this post was submitted on 08 Nov 2025
2 points (100.0% liked)

Wild Feed

102 readers
31 users here now

A catch-all world journalism hub for news, reports, blogs, editorials, and more.

Rules:

  1. Be cool to each other. Instance rules apply.

  2. All posts should link to a current* blog, article, editorial, listicle, research paper, or something that can be considered "news."

  3. Post title should be the article title or best fit.

  4. No blatant misinformation.

Tags: Not required unless the post fits under one of the below categories.

*[OLD - (year)] For old but relevant articles. Use your best judgement.

[Conspiracy Tuesday] Conspiracy theories. Only allowed on Tuesdays.

For a more serious, independent news feed — check out https://lemmy.today/c/Independent_Media

founded 2 weeks ago
MODERATORS
 

Law enforcement also became convinced that there was a link among the victims. Not just their wealth and the location of their homes—something more singular. Detectives in Fairfield County, Connecticut, and Westchester County, New York, cross-referenced their cases. Did the victims belong to any clubs? Only the most exclusive yacht and country clubs in the country, but there wasn’t one they all belonged to. What about academic affiliations? Collectively, they’d been to every elite boarding school and Ivy League university, but they weren’t all, say, graduates of Yale. Did they use the same arborist? Was the same individual collecting their trash? No and no. The police did notice one thing: Many of the victims’ phone numbers were not publicly listed, which made the fifty-ring calls odd—to say nothing of the hang-up calls some targets had received prior to being robbed.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here