I've always wondered: Is it possible to kill someone with one of those ice daggers that plunge from eavestroughs during winter? It would seem a perfect weapon since it would, of course, melt in hot water.
Sure, just go for a nice soft spot - eye socket, throat, inner thigh, stomach. The chest has too many rib bones guarding it that could deflect or shatter your weapon.
Cheers,
Grant
I once killed a character by strapping her in the drivers seat of a pick-up and placing a block of ice on the excellerator. The truck went into a lake and the ice melted before the police found it. The girl was behind the wheel so she must have driven herself intot the lake.
There was an old story where ice was used as the murder weapon. Its been bugging the shit out of me since I first saw this topic. Unless I can place the story I may very well not sleep tonight.
I'm sure I've read a murder mystery where the weapon was an icepick inserted at the back of the skull- at the base. The bleeding was minimal and covered by the hair and so the cause of death was not immediately obvious
Is that true? Every head wound I've ever seen - not in crime scenes, more like athletic mishaps - has bled like hell. And even if that's not so, it doesn't seem like it would get past the first few minutes of an autopsy, or am I wrong?
I remember vividly the time a VERY large icicle hit the pavement about eighteen inches in front of me as I walked between two five-story buildings. The shards cut my face. I am convinced that it could easily have killed me.
It wouldn't even have had to melt to be a perfect weapon--if it had actually been a murder attempt it would have looked like a freak accident.
In the book, The Tail of the Tip-off, author Rita Mae Brown uses poison on the tip of an icicle (just like a needle) to inject it in the victim's neck. The idea was to allow the ice to melt without any real evidence of a weapon and of course to baffle the cops who can't solve a case without the help of a local amatuer sleuth.
As a matter of fact, there was a recent BBC TV documentary about 'How to commit the perfect murder' which basically reversed the whole CSI concept and looked at whether it was possible to carry out a crime that was undetectable with all the methods now available to the cops. The show looked at ice-daggers and was very sceptical at first until - to their own surprise - two eminent foreensic scientists found that they could penetrate deep into a joint of pork (the standard substitute for human flesh) using a short stabbing-spear of ice. It evern snuck between ribs. So the answer was, yes, ice kills.