Vampire Cop (1990) / Cannibal Cop (2017) Reviews by RevTerry
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Vampire Cop (1990) / Cannibal Cop (2017) Reviews by RevTerry
never 4get the time a fetish website i frequented got shut down by the feds cuz an nypd officer kept posting there about wanting to kidnap and eat women
Cannibal Cop (2017) (DVD Review)
Cannibal Cop (2017) (DVD Review)
Cannibal Cop (2017) (DVD Review) Directed By: Donald Farmer Starring: Roni Jonah, Donald Farmer, Channing Dodson Rated: UR/Region: O/Widescreen/Number of disc: 1 Available From SRS Cinema Detective Warbeck is a cop who plays by his own rules, including abusing his suspects and even innocent civilians. But when one of his victims is raised by a voodoo priestess, Warbeck is attacked and turned into…
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Recently watched the documentary Cannibal Cop in my intro to criminal justice and it's all I can talk/think about.
my acting was plenty horrible enough for donald farmer’s ‘cannibal cop’. my bra comes off in the opening scene.
NYPD Police Officer Convicted For Plotting To Rape, Kidnap, And Eat Women Is Free
NYPD Police Officer Convicted For Plotting To Rape, Kidnap, And Eat Women Is Free
The so-called “Cannibal Cop” was convicted in March 2013 of planning to kidnap, rape, kill, and cook women. A judge granted his release on $100,000 bond after his conviction was tossed. View this image › Facebook / Via nypost.com The conviction of Gilberto Valle — the New York City police officer known in New York media as the “Cannibal Cop” for allegedly plotting to kill, rape, and cook women —…
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The Internet has created unprecedented opportunities for individuals to explore a wide range of unfamiliar and often-marginalized desires, and in doing so has a
Thea Johnson & Andrew Gilden have posted Common Sense and the Cannibal Cop on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
The Internet has created unprecedented opportunities for individuals to explore a wide range of unfamiliar and often-marginalized desires, and in doing so has also created unprecedented opportunities for the criminal justice system to monitor and punish these sexual desires. An important example of this dynamic is the recent trial of Gilberto Valle, New York City’s so-called “Cannibal Cop.” Valle, an NYPD officer, was convicted for conspiracy to kidnap several women based on a series of highly fictionalized conversations on a “dark fetish” fantasy website. Although these conversations revealed Valle’s fantasies involving kidnapping, torturing, and cannibalizing women, he had made no effort to kidnap, kill, or eat anyone, and there was no evidence that his online discussions went beyond graphic exchanges and digital role-playing.
The “Cannibal Cop” case provides a useful template for examining the ethical boundaries of applying criminal laws to the precarious realm of Internet-mediated sexuality. This Essay highlights some of the important questions raised by the prosecution of the Cannibal Cop, and it emphasizes the need to carefully approach the important, yet inherently blurry line between “fantasy” and “reality.” We caution against overreliance on "common sense" in cases like this, given the incomplete lay understandings of how people use the Internet to explore sexual desires and the risk that legal decisions will be driven by disapproval of these desires.
This beautifully written and compelling essay explains why the jury’s reliance on “common sense” can be both a virtue and a vice. Confronted with deviant desires they cannot understand, common sense may lead jurors to condemn defendants based on fear and horror, rather than real evidence of wrongdoing. Johnson & Gilden focus on the sensational case of Gilberto Valle, the so-called “Cannibal Cop,” whose horrible but unrealized Internet fantasies led to his conspiracy conviction, which was ultimately reversed. But their observations implicate many convictions for inchoate crimes based on Internet fantasies, from sexual abuse to terrorism. How should we distinguish between fantasy and reality in a medium that so seamlessly mediates between the two? How can we?
Thought Crimes: The Case of the Cannibal Cop. Erin Lee Carr. 2015. USA.