"Thomas Hargrove is a homicide archivist. For the past seven years, he has
been collecting municipal records of murders, and he now has the
largest catalogue of killings in the country—751,785 murders carried out
since 1976, which is roughly twenty-seven thousand more than appear in
F.B.I. files. States are supposed to report murders to the Department of
Justice, but some report inaccurately, or fail to report altogether,
and Hargrove has sued some of these states to obtain their records.
Using computer code he wrote, he searches his archive for statistical
anomalies among the more ordinary murders resulting from lovers’
triangles, gang fights, robberies, or brawls. Each year, about five
thousand people kill someone and don’t get caught, and a percentage of
these men and women have undoubtedly killed more than once. Hargrove
intends to find them with his code, which he sometimes calls a
serial-killer detector."
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Via: The New Yorker
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