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Saturday, May 26, 2012

New Show on Marjorie Orbin on E!

E! Producer Steve Filmer holds the slate for the camera
If you just watched the Scorned TV show on Marjorie Orbin, wait till you see the new E! show we just shot!  E! came to town on a balmy Friday in May and put me in the hot seat.



Actually, the crew arranged things so the lights, which usually have me cooked to a crisp within 20 minutes, were as cool as a Seattle morning all afternoon. Thanks, guys!  This show has an unforgettable title. I'll let you know what it is as soon as the network unsilences me. ;)   It shouldn't be long, the show airs in June!

They will cover territory you didn't get to hear about in Scorned, so you'll want to tune in and see what you missed.  In the meantime, be sure to click on the Marjorie Orbin label on this site (below or to the left) in order to see lots of photos that couldn't make it on TV--and to find out where Marjorie is now! Follow the links here and you can even read her love letter, see how much she owes, and what happened at her appeal.

E! crew, slate, WHAT SHE ALWAYS WANTED books
















Hey!  There's LOTS of stuff that will never make it on TV. You can only find it in the book -- look for the distinctive red cover with the real photo of Marjorie behind bars on it. WHAT SHE ALWAYS WANTED by Camille Kimball  Why not get a copy and read it before the E! show airs?  You can have all the facts in your hands as you watch!



For a video clip of BRIDAL TO HOMICIDAL, click here! E! video

(click on a title below to buy)
Camille Kimball's books:
                 **A Sudden Shot** as seen on TV!

Thoughts on this or any article at this site? To the next person whose comment I use for a post I will send a free signed book!  (If you post as "anonymous" for convenience, try to include an identifying website or name in your remark so no one else can claim your prize!)  For an example, please click here.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

More Television

This photo is from last week's TV shoot. Another comes up this week!


I've been quiet cuz I'm busy working on another TV show. TV is so much work behind the scenes...then poof!  A short blaze into the ether, much like a comet.

Will post more soon but must beg off for the moment.  Ummm...let's also confess I have photos of Michael Kiefer's book signing, but am having trouble loading them.  So FumbleFingers chica is toiling away, with not much to show for it.

In the meantime, scroll below to see more about Michael and follow links at the bottom of the page!

Monday, May 21, 2012

Pounce on This!





No reporter truly works alone. Some young puppies think they have to puff up their chests and pretend they can find all information all by themselves. These are the reporters you learn not to trust, because they make so many mistakes. A really good reporter knows that information is INFINITE. One simply cannot find or digest ALL of it.  The really good reporter has learned to cross check himself by testing his info and comprehension with other trusted sources, even if they are competitors.



An even better reporter, because he has both confidence and humility, is the one who will extend a helping hand first.  I happily announce that Michael Kiefer, currently on staff with the Arizona Republic (he has had some other gigs, often very cool ones), is such a one.   We met during the Phoenix Serial Shooter trial. He was generous with his professional expertise and his personal friendship. I couldn't wait to thank him in my book's acknowledgements.  We conspired on more than one occasion to further each other's goals and I hope I held up my end of the social contract. 


Something I got to do during breaks in that trial (and others that came along later) was read samples of Michael's manuscripts. He is, as Paul Rubin of the Phoenix New Times calls him, a "wordsmith."  Newspaper writing style is very restrictive, but he has successfully unleashed some of his finesse even there, writing compelling leads and working in the poignant scenes that are hard to get past barbarous editors.


Michael has now decided to give you the chance to do what only the privileged few, such as myself, used to do in courthouse hallways and offices. Now you can not only meet him, but hear him read from  one of his own novels. 


Tonight (Monday, May 21, 2012) at the Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, Michael is reading from The Lion Hunter.  Action fans, there's real lions in there. And real women. 


Based on Michael's many years of living--and reporting--in the Southwest, you will be drawn out of your city life into the complex yet spare territory that surrounds America's fifth largest city.  


Product DetailsLanny Klegg is on the trail of a poacher who hunts mountain lions. Trouble is, Lanny has sympathy for the ranchers who hire the lion killer. Ratcheting up the tension are the women that stand between Lanny's heart, soul, and his job. The Lion Hunter is Michael Kiefer's beautifully woven story of 21st century cowboyin'--shades of morality as subtle as the cougar's tawny coat and as dangerously opposed as the big cat's bloodthirsty fangs.  

Interested in more about Michael Kiefer? Here is a post that mentions an important story that he did that ended up coming up in the Casey Anthony trial.  And this one has a photo of him.


ADD: I had a link error up there which should now be fixed. Clicking on the words "important story" above should take you to a post about the Ring case and Casey Anthony.


When: 7pm
Where: Changing Hands Bookstore
Address: 6429 South McClintock Drive  (Tempe, Arizona)
Date: May 21, 2012 (Monday)







(click on a title below to buy)
Camille Kimball's books:
                 **A Sudden Shot** as seen on TV!

