Thursday, October 28, 2010

A Murderer's Silence. The Case of Col. Russell Williams

Years after the disturbing case of Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka, many crimes and murders continued to occur, however out of all of the brutal crimes that happened during that time span, Wednesday October 20, 2010 provided some of the most terrifying and disturbing evidence and information that surpasses the Bernardo Homolka murder. Russell Williams', known to the public as Canadian Armed Forces Colonel Russell Williams' was charged with 86 break and enter. The most chilling were the first-degree murder charges of  both Marie-France Comeau and Jessica Elizabeth Lloyd, a more horrifying replica of the Bernardo case.

The Russell Williams' case came as a shock to the Canadian public and the world. As we all sat and watched the first video which began with Williams who initially appeared to be completely confident in thinking he was safe and in thinking he wasn't caught. He was interrogated and calmly responded to the questions being asked. However, as the video carried on, the interrogator slowly gains Williams' trust by using his professional and skilled psychology to extract confessions. The investigator continues to provide more and more evidence until Williams realizes he his caught. The boot print and tire tracks at a murder scene match his boots and personal vehicle. The attacks occurred in areas where Williams lived and frequented. Comeau was also a member of the Canadian Forces who worked on the same base as Williams. The ominous DNA test that will inevitably identify him as being a killer. For Williams, there was no way out and from that point on the details became more and more frightening.

 In court, the victims friends and family had to sit for hours in distraught while Williams stated things such as, "When I first hit Jessica in the back of the head with the flashlight, I could feel her skull give away." He spoke about how he bound and raped the two women, and how he forced Jessica to perform oral sex on him by attaching a zip tie around her neck and saying if he didn't like what she did, he would pull it tight, another comment that made the victims family's cringe and sob in distraught.

The Russell Williams' case concludes with a sad and tragic ending in which no human being should ever have to go through. These women were just beginning there lives and for it to end in such a barbaric and inhuman way is hard to fathom. Like Bernardo, this case has struck the lives of all women across Canada and the globe. In the prosecution's closing statement, Crown Attorney Lee Burgess says, “Because of Russell Williams we are a community where women now feel unsafe in their homes and where their spouses, their families and friends feel unsafe at leaving them alone. One might think the capture of the perpetrator might start to alleviate that fear, but for many people it has not,”.The prosecutions closing address signifies a sad truth. Although society may believe that punishment by the law will deter potential perpetrators and murders, unfortunately it does not. As a result, we will continue and move on with our lives and the Williams Case will be forgotten until the next perpetrator strikes.  

It's scary to think about the fact that people who appear to be 'good' and 'normal' can in actuality, be those individuals who are capable of committing the most heinous crimes. The important question that comes out from both the Williams and Bernardo case is, "Who can we trust"?


Monday, October 11, 2010

How Much is Too Much...When to Draw the Line

More often then not, it seems that these days half my Facebook "friends"know my daily occurrences before I even get a chance to personally share it with them.  Perhaps it's from the pictures of the wedding I attended on the weekend or the most recent wall post from a friend of friend.  Either way, it seems that there is no getting around the evasiveness of Facebook or any social media website for that matter.  Now a days you don't even have to have a person as a friend to know what is going on in their life, simply view another profile using the six degrees of separation and you're almost guaranteed to be successful in your quest to "lurk" an individuals private affairs.

Is it reasonable given how society today has embraced social media for us to expect that most aspects of our personal lives will be shared with others, whether we approve it or not?

Personally, I feel it is not so much a choice, but a matter of acceptance given how technologically dependent society has become.  To put ourselves out there for the world to see goes deeper then wanting to share parts of your life.  One could argue that the success of sites such as Facebook are based on narcissism. We don't post pictures of ourselves or broadcast information about ourselves necessarily because others are interested, we post because we want to portray ourselves the way we other to see us, almost creating a false reality.  Our so called "friends" are not necessarily our friends so why do we feel the need to share personal moments and thoughts with people we barely know?  We should also remind ourselves that as easy as it is to post our lives for the world to see via the Internet, it is not easy to remove it. Once we throw such information into cyberspace we are more or less mercy of other individuals.  To conclude I will leave you with this.  If you choose to put yourself out there you might as well be signing away control over your life to a certain extent.  Be wise in what you publish because you never know who will end up viewing it, whether an employer will use something against you or whether you will have a friend who's out to destroy you.  There is an interpretation for everything.  Sometimes pictures and words cause inaccurate assumptions, there is never one point of view.

Happy Birthday (from my facebook page)