Given their often idyllic portrayal, we tend to think that crimes in the Amish community do not exist. However, the atrocities did happen, just like the recent beards of the traitor Amish in Ohio.
Break the silence from
Is the latest novel of bestselling authors,
Linda Castillo; the third part is Kate Burkholder, director of the police station in Pennsylvania's fictional Painters Mill town.
In the past six months, hate crimes against the Amish have been plaguing Koshocton and Homs County. The 4WD is burning Molotov cocktails, farm animals are slaughtered at night; men are being hit, dressed in half, frozen and tied to their carts.
Addressing these crimes is particularly challenging because, culturally, the Amish do not like pressing allegations. "God will take care of us," is their inherent belief.
Solomon [Solly] Slabaugh, his wife Rachel and his brother Abel, his brother from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, were found dead in their farm's faeces [Manure pit captures livestock waste and produces deadly methane gas] ].
Are these the latest hate crimes against the local Amish, magnified, or just a terrible accident?
Kate Burkholder quickly arrived at the scene. In the past, Amish himself, she was in a dominant position in leading the investigation.
The coroner, Dr. Ludwig Coblentz, discovered a large amount of head contusions on Solly during the autopsy and began a murder investigation. Human hair was also found on the shovel near the body.
Slabaugh left four children: Mose, 17 years old, Salome, 15 years old, Samuel, 12 years old, Ike, 10 years old.
State agent John Tomaselli came to help Kate investigate. They worked together on the Slaughterhouse killer and found themselves involved in it.
The dark secrets of Kate's youth have plagued her as a young woman today, challenging her love. However, she was attracted to Agent Tomaselli: "He got me. I am thirty-one years old. This is the first time someone has given me a real understanding."
The Slabaugh family has its own hidden, the core of the plot.
Who is motivated to kill Slabaugh?
Adam Slabaugh is alone. Married outside his Amish faith, Solly forbade his brother to see his niece and nephew. Adam is now a close relative of the Slabaugh child custody.
Considering the lack of money in Solly's hidden Mason jars and the removal of rifles from the Slabaugh house is the key to solving these crimes.
Break the silence from
If you have contact with Central and/or Northeastern, and all regional references are particularly enjoyable.
If you are interested in reading the feeling of a well-written mystery/shocking small town, you will enjoy it. from
Break the silencefrom
. This is an interesting, fictional drama that does not have the real crime reality that really happened in the Amish community today.
For all Amish, visit the popular blog Amish America: http://amishamerica.com/.
Orignal From: Silent Silence Linda Castillo - Amish Mystery Book Review - Hate Crime and Love
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