THE SLEEPWALKING KILLER
On the night of May 24, 1987, around 2:00 a.m., Kenneth James Parks, a 23-year-old from Toronto, left his house and got into his car, after driving for 22 km, parked in front of his in-laws' house.
After getting out of the car and opening the door of the house, he entered the house. Once inside, he first strangled his father-in-law, Dennis Woods, and then, after beating her, stabbed his mother-in-law, Barbara Ann Woods, to death with a kitchen knife.
After that, as if nothing had happened, he left the house and got back into his car, going to the nearest police station, declaring: "I think I killed someone".
In fact, the man had not realized what he had done because he had been asleep all that time and therefore could not even be held responsible for his actions.
In fact, during the trial, which took place in 1988, the jury, after 9 hours of deliberation, pronounced a verdict of acquittal, because according to them, Parks, suffering from sleepwalking which was also hereditary, committed the murders in his sleep. The prosecution, considering the acquittal ridiculous, appealed the verdict but, in 1992, the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed it in full.
Even the sleep specialist hired as a consultant, initially skeptical about such a case of sleepwalking since the man had performed a series of rather complex actions such as driving, going through three traffic lights without accidents etc., after a more careful examination, became convinced that Parks, during the commission of the murders, was actually asleep.
According to the investigations, most likely, Dennis Woods, finding his son-in-law wandering around the house asleep, trying to wake him, made him feel in danger thus leading him to react in a hostile and aggressive way.
So if you see a relative wandering around your house at night, let him do it, or rather hide, otherwise you run the risk of ending up cuckolded and beaten, or rather, killed.
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