
The Yoga Store Murder
The Shocking True Account of the Lululemon Athletica Killing
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Narrado por:
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L.J. Ganser
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De:
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Dan Morse
It was a crime that shocked the country. On March 21, 2011, two young saleswomen were found inside a lululemon athletica store in Bethesda, Maryland, one of the nation's wealthiest suburbs. Jayna Murray, thirty, was dead—stabbed, slashed, and struck more than 300 times. Brittany Norwood, twenty-eight, was alive—tied up on a bathroom floor, her clothing ripped, her face bloodied. This is the full true story of what happened.
"In the field of true crime you never know what you'll get—a badly written clip job or thoughtful reportage that goes beyond the crime scene to the impact of crime on people and society. This book lines up on the latter side. It was one of the best written and researched true crime books I've read in quite a while." -MICHAEL CONNELLY, bestselling author and executive producer of the Bosch drama series
"An incredible piece of true crime." -Cosmopolitan
"[Morse] brings a journalist's instincts to this moment-by-moment chronicle." -The Washington Post
"[Listeners] will tear through the book-as I did-to learn the solution to the dark mystery at its core." -HAROLD SCHECHTER, author of The Mad Sculptor: The Maniac, the Model, and the Murder that Shook a Nation
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Great for True Crime Buffs
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To go through all that and not tell WHY bugs me. Even Dr. Grande on CleanTube (YouTube with no advertisements) has ideas. Narcissism was his mulling on this one.
Her family seems very, very deluded about her. Not only was she a thief and a scammer (from her own friends and family, no less! Not just "rich strangers/companies," which at least makes SOME logical sense). It's codependent to love anyone who clearly does not have that capacity. The family sort of acts like they want her on the streets, and by now, being 15 years older, which make it that much more likely she'd kill again. Nobody's going to be beating down her door by this point, which tends to bring that killer instinct out of them.
It's irritating that her family acts like she "accidentally" killed someone, instead of spending several minutes deliberately doing it, as 331 hits takes awhile.Taking breaks, even! Switching weapons four times! As the judge proved in his chambers the time it would take to hit anyone 331 times, I think it was.
The lowlife thieving would have put me off back when, though. Just me? Bring a ho wasn't an issue for me. I mean, adults and all that. But the dishonesty is problematic. If you want to be a pro, go right ahead, just don't lie to yourself as to what it is.
Strange story.
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