


Has anyone checked to see if Mark Richt is awake? Guy looks pretty glassy-eyed and droopy over there. I am so sick of not winning…They poop the bed every big game and moment.Ĭupcake - cupcake - cupcake - cupcake- cupcake - reality I wish I could go back and go to college somewhere other than UGA. Jenkins takes off too many plays…if being big and fat gets you a starting job on the Georgia D, sign my sister up… No matter how good South Carolina ever is they should never beat us more than two times in a decade! I am so ashamed right now! If you want to keep Richt after this then you must hate UGA. You have been warned.Įven Sarah McLaughlin can't save these dawgs TiderUpNorth, Denn圜himes, Lil Sis, *nameredacted*akaCJ, Bama's Lucky Grits, lastmilefire, ihartbama, J Tadpole, bham03uagrad, SoGladILeftTheAcc, Darth Saban, MDBTideRoll, and several others that didn't give me a name to credit (but thanks anyway!).Īs always, if you are in any way offended by vulgarity, sexual innuendo, dirty words, and etc. Big thanks to the following folks for submitting: It's OK to listen to the podcast, but continue to understand that people's lives have been affected.All the upsets this week brought some pretty strong material in. “A fundamental message that I am trying to continue to press, is that of course, we say it's entertainment, but within the true crime genre, we need to make sure that there is that ethical responsibility of understanding that this is real life,” Holes said. He added that he hopes that true crime lovers comprehend that the cases they learn about, and the people affected, are very real. It's now the fundamental message that I want to get out there.” “And that turns out really is why this book exists. “So this is where the message with ‘ Unmasked’ is not only talking about the pursuit of the Golden State Killer and these other cases I was involved with, it's really trying to convey that this profession has an impact on the individuals working it, their sacrifices these individuals have made of themselves, of their families,” he told NPR. Holes got into the trauma he experienced in his new memoir, “ Unmasked ,” which was released in April. “I buried that shock and now I’m in the mode of ‘I got work to do.’” Holes told NPR that while many of the stories he worked on are “shocking at first,” he said he learned to “bury the weight of that emotional trauma.”
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Just recently, he spoke out about Mitchell Bacom’s 2022 murder conviction in the death of 14-year-old Suzanne Bombardier, expressing concern that he might be a serial killer who preyed upon sex workers. Holes has since worked numerous other cases, including the re-examination the mysterious death of Rebecca Zahau in Oxygen’s “ Death At The Mansion: Rebecca Zahau ,” which aired in the summer 2019. He then began working on the case again during his spare time, focusing on DNA and genetic genealogy he's been widely credited for hunting down the man who killed at least 13 people and committed more than 50 rapes throughout California. Holes was working as cold-case investigator for the Contra Costa County District Attorney's office when true crime writer Michelle McNamara approached him about it, leading up to her 2013 Los Angeles Magazine piece on the case, The case was familiar to Holes as he'd initially began working on the case when he was in his 20s and a forensic toxicologist. The most famous case that Holes helped solve was the Golden State Killer case: His work helped lead to the arrest of ex-cop Joseph DeAngelo, who was convicted in 2020 of being the notorious California serial killer. The report noted that Holes has suffered nightmares, endured marital issues and used bourbon to self-medicate - all the result of diving in deep on some very morbid cases. "But I will tell you, it's very real and a lot of other people are experiencing that." "I didn't recognize that over the course of my career," he added.
