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10 dead unsolved celebrities who will keep you up at night

 10 dead unsolved celebrities who will keep you up at night

People have always had a thing for unsolved mysteries, which is why beloved character actor Robert Stack had a job in the '90s and we're inundated with cable docu-drama series sporting variations on the theme to this day. We like to play armchair detectives, formulating our own theories as to the guilty parties and assuring ourselves that if we were working the case, we'd have long ago dragged the perpetrators into the cold light of justice.

Of course, this is a bunch of malarkey. Real detectives spend considerably less time than most of us sitting in armchairs and considerably more pounding the pavement, interviewing witnesses, and gathering clues — yet somehow, a goodly number of vicious crimes stubbornly refuse to roll over and let themselves be solved. Even in cases in which the victims are high-profile celebrities, getting to the bottom of a murder case is way more difficult than it looks on TV. If you have any doubt, take a look at these baffling unsolved murders. The perpetrators have never been brought to justice, despite the fact that their creepy circumstances kept detectives up at night — and they just might give you a touch of the heebie-jeebies as well.

10 No man can beat him



When most people hear the words  "Bruce Lee ", the brain automatically translates words like "unstoppable " that move in the speed of sound despite being made of iron.   "I had no masters in the martial arts; the martial arts was the creation of Jeet Kun, an art without form that was just as much philosophy as it was fighting style, while still lying in hospital bed after injury. He hit the crap out of Chuck Norris on the screen, and once kicked karate master Bob's wall very hard he flew back in extra and broke that guy's arm. It sounded like nothing could ever take it--but nothing, though we still don't know what it was after more than four decades later.

I died at the age of 32 in a friend's apartment, the official cause of cerebral edema death, and swelling of the brain. The theories immediately began to fly, and the heat (because he had the sweat glands in his armpits removed) to an allergic reaction to a dwelling in, well, Ninja. But no satisfactory explanation was found, unless I already found the same. As shown in the 1993 Bicipo Dragon: Bruce Lee's story, I was convinced that the demon was stalking male members of his family, including Brandon's daughter, who would die in a tragic accident on a plateau in 1993.

9 Legend that they were not


Paul c. Is a legend among the fans of the Golden Age rap, but if the world is a fair place, you can remove all qualifications and describe its legend only with the capital L. Perhaps his most important achievement: he was the first to use the MU SP-1200, a sampling organizer that gained the legendary status of its own ability to transfer rap beats with natural vocal. The school has made a class of prominent producers in its use and its name was built through its production and classical engineering works such as the First Lady Ladies Queen, "Markie's business is just a friend," and the great majority of Eric B and Triple Hibo let the initial UX rakin beat them. CJ Moore's partner as "the man who was on the subject to make some of the worst sh * t heard on this planet, because it was dangerous" - but it was not to be.

In 1989, Paul was shot at his home by an unknown attacker, and the fact that he was not really known to the enemies was in perfect spirits the day before and shocked his friends and colleagues. After the required crime appeared for America, the trick was to arrest Derek Blair, who was not charged for lack of evidence. The death of Paul casts the veil on the thriving rap scene, and so far the mourning friends of the giant product was about to be.

8 Living and dying in L.A.


On November 16, 2010, Hollywood power worker Ronney Shawn rolled on Sunset Street through the Anqa district after leaving the first part of the feature film. Suffice it to say that this was not an area of random shooting was known to happen, but as his car shessen, someone pumped four shots through his side pilots window, killing her almost instantly. One of the most dared, the shocking Hollywood killers had ever seen--and if the critics were to believe, the Beverly Hills Police Department missed the investigation so well that he was unlikely to be resolved ever.

Wild speculation ran as to who might wish to have fun loving and sparkling dead agent, running a group of gambling debtors into shady financiers in a random road rage accident. But the investigation of BHPD quickly focused on Harold Smith, a person who committed suicide when confronted by the police. The closure of the case was declared, but the documents published in 2017 show a very limited investigation that ignored other suspects and potential witnesses, could not take advantage of all the available surveillance sequences (which of them put Smith in the scene) and had a serious case of tunnel vision for Smith, suspicious dubious. Even in the light of this information--and the fact that there is no material evidence to link Smith to the crime--the case has not been reopened.

7 Eraser-head Injury of Doom


Jack Nance was the unlikely muse of acclaimed director and famous Weirdo David Lynch, who cast him as the lead in his surreal masterpiece Eraserhead. Nance was also featured in Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks and its theatrical coda Fire Walk with Me, and would have gone on to anchor even more Lynchian weirdness had he not gotten involved in a random street fight in 1997. After exchanging words with two young men in a doughnut shop, Nance was punched twice in the head; He arrived home complaints of a terrible headache, but otherwise didn't seem out of spells. The next day, a friend who stopped by to check up on him found him dead of his injuries.

Lynch remembered his friend as easily irritated and prone to being vocal about it, which may have had something to do with the altercation. "He spoke his mind and had a dry wit — he often got into trouble," the director said in an interview. The men who delivered the fatal head-punching were never identified, and decades after the fact, it's highly doubtful they ever will be.

6 Death of a group of a man


Another hip-hop legend whose life was tragically cut short, Jason Mizell - better known as Jam Master Jay, the DJ who anchored the sound of the iconic Queens trio Run-D. Mr. C. - was as well liked as anyone in the industry, making his shocking murder even more disconcerting. At the end of October 2002, Mizell was working in the Studio when an unknown group of people arrived. Also present were Mizell's friend Randy Allen and partner Uriel Rincon, who described Jay greeting the group warmly after having his assistant Buzz them in the Studio. An hour later, Mizell had died from a gunshot wound in the back of the head-and to this day, the only people who can know why do not speak.

