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How One Cold-Blooded Scheme Shattered the Illusion of Suburban Success

In an old rusted tea tin, the killer had carefully stored personal items taken from the women he murdered. Eleanor’s expensive lighter. Irene’s gold pendant. Susan’s car keys. Marina’s business card. To him, these were not valuables. They were war trophies.

Investigators also found a detailed regional map covered in red X marks. Those marks showed where he had dumped cars and hidden body parts. Several more X’s marked neighborhoods where he had planned future attacks.

A full forensic psychiatric evaluation found Andrew Kravitz legally sane. Doctors diagnosed him with a severe antisocial personality disorder. He lacked empathy, compassion, and guilt.

He fully understood what he had done and believed it was justified. The trial was held behind closed doors for obvious reasons. The details were too shocking for public release.

Throughout the proceedings, the defendant remained calm, even openly defiant. He never once looked at the grieving relatives of his victims. Instead, he watched the judge with a faint, mocking half-smile, as if the whole thing bored him.

When given a chance to speak before sentencing, he said only one sentence. “The only thing I regret is that I didn’t do more.” The sentence that followed surprised no one…

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