Professorial Carnage at Missouri State 

An instructor of modern and classical languages at Missouri State University stabbed an killed a professor emeritus and also stabbed his wife when she tried to defend her husband. 

The killer arrived at the victims’ residence in a Mercedes Benz and barged into the professor’s house, brandishing a big knife. He is being charged with 2nd degree murder. 

20 thoughts on “Professorial Carnage at Missouri State 

  1. A friend of mine just took a tenure track job teaching Ottoman History there. I am taking his old job in Kurdistan. Nobody expects somewhere in Iraq to be safer than somewhere in the middle of Missouri. But, the empirical evidence shows that it is.

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  2. As a non-US person, can I ask what actually is second degree murder? This sounds pretty unequivocally intentional to me. How can it not be first degree?

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    1. Popular understanding (at least mine) is that second degree murder is more…. spontaneous (heat of the moment kind of thing) while first degree murder is more planned in advance.

      I have no idea if that is really what applies in the law. Probably not.

      Also, the specifics of first and second degree might differ by state in the US and there might be practical reasons for pursuing second rather than first degree murder charges. I suspect that in this case second degree might be part of a plea bargain (where the accused agrees to plead guilty of a lesser crime rather than face trial for a greater one).

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    2. Both first degree and second degree murders are intentional. But first degree means special circumstances: multiple murders, torture, kidnapping, murder of a cop. These murders can carry a death penalty while 2nd degree doesn’t.

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      1. First degree murder charges require premeditation, while second degree murder does not. A lot of those special circumstances indicate premeditation (with some random exceptions). In this particular case, the charges indicate more of a “heat of the moment” thing.

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        1. I don’t know, he grabbed the knife and drove all the way there. To me, that’s premeditation. How often do people arrive at professors’ houses wielding knives?

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          1. “How often do people arrive at professors’ houses wielding knives?”

            hmmmmmm….. (looks down at shoes)….. mmmmm some … people…. might? have? just…. one or thre….. OKAY! 17 times! But they MADE me do it!!!!

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            1. I know many of us have been tempted. On my first date with N, I moaned for so long about a feud with a professor that he asked me if I wanted him to go beat up the offending prof. 😃

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          2. Premeditation requires a rational consideration of timing and action. While he did grab a knife and drive all the way there, was he thinking rationally? The mens rea requirement requires more evidence than they may have against him. A second degree charge is then more likely to succeed than a first degree charge.

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