Thoughts on this or any article at this site? To the next person whose comment I use for a post I will send a free signed book!  (If you post as "anonymous" for convenience, try to include an identifying website or name in your remark so no one else can claim your prize!)  For an example, please click here.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Bienvenidos, Amigos!

Hay muchos visitantes de Sudamerica hoy.  Tengo mucho gusto en recibir a ustedes!
Saludo a todos con alegri'a!

Digame, por favor, lo que paso'?

Quizas un programa se emito' por television  hoy dia? Por favor hazme el favor de avisarme cual programa? y cual estacion?  Hay espacio para las respuestas debajo de aqui'.

Gracias!  Me da placer en verles aqui! Que vengan ustedes otra vez!


Camille


p.s. Gracias para perdonarme mis limitaciones en la bella lengua espanola!

Friday, May 11, 2012

TV Shoot This Week - Watch For Air Date

True Crime Author Camille Kimball shoots another TV show
We were already breaking down the set before I remembered to take pics! The crew had come in from out of state.

Except for Rusty, whom we've worked with before. Rusty keeps the sound pure and even, wrangling the whir of AC units, passing planes, and the occasional wail of a street performer's saxophone.  Thanks, Rusty!


Cinematographer Jacin we've happily worked with before, too.  At his last visit, Jacin became an enthusiastic fan of Mrs. White's Golden Rule Cafe. But this time, I learned Jacin is a true foodie with a blog of his own. Visit Jacin's recipes and ruminations from the road here. Don't let the title of his blog fool you, he's an EXCELLENT cinematographer (and I happen to know was trained by the bestest, too, so he better be!).
Producer Melissa poses with Cinematographer/Foode Jacin
Keeping all the plates spinning, as is the crazy job of any TV producer, was Melissa. Melissa had gathered eight thousand pages of documents in pursuit of this story.  You think it takes time and concentration to read and absorb eight thousand pages of testimony, forensic reports, and the like? Try distilling them all down to an hour's worth of television?! My hat is certainly off to Melissa for tackling this massive story.

There are so many people who step in in big ways and small to shepherd along a TV show. I would like to thank them all right here though some will have to remain anonymous. You know who you are!

I don't know the air date yet, but I will announce it here when I do. Hope to see you on TV!

(click on a title below to buy)
Camille Kimball's books:
                 **A Sudden Shot** as seen on TV!

Thoughts on this or any article at this site? To the next person whose comment I use for a post I will send a free signed book!  (If you post as "anonymous" for convenience, try to include an identifying website or name in your remark so no one else can claim your prize!)  For an example, please click here.

Monday, May 7, 2012

It's that time again!  I am madly preparing for a new TV shoot. So much to do!  The crew is already in town, shooting other scenes. Let you know more soon!


So if you are trying to reach me, sorry, I'm pretty focused on mastering the above pose. Should I keep my fingers curled as she does? Or should I boldly go all maverick and unfurl a finger right on my chin?


What will the show be about?  Crime, of course. This guy. He's got as a dark a soul as I've ever come across.




Check back soon for more about this upcoming show. In the meantime, why not check out some other cases here?  Many posts have vigorous discussions in the comments section. It's never too late to join in, new commenters are always popping up!

http://camillekimball.blogspot.com/2011/11/baseline-killer-sentenced-today-mark.html

(click on a title below to buy)
Camille Kimball's books:
                 **A Sudden Shot** as seen on TV!

Thoughts on this or any article at this site? To the next person whose comment I use for a post I will send a free signed book!  (If you post as "anonymous" for convenience, try to include an identifying website or name in your remark so no one else can claim your prize!)  For an example, please click here.


Wednesday, May 2, 2012

A Crime Writer on the Robert Champion Case

Robert Champion, crime, HBCU, hate crime, hazing, court, FAMU, National News
Who knew we should be afraid of John Phillips Souza wielders?

Some years ago when I was working at a TV station in the investigative unit, I first learned the term "hazing."  I had gone through my high school and college years blissfully unexposed to the practice of "initiating" young people into a club or team by the administration of various blows and tortures, usually committed by other students, sometimes even at the direction of an adult such as a coach.

Hazing is supposed to be some kind of camaraderie builder, I was assured. But as I listened to the distraught outpourings of a mother of a hazed teen, it sounded a lot more like Lord of the Flies* to me than team spirit.  I was horrified at the evidence I found to back her up. We did a big investigation on the high school's hazing tradition and our story became huge news.

Now that my career focuses on stories about crime, I wonder what exactly separates hazing from another common practice, one we baldly call "assault."  When a person is systematically beaten and subjected to other physical cruelties, we call the perpetrators "criminals." We take unpleasant mug shots of these criminals, throw them in prisons, and cast disdainful looks at them when we see them in courtrooms, assured of the evil nature tainting their souls.  When they gather together in organized groups to carry out these assaults we find them especially horrific and pass legislation against these groups e.g. anti-gang laws, RICO, and other racketeering statues.

But whoever thought of marching bands as a criminal enterprise?

Mob boss: " Do you have any experience in thuggery?"

Young recruit: "Yes, your Donship, I come to you highly trained. You will be pleased."

