Good Kill Hunting 2
- Markiavelli

- Dec 5, 2025
- 2 min read
WHY NY BUSINESSMAN GEORGE DAMON IS GUILTY of killing "Old Shakespeare" (prostitute) Carrie Brown

Carrie Brown was allegedly blackmailing a "Broadway Merchant"
George Damon fits the geographical and occupational description of the Broadway Merchant. He's a businessman in the print business near Broadway.
George Damon hired the Number 1 suspect and he covered it up and lied about it.
The hired man took the room key home with him after the murder and left it at Damon's residence. WHY? To prove he did it? Got the job done?
He fits the profile of a prostitute killer as did the Long Island Serial Killer. Artistic businessman. Owned and ran a print shop. LISK was an architect.
Damon fits the description of a man named George who went out with Carrie on the previous Monday. Tall, sharp features and a hole (rare dimple?) in his chin. If that was him, why would he go out with her when he was paying her "to stay away from him"?
There was another man with this George. Was Damon introducing the man to the target?
The hired man was out three days afterward on the Thursday night. Why?
The killing appears to be planned and coordinated/coerced.
The killer was not Jack the Ripper, nor was he a serial killer as far as we can tell. He only killed once and he wasn't caught so he started and then stopped, as if he was "hired" for the one "job".
Carrie's date with "George" coincides with the arrival of the working candidate for George Damon's hired hand and the suspect "Frank".
The murder room key and the bloody clothes were found by the maid, which explains why Damon could not keep everything a secret.
Damon conveniently forgot Frank's last name.
If everything he said was true and he turned in the evidence, he'd have been a hero who helped catch "Jack the Ripper" but he didn't do it.
The least he was hiding was his patronizing prostitutes and hanging out with Carrie's killer, but he told too many lies for it to be just that.
After a couple of bogus affidavits saying he was scared of Frank and worried about the publicity (I wonder what kind; could it be his punting with sailors? Hiring them to kill?), he made another one saying Frank had a flat nose and was clean-shaven so didn't fit the description. One lie too many (especially when there's no reason to lie and you're not known as a pathological liar) means you're guilty!




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