¶ … 2005, one file sent by the BTK killer to a Wichita television station led police to investigate Dennis Rader, a church president, and ended the 30-year murder spree of this serial killer. What evidence was pivotal in this case?
Computer evidence has become increasingly pivotal in demonstrating the guilt or innocence of a suspect. This has recently been seen in the so-called BTK case. The case is testimony to the value of using computer evidence in modern forensic science. The BTK (Bind, Torture, Kill) killer was linked to eight murders in the 1970s and '80s and then resurfaced in 1991 and later in the 21st century. But when the killer Dennis Rader "came to his pastor in January with a floppy disk, saying he had the agenda of a church council meeting and needed to run off copies on a printer," the electronic imprint in the disk linked Rader to a message sent by the BTK to a Wichita TV station (Computer Trail Led To BTK Suspect, 2009, CBS). The BTK killer was known for the cruel and taunting message he sent to various media sources and this propensity of his was used to 'crack the case.'
Later, other evidence would link Radar to the crime, such as souvenirs he kept of his victims as well as other DNA evidence. But the critical link in the chain was the disk, which gave law enforcement (who had been following Radar) the ability...
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