Mob boss: "You are very confident, young one. Just what outfit could give you such credentials?"

Young recruit: "Sir, I hail from....a marching band!"

Mob boss, wiping a tear: "O blessed day!"

Young recruit: "Not only that, I was in the clarinet section."

Mob boss: "Skip kissing my ring, let me clasp you to my bosom!"


The death of 26 year old Florida A & M drum major Robert Champion is one of the most horrific hazing incidents I've ever heard of. Not just because the earnest young man with the chin strap and the whistle in his pursed lips died, but because of who was involved in the hazing.


Florida A&M University hazing scandal
Robert Champion epitomizing all-American college fun



In the big hazing story we did at the TV station, the kids involved were football players and the coaches were complicit. Football, we all understand, involves brutality by its definition. Teaching boys to be brutal, make the tackle, hurt the opponent...hazing. There's a certain synergy there.

But musicians are supposed to "soothe the savage breast," are they not? Yes, the songs played on football fields are vigorous tunes with rousing beats but the idea is to channel the fan frenzy into something legal and civilized, isn't it?  Kids who join the band are supposed to be, in some fundamental way, characteristically different from boys who join football teams. After all, those who go on to play pro ball may even be given extra bonus money by their coaches if they cause medical harm to an opponent (note the sarcasm please, "Bonusgate" is a whole 'nuther topic).  Musicians are usually asked to play in harmony with their peers and colleagues, the same tune, the same page, the same note.

And yet we now learn that one of the most famous marching bands in college history is divided into cliques, defined by an instrument (clarinet, tuba, etc.) and characterized by a tribalism that would make an anthropologist gulp.  In fact, here in Arizona, we are blessed with the world class Musical Instrument Museum, staffed by the globe's finest professional experts in the field of who plays what instrument and why. The place is chock full of guitars made from gas cans and drums fashioned out of garbage pails, and other legacies of the human soul reaching for the salving effect of music under the most oppressive of circumstances.
Musical Instrument Museum
The Musical Instrument Museum in Scottsdale--they study instruments 

 Music can rouse a nation to revolution, Chopin's Polonaise comes immediately to mind, but can experts explain why clarinetists had to beat kids before they could pucker up and play? (As part of the FAMU investigation, 4 clarinetists have been charged in the assaults of 5 students who were lined up by height and systematically punched and more.)


When we picture the woodwind section, we do not conjure up mugshots the way we do in other criminal assault cases. Kids don't practice for years in front of sheet music because they can't wait for the chance to pummel someone. Hazing may be the masque of a devoted sadist, but it can also sweep up well-intentioned youngsters, pursuing a dream, succumbing to institutionalized peer pressure, a peer pressure often coated with a veneer of authority, or even explicitly overseen by real authority figures.

In Florida, where Robert Champion was beaten to death on a bus full of his fellow musicians, prosecutors have charged several young people with felony hazing, but not with any form of homicide. Champion's parents are understandably upset.

But law is, as Lady Justice will tell you, a delicate balancing act. Most homicide charges require a defined criminal intent. They also require a clear nexus between the cause of death and the defendant. While we could say a whole busload of young people were guilty, when each individual kid is examined, we may find some cowering under a seat, terrified, or one or two even actively trying to help Robert. Of those who certainly did participate in the beating, will a lawyer successfully argue that his particular client not only had no criminal intent, but deliberately pulled his punch as Robert came staggering past? Which blow did kill the young man? One delivered early on with full force and fury by an upperclassman or perhaps that last little tap by a frightened frosh? When you look at the realities of a court trial, you see the horrible specter of possibly all the defendants getting off scot-free by such defenses.

So Florida can be glad it passed an anti-hazing statute in 2005. This gives prosecutors firmer ground upon which to pursue to justice. The violent clarinetists, flautists, and tuba players may only face a maximum of 6 years for the painful death of someone supposed to be their friend, but at least prosecutors have a fightin' chance of making it stick.  In a perfect world, the death of Robert Champion would be given its full weight on his side of the scales of justice.

But in a perfect world, Robert Champion would be twirling a baton in true camaraderie with his bandmates at upcoming graduation celebrations instead of starring in their upcoming criminal trials.

Reports say that the hazing within college marching bands is not only common but has a long history, it still comes as a shock to me, as much as the day I first heard the word "hazing" and explored the twisted tradition in high school football players.

As a crime writer, I can picture all too well what is ahead for the Champion family. The trial(s) will be a grueling marathon of gritted teeth and sudden, silent tears. My heart goes out to them. Rest in peace, Robert.


*If you haven't read Lord of the Flies, you should. Proper British boys in short pants degenerate into cruel, scapegoating savages.

(click on a title below to buy)
Camille Kimball's books:
                 **A Sudden Shot** as seen on TV!

Thoughts on this or any article at this site? To the next person whose comment I use for a post I will send a free signed book!  (If you post as "anonymous" for convenience, try to include an identifying website or name in your remark so no one else can claim your prize!)  For an example, please click here.