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View Full Version : The green river killer move. True story.


Bubelaiken
06-03-2008, 09:35 PM
Hey guys.

guess what? i just watch this movie. this movie is based on true story.

this killer has killed 40 or more girls. this killer was in front of them the whole time. the police were pressure by the city. the city was almost backrupt because of the murder. it took the police to solve it for 20 years.

Helen remus was one of the girls who were murdered by the green river killer. however they never said that they found her body but they knew that she was part of the murder's. she was the storyteller of the movie of the green river. helen met the dectievce dave Reichert before she died. the detievces keep going and was on this case for 20 years. he never gave up!!!

he keep going. he felt like helen was there with him. he feel her spirt. helen best freind have a daughter and named helen after her best freinds.

all those girls who was murdered were not orginally normal girls. they were prosituites.

if that weren't for them... the killer would killed thousands of girls and keep going on rampage of killing. if that weren't for them they never got a chance to figuare why.

you should watch this movie!!! it is awesome movie but yet sad!!!

Labby
06-04-2008, 01:34 AM
For those who don't know, the Green River Killer operated primarily in the Pacific Northwest. In other words, my backyard. The women they know he killed were all prostitutes. However, they have reason to believe that he's actually killed dozens more victims all along the Pacific, from Washington to California (he plead guilty to 48 murders, but says he killed 71). He was caught in 2005, and is now serving a life sentence.

One of the more interesting parts of the case is that members of the task force set up to catch him interviewed serial killer Ted Bundy in order to gain insight into the mind of the GRK (Gary Ridgway).

The Green River Killer murders also launched a scary story told by kids in the Northwest to each other. One such telling completely ended the night's story-telling, as the teller was highly successful in terrifying the younger passengers in the church van.

In my defense, I was just out of high school when I told the story on a youth missions trip. That was the last time I told the story as anything other than a recap, because the conditions will never again be that perfect or gain such results (everyone was on pins and needles. After about five seconds, my buddy slammed his hand down on the seat and yelled "BOO!". Two (very short) girls almost hit their heads on the roof).