The Ng case forced the Canadian courts to examine for the first time the issue of capital punishment in light of the patriation of the Canadian Constitution and Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
At one point, exasperated senior American officials went so far as to threaten to come into Canada and forcibly take Ng if the Canadian courts refused to give him up to face Californias death penalty.
In painting their profile of Ng, the authors reached far into his past to interview former classmates in private schools in Hong Kong and Britain. They also sought the help of a leading expert on psychopathic killers to examine Ngs upbringing and its impact on his development. His conclusion: Ng may have been hard-wired to kill.
In researching No Kill No Thrill, the authors spent hundreds of hours interviewing police and court officials and going through reams of case files. They traveled to California several times to attend Ngs sentencing in Santa Ana, to meet family members of victims in Garden Grove and San Francisco and to visit the murder scene in Wilseyville.
To prepare the final chapter, they attended a private service for the victims in San Andreas, standing alongside members of the victims families at a cairn containing the unidentified remains of as many as 25 people.
Ng and Lake killed at least a dozen men, women and children, and perhaps as many as twenty-five. When the Miranda project finally threatened to collapse as the two were arrested on unrelated charges, Lake took a lethal cyanide pill and Ng fled to Canada. There he was arrested for robbery and the shooting of a department store security guard.
Then, for Canadian police, two critical events established a surprising link between the robber being held in an Alberta prison and the cold-blooded murderer wanted thousands of miles away. The first was that Ng told some of his story to fellow prisoner Maurice Laberge. Laberge recognized Ngs story as a ticket to early parole and encouraged Ng to tell more. Ng obliged--not only with words but with grizzly cartoons of his psychopathic desires. The second event was that Laberge connected with RCMP Sgt. Raymond Munro, who, in cooperation with California police, began investigating the relationship between Ng and the Northern California murders.
As Ng fought extradition to the United States for six years, Sgt. Munro became involved in one of the longest, most intricate and most expensive international investigations and subsequent trials to have ever occurred in North America.
No Kill, No Thrill is the story of a cop, a killer and his confidante. But more, it is the story of dogged, resourceful police work that brought a killer to justice. Drawing frequently upon little-known sources ranging from Charles Ngs childhood in Hong Kong, his experience in the U.S. marines and his heinous killing spree, No Kill, No Thrill is a penetrating portrait of the dark mind of a sociopathic killer who now awaits execution on death row.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gripping True Story,
By A Customer
This review is from: No Kill, No Thrill: The Shocking True Story of Charles Ng - One of North America's Most Horrific Serial Killers (Paperback)
An excellent read about the grisly crimes of two men bent on a killing spree to satisfy their twisted needs. Very interesting information on how the RCMP helped to convict one of the mass killers
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