As the post title implies, certain niceties come to mind that ought to be addressed.
Anyone at the higher levels of organized crime, or the agencies that investigate it, feel free to share anonymously in Comments, but it seems to me if I were the Mob, or any undertaking (no pun intended) where disposal of inconvenient bodies were problematic, the first thing I'd do would be to move into the mortuary business in a big way, and acquire as many of them as I could.
1) They never go bankrupt, as clientele is an endless supply.
2) The mark-ups for legit business are quite simply recockulous.
3) Having a crew of trusted employees who would and could show up anywhere, any time, 24/7, like the clean-up crew in a John Wick movie, would be a boon to Mob business. For a gold coin (let's call it an ounce, currently around $2500), they dispose of all the evidence to those "in the trade". For anyone inside the family, it's literally on the house.
4) Murder? Not without a body. Evidence? Gone forever. As Stalin noted famously: "No man; no problem." Troublesome people simply disappear, and their faces go on milk cartons. But now, nobody can dime out anyone and tell anyone "where the bodies are buried". Because now, they get sprinkled at sea, flushed down the toilet, scattered to the winds. Whatever.
What happened to Left-Handed Louie?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind...
I bring this up not to tell organized crime (and as Ben Kingsley's character observed in Sneakers: "Trust me, Marty, it's not that organized.") how to go about their business, because they doubtless already know it (recall, if you will, Signore Bonasera, whom Don Corleone befriended at his daughter's wedding at the opening of The Godfather - Mario Puzo didn't spin that out of whole cloth), but truth be told, they aren't likely the only ones for whom disposal of certain things is solely their problem.
More proof that this is really a thing, in case you needed it:
For a hint about how certain things are handled "officially" I note for the record that Clint Emerson, Navy SEAL and CIA SAD worker, didn't include this information in his book for nothing, nor did he learn the information presented solely secondhand, through reading classroom materials. This is first-hand knowledge and years of experience talking. Take that to the bank.
And make no mistake, those methods will work. But they're intended as one-time field expedients. If you try thermal burial more than once in your own back yard, even if you live on 100 acres, sooner or later, a neighbor or passerby who's not the same color pin on the map as you is going to see repeated black columns of smoke, realize you're not having a pig roast nor electing a new pope, and call all the wrong people to come chat you up.
All those problems go away with the right excuse, and proper equipment.
While half-way helicopter rides would be satisfying, you need a convenient ocean nearby and hungry sharks and such to make the plan foolproof. In Pinochet's Chile? The country is one continuous coastline. But it isn't going to work, for example, in Nebraska. Mineshafts work, but you're always one sheriff's SAR rappel away from 200 consecutive life terms in the Big House, right?
I don't know what the cost is of the unit above, or what the buy-in is to open or acquire a nominally legit crematorium. But whatever that price, it pales to insignificance compared with the peace of mind that would come from knowing there's never going to be a corpus for some flatfoot to habeus, and thereby change people's retirement plans from white sands to gray bars.
It's less messy than a Morbark, and dead certain. Used judiciously (say an extra body a day), you could eliminate a lot of problems in your local area, completely under the radar.
Which, frankly, would move it right up near the top of the list of Things One Might Wish For if events required a lot of troublemakers to become "no problem".
Of course, that would never happen here, right?
Just saying.
(Addendum: Note the Comments for rural - particularly southern - equivalents, regarding domesticated pigs, feral hogs, and alligators. Al Swearingen and Mr. Wu from Deadwood send their regards.)
Had a family Fren growing up. He was a NH State Trooper. True story. One of his cases: PanAm Chief Pilot who married the Hawt Stu back when there were still insanely hot aerial-whores... she didn't know it at the time but he got his kicks out of beating the ever-lovin' shit out of chicks. One time he apparently took it a wee bit too far. (This was all pieced together after the fact mind you)
ReplyDeleteAfter beating Spouse into DeadSpouse, Cpt. PanAm rented a chipper. He lived on a lakefront in upstate. Dragged DeadSpouse to the edge of the water in thick brush, started 'clearing' the brush with a chainsaw, and throwing the logs and 'stuff' to include pieces parts of DeadSpouse into the chipper, "Branch, Branch, Leg, Branch, Branch, Arm ..."
The neighbors never caught on.
Two months later when now DeadSpouse was reported missing, Cpt. PanAm said she'd run off sumdood she met while flying overseas... Our Fren being sus, checked the credit card receipts of Cpt. PanAm, and went to the "We RentaChipper" that had rented the chipper to him, and lo and behold! It was still there, hadn't been re-rented, and was NOT fully cleansed of the bio-matter (hoomon that is)
That wasn't enough for the Persecutor and Judge (haaaaawk-spit see my poast today to see why I distain ALL them fuckers now) to file a case against Cpt. PanAm.
What it took was our Fren and the State Police Dive team over a period of three weeks scouring the bottom of the lake, looking for ANYTHING of DeadSpouse, until they found a fragment of DeadSpouse's jawbone that was large enough for them to say "Ain't no way a bitch could be alive with this shit being missing!" and nailed Cpt. PanAm's hide to the wall.
Easier to torch up a motherfucker.... wonder if a VA SBL would pay to set up such a service as you suggest? Jes' Sayin'
1) It's a profitable service.
ReplyDelete2) It opens up a plethora of possibilities.
Special Services in a pig farm might be a nice sideline.
ReplyDeletemost morticians in the usa are freemasons
ReplyDeleteCrew here in Honolulu used the City and County incinerator for a number of years. Until they got caught. No exact number is known but is was upwards of 35.
ReplyDeleteLove living in Louisiana.
ReplyDeleteOur human population is 4.9 million. Our wild alligator population is about 2 million.
Just sayin'.....
In our neck of the woods you leave it out for the feral hogs. Less than a week everything is gone. Or so I have read.
ReplyDelete@Anon 5;25 a.m. - Except for the teeth. See Mio, MI case of two missing hunters.
ReplyDeleteLawyer who was really interested in forensics told me decades ago that you want to perforate the body (i.e., major organs) prior to a water burial. Claimed decay/outgassing could cause bloating that would make the body way more buoyant than you could imagine and thus very easy to "underweight' it. Especially in shallower bodies of water. YMMV.
ReplyDeleteTucanae: LOL, reminds me of the serial killer up in Canada that owned a Pig Farm. The local authorities could not figure out where all the bodies went.
ReplyDeleteWhy do I recognize the book? I bought it because you recommended it.
ReplyDelete