In a rare moment of judicial decisiveness, a New York judge has finally slammed the cell door on the Long Island serial killer, a creature so depraved he makes Voldemort look like a cheeky chappy from a boarding school comedy. Eight women, eight souls extinguished by a man who apparently mistook human life for a particularly gruesome game of hide and seek. The sentencing is done, the gavel has fallen, and the families of the victims can now breathe a sigh of relief, if not closure.
But across the pond, a different sort of ache festers. British families, whose daughters fell victim to the same predator, are left watching from the sidelines as their own pursuit of justice drags through the mud of international jurisdiction. It's a bitter reminder that in the theatre of the macabre, some actors never get their curtain call.
The Long Island Strangler may be behind bars, but for these families, the trial is far from over. They demand answers, they demand accountability, and frankly, they deserve a damn sight more than the bureaucratic shrug they've been getting. This is the grotesque pantomime of modern justice: a killer gets his due, but the echoes of his sins still haunt two continents.
And somewhere, a politician is probably drafting a press release about 'strengthening transatlantic ties' while the families just want a voice. In the end, the only thing that's truly sentenced is the hope that one day, the system will stop being a punchline.








