an interrogation room. This symbolism adds a level of tension and potential crime to this interview. Also, the inclusion of the cop show being presented in English presents a level of inclusion of the United States in this foreign country, especially a level of empowered and policing
Two detectives were assigned to the case: Harry Hanson and Finis Brown. [2] When they and the police arrived at the crime scene, it was already swarming with people, gawkers and reporters. The entire situation was out of hand and crowded, everyone trampling all over any hopes for good evidence. [2] One thing they did report finding was a nearby cement block with watery blood on it, tire tracks and a heel print on the ground. There was dew under the body so they knew it had been set there just after 2 a.m. when temperatures dropped to 38 degrees.
2. Law Enforcement tried to find evidence of how he just vanished and got the FBI involved.
“been awakened at the dawn of day by the most heart-rending shrieks of an own aunt of mine, whom he used to tie up to a joist, and whip upon her naked back till she was literally covered with blood. No words, no tears, no prayers, from his gory victim, seemed to move his iron heart from its bloody purpose…[he remembered] the first time [he] ever witnessed this horrible exhibition. [He] was quite a child, but [he] well remembers it.” (7)
Through the years there has been many ideas to what goes bump in the night. Mysterious, unsolved happenings blamed on the so-called supernatural. There are many myths, legends and lore based on these so called mysterious happenings. Through this research paper I am going to help to explain the biggest threats, conspiracies, and misunderstandings of aforementioned legends, myths, and lore.
There was obvious blood drops all over the step and ground with several vertical blood drops on the brick itself. It was apparent that the blood had dripped straight down and there was no sign of moving blood spatter.
The school's undercover narcotics officer, Randy, was killed in the faculty parking lot. A car pulled up, and a black tinted window rolled down. The passenger in the back seat shot him once in the head with a handgun, then the car sped away. Randy was killed instantly, and the people in the car were never caught.
Batman was just about the start searching the city for more victims when another APB rang out. Yet again a body had been found, this time it was found on top of a factory in the Old Towne district. This victim was similar to the other two victims, head wrapped in bandages and was dressed in a hospital gown. The word “Broken” was also spray painted above the victim’s head. However, this victim was different the last two, because this victim was a woman. This ruled out the serial killer only targeting men, the killer was after everyone. Once again Batman found the cause of death to be cardiac arrest caused by an overdose of oxycodone. Yet again, Batman had to conduct a deep-tissue scan on the victim in the hopes of trying to find an ID and a
It was said to be a strange night on January 21st, 1966. After a home cooked meal in the Gibbs’ household, Charles Clayton Gibbs collapsed. He was hurriedly rushed to the hospital for treatment. Unfortunately, he passed away the same night he collapsed; leaving the Gibbs is a mournful state. The doctors had classified the illness as an undiagnosed liver disease. A distressed Janie Gibbs was a great apprehension to Cordele and they rushed to her side immediately. Since she was an immense part to the church, donations were given to the Gibbs family to help support the family financially. Above all, they were there for guidance to help the family, more importantly Janie. When things seemed to be at its worst, another sudden death occurred.
Montgomery provides an alternative perspective, and he introduces a degree of relativity to the issue. Separated from other men for so long, he has become much closer to the Beast Men, and he does not make as clear a distinction between them and himself as does Prendick. Perhaps as a result of the variation in Dr. Moreau's experiments, the Beast Men are not uniform in their degrees of bestiality versus humanity; besides, some animals are by nature closer to men than others are. While Moreau's actions are abominable, Wells did not create a one-dimensional antagonist. This scientific objectivity is understandable, if humanly inexcusable. Even so, his actions are not purely objective; quite the contrary, they result from his overpowering desire