true crime

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 399

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Advertising the Crime

Some defendants make the prosecutor’s job almost too easy. They post the evidence. They wear the evidence. They drive around with the evidence stuck to the back of the car. Every so often they go further and explain the whole thing directly to the officer at the side of the road. This week’s stories come from Buffalo, suburban Kansas City, and a small town in Wales. They do not have much in common except for one detail. In each of these cases, the defendant made an unforced contribution to the file.

I tell people all the time that the right to remain silent exists for a reason. It is not just something they say on American police shows. It is a real Canadian constitutional protection, and the smarter end of my client list takes it seriously. The people in this week’s stories did not get the memo.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 391

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: The “Special Delivery” Edition

Welcome to another instalment of Weird and Wacky Wednesdays. In the legal world, we often talk about the “chain of custody” for evidence. Usually, that involves police carefully bagging items at a crime scene. This week, however, we have one defendant who skipped the middleman, bringing the evidence directly to the station. Then we have the weird corn hole guy case and a case where the officer hitched a ride on the hood of a stranger’s car.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 386

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Lawyer criminals rather than criminal lawyers

Recently for Weird and Wacky Wednesdays, I covered some legal stories where police officers did some horrible things. Of course just because you’re a police officer, that does not make you moral, honest or ethical or not a criminal. Same goes for lawyers. Both lawyers and police officers have higher ethical standards to maintain. Some lawyers and some police officers fall far below those standards and go further, committing crimes. This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays, we are going to look at some fairly notorious cases where the lawyers were not just unethical but criminal. 

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 379

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: The market for human body parts

This could have been a topic I covered for Halloween, but a particularly strange legal story appeared just last week in the news. And so here we are, at Christmas, discussing the market for human body parts. Of course, not everybody celebrates Christmas as warm, bright, or celebratory. Some people are tired, and some people are grieving. This week I’m doing something slightly counterintuitive and talking about death and things in packages despite it being Christmas. 

Birth and death are not strange. They are the most banal human experiences because this happens to every one of us. What is unusual is to die and have your body parts become inventory, a good to be traded. This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays, we’re going to look at three recent and connected cases where the law had to step in because people were selling body parts. 

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 349

Cartoon-style wide illustration showing three panels: a man in a kayak, a confused businessman imagining another man's face while looking at his phone, and a happy woman taking a selfie with cash and a vault. Banner text says “Weird & Wacky Wednesdays: Criminals Who Thought They Outsmarted the System.”

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Criminals Who Thought They Outsmarted the System

This week we’re spotlighting individuals whose overconfidence in their cunning led to ill-fated criminal endeavours. From faking deaths to AI-driven fraud, these stories serve as cautionary tales about the perils of underestimating the law and overestimating oneself.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 342

When Theft Gets Too Ambitious

Some criminals aim high—too high. From stealing an entire bridge to making off with massive amounts of cheese, these stories prove that some thieves have a little too much confidence in their schemes.

The Case of the Missing Bridge

In a plot that sounds straight out of a cartoon, a group of thieves in Bihar, India, managed to steal a 500-tonne iron bridge—piece by piece. Posing as government workers from the irrigation department, they used gas cutters and heavy machinery to dismantle the 60-foot-long bridge over the course of a few days. Villagers, believing it was an authorized operation, watched as the scrap metal was loaded into trucks and taken away. It wasn’t until the bridge was completely gone that locals realized something was amiss and alerted the authorities. citeturn0search14

Forklifting an ATM

Most bank robbers go for cash, but some think bigger—like the entire ATM. In Sacramento, California, surveillance footage captured a thief using a forklift to pry an ATM from its foundation. The suspect then loaded the machine into a pickup truck and attempted a getaway. However, the plan quickly unraveled when the ATM fell out of the truck onto the road, causing an unrelated crash. The suspect fled the scene and remains at large. citeturn0search15

The Great Canadian Cheese Caper

You’d think banks or jewelry stores would be the most tempting targets, but in Canada, cheese is apparently just as valuable. In 2019, thieves made off with $187,000 worth of cheese from Saputo Dairy Products in Tavistock, Ontario. The heist involved fraudulent paperwork to claim a shipment of cheese originally bound for New Brunswick. The cheese never reached its destination, and authorities are still on the hunt for the culprits. citeturn0search19

Some criminals have big dreams, but as these stories show, ambition doesn’t always lead to success.

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