Former NYPD detective Derrick Parker gave an interview to DJ Vlad 15 years after the fact and told him, referring to the infamous murders of Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur, the following: "I would say any case on the big three, that [the Jam Master Jay] case is losing c to be a little resolved," he said. "Soon, I hope." It chalks the persistent case unresolved status until the witnesses fail to cooperate, which there is just maybe a good reason for: Mizell's cousin Ryan Thompson is of the opinion that all Potential witnesses would be imprisoned as accomplices if they spoke to me. In October 2017, the case was officially considered cold, and it does not seem like it will heat up anytime soon.

5 The death of the new wave


Although Peter Ivers helped compose music for Eraserhead, he spent the early 80s making a name for himself on the fledgling new wave scene, which he defended as the host of the New Wave Theater of USA Network from 1981 to 1983. His eccentric style interacting with those on the cutting edge of the LA New Wave and hardcore scenes could border on the art of performance in his own right, and Ivers may have been on his way to national celebrity as a television personality-if his life was not brutally cut short on March 1, 1983.
Ivers was found clubbed to death in his LA apartment, and the police determined that he had been killed by an intruder-perhaps an "opportunistic burglar" -which is a theory that your sixth average grader could probably have arrived given the information available. It quickly became clear that no additional tracks would be forthcoming, and it is perhaps because of the absence of unfortunate Ivers' that his beloved New Wave music also suffered from an unceremonious disappearance in the world. short order.

4 A broken perfect image


Bob Crane was the awesome, beautiful star of the 60's Hogan sitcom, a man well-liked by his peers who had stayed in the public eye via a steady stream of guest roles in popular shows in the 70s. His healthy, squeaky-clean image makes him a horrible 1978 murder all the more unfathomable. He was discovered in him Scottsdale, Arizona, at home with him head-in and an electric cord tied around his neck. But if his death was shocking, the details of his private life that fled after were positively staggering.

Namely, Crane was heavily photographing and otherwise his own many, many documenting romantic with women, meeting his something John Carpenter friend may have helped with. Carpenter immediately became the focal point of the investigation and was even tried for the crime in 1994, but was acquitted. A 2016 reexamination of DNA evidence also failed to pin the crime on Carpenter (who died in 1998) and the case officially cooled once again. The case was the subject of the excellent 2002 auto focus film, directed by the legendary Paul Schrader and starring Greg Kinnear and Willem Dafoe as Crane and Carpenter, respectively. Although the movie is certainly not reserved in its opinion that carpenter was responsible for the crime, it is doubtful that we will ever know for sure.

3 Diary of the Lost Starlet


Christa Helm was never a household name, but the striking actress may very well have been if she hadn't met her mysterious fate. Arriving in Hollywood in the early '70s, Helm managed to land bit parts on such popular TV series as Wonder Woman and Starsky and Hutch — but she was allegedly much more prolific with the fellas than she was with her roles. She was rumored to have bedded such diverse talents as Warren Beatty, Joe Namath, and Mick Jagger, and she wasn't shy about recording all the juicy details — complete with a rating system — in her "sex diary." One day, a friend received a postcard from Helm with an ominous message: "I am in way over my head here. I'm into something I can't get out of." Shortly thereafter, the starlet was brutally stabbed and bludgeoned to death on a West Hollywood street.

The investigation quickly zeroed in on the diary — or rather it would have, had the diary actually been present. It, along with several tapes Helm had recorded of her encounters, were conspicuously missing from her home when investigators attempted to recover them. While it was theorized that she had turned to extortion to supplement her sparse acting gigs, nothing was ever proven, and the diary and tapes were never found.

2 The mystery of murder that refuses to die


The death of uber-glamorous actress Natalie Wood riveted the nation in 1981. During the filming of the thriller Brainstorm, Wood was enjoying some R&R aboard a yacht anchored off Catalina with husband Robert Wagner and castmate Christopher Walken. Somehow, Wood vanished from the boat, and her body was later found floating over a mile away. The death was ruled an accidental drowning — until it was reopened in 2011 due to new information from witnesses.

Investigators have largely kept the nature of this information under wraps, but enough is known to poke some serious holes in Wagner's story. He claims he and Walken had an argument, then calmed down and noticed that Wood was missing — but multiple witnesses claimed to have heard a man and a woman arguing heatedly during the time frame in question, and investigators have also noted that Wagner has at times failed to get his story straight. Add to this the fact that Wood was known to be terrified of water and that she "looked like the victim of assault" when investigators recovered her body, and it became clear that Wagner, Walken, or both were not being totally forthcoming about things. In 2011, the case was reopened. Wagner — now in his 80s — was deemed a person of interest in 2018. The renewed investigation has been ongoing ever since, which doesn't seem to bode well for its resolution.

1 Do not blame the law


In 1966, rocker Bobby Fuller was riding high with his band, the Bobby Fuller Four, basking in the success of their hit single "I Fought the Law" (a skirmish which, as we all know, the law won). He had just signed a fat distribution deal and seemed ready to repel the entire British Invasion all by himself when he received a fateful phone call early in the morning on July 18. After the call, he departed his apartment in his mother's Oldsmobile — but we'll never know who he was going to meet or why. Later in the day he was found dead of asphyxiation in the car's front seat. Bruises covered his body, and he'd been doused in gasoline.

Amazingly, responding officers quickly pegged the scene as a suicide. A nearby gas can was disposed of without being dusted for prints, people were never questioned, and the bruises were chalked up to the gas fumes and the summer heat. Fuller's family never bought the suicide explanation. He was at the peak of fame and showed no signs of depression. But author Miriam Linna, who wrote a book on the case, has her suspicions: "In July 1966, Bobby had had it," she said in an interview. "The band was going to break up. … He was going to go solo." She suspects he was killed because he wanted out. The case is still unsolved.





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