The Perfect Murder Weapon

by Janis Patterson

We all believe that killing someone is easy as pie (remember, I’m speaking of in pixels only here) but it’s not as simple as it seems. The main trick is doing the deed and getting away with it. I mean, letting your character get away with it. Harder still is to make it so your sleuth can find enough clues to solve the mystery without making your killer seem like an idiot or your sleuth some sort of psychic/savant. What’s really hard is when your villain is so smart you really have to work to make it possible for your sleuth to catch him. I’ve had that problem in my current WIP, so I know whereof I speak!

One of the main things to catching a killer is the murder weapon. Guns and knives have traditionally been regarded as men’s weapons of choice, while poison is regarded as a more of a woman’s weapon, the rationale being that women are dainty little creatures of great sensibility who don’t like to see blood and gore. Really? And they kill people? Give me a break.

One of the main choices of murder weapon is dependent on its availability and traceability. A gun? Who owns it and how did the murderer get it? With the forensic ballistics available today – not to mention the creeping cancer of the gun control nuts – it’s harder and harder to make it believable that a villain can just grab a gun, shoot someone and get away with it. Of course, there are workarounds. The gun could be stolen. The gun could be bought on the black market. The gun could be ‘borrowed’ with the intent of framing the legitimate owner. Something else to be considered is that so much information needed to catch the villain – ballistics, registration, etc – is not available to an amateur sleuth unless they can wheedle it out of a policeman.

Forensics today can trace a knife down to the minutest measurement and shape and, if it is unusual enough, to the brand and store from which it came. If I were going to commit a murder with a knife, I’d go to the local Target or WalMart and buy the commonest knife I could, then afterwards boil it in bleach to kill any blood on it and donate it to some charity or other or leave it in a batch of kitchen utensils at a garage sale – after carefully wiping off all fingerprints. Of course, this is assuming the killer is strong enough both internally and externally to handle the strength necessary and the resultant blood, which is going to get all over his clothes. If you want to see how hard it is to stab someone, take your murder knife and stab a big, thick roast. It’s hard to get a knife deep enough to cause a fatal wound, but not as hard as stabbing a real life person, because the roast isn’t fighting you back!

Then there’s poison. First of all, where does the killer get it? Today so many of our commonly available compounds have had their poisonous elements removed or neutered. There’s nicotine, of course, sold for e-cigarettes, and it’s commonly available, but how do you know how much to use, and then there’s the problem of getting it into your victim. Same with prescription meds, which are generally fairly traceable because of limited availability. There are also the plant based poisons, but first you have to know about them, and again think of how much to use for a fatal does and how you’re going to get the resultant product into your victim Unfortunately for the killer plant based poisons are notorious for being both variable and unreliable. Poison contents vary according to the plant, the location where it was grown, the season of the year – and the phase of the moon for all I know. You never really know if you’ve gauged your dosage correctly until your victim either dies or survives. Also, this is considered rather esoteric knowledge, known to a smallish group of people (other than mystery writers) and fairly easily traceable.

For the hardy, there is always the staple of your two hands and a good old fashioned strangling. Of course, you have to know the victim well enough to get that close to him, and you have to be strong, for he will be fighting you. Strangling takes a great deal of strength as well, which basically rules out the delicately built person strangling a larger one. It also is harder than it seems. Life is tenacious, and it takes at least four minutes if not longer to strangle a person until death is assured, no matter how easy and quick it seems on television. Same objections with smothering. Unless the victim is unconscious your villain will both have to subdue and smother. Not easy.

So – is there a perfect murder weapon? Not that I know of. Every one has plusses and minuses, and in its way that is perfect for the mystery writer. You can choose one that fits your villain and your victim, but each method has built-in clues and difficulties that can, with a little accuracy and lots of creativity on your part, make it possible for your sleuth to capture your killer, no matter how smart that villain thinks himself to be.

Also, if you’d like to read the article The American Research Center in Egypt did on me and my upcoming novel A KILLING AT EL KAB, here’s the link – http://www.arce.org/news/u162

13 thoughts on “The Perfect Murder Weapon

  1. Something completely untraceable would be a 9mm ice bullet fired from 3-D Printed Air Pistol. Like the icicle, the ice bullet would melt within the body and is large enough to do the appropriate amount of damage. The 3-D Printed Air Pistol would be completely untraceable and easily disposed of. Plans for manufacturing a 3-D Printed Air Pistol are readily available on the Internet.

    If not the ice bullet that then Foxglove and Oleander flowers mixed with a Nasturtium and Watercress salad with a mustard vinaigrette dressing. All natural and actually quite tasty. It would easily take a couple of hours before symptoms start to occur and by then it would be too late as it would look like a heart attack.

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  2. Some of it may depend on your victim. Say that he or she is a diabetic, an overdose of insulin should do the trick, hence the whole Sunny von Bulow trial cf REVERSAL OF FORTUNE.

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  3. In the same vein as the icicle, there’s the solid chunk of ice. Use it as a blunt instrument, then toss it in the pool. Actually, I can’t think of the perfect method to off someone, but if you come up with one, please let me know. I have a long list of people to try it on.

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  4. You’ve touched on exactly why I wrote my free giveaway 60 Ways to Murder Your Fictional Characters (http://www.suecoletta.com). It’s so hard to come up with a sure-fire way to kill, otherwise known as the perfect murder. But if there was a perfect murder method, then the story would fall flat. One of my favorite pastimes is inventing creative ways to kills, fictionally speaking of course. Great post!

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  5. I loved the Alfred Hitchcock story where the wife killed her husband by beaning him with a frozen leg of lamb and then cooking and werving the lamb to the detectives. Perfect disposal of the murder weapon. Good post, Janis!

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  6. An icicle made of the victim’s own blood. Fabricated as Pycrete. Look it up, pretty fantastic stuff. Leaves an unfathomable clue.

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    1. Agreed – but you have to live in a part of the country that has such things of a size and strength to be lethal. And your story has to be set in the winter. Unless you can construct a suitable icicle in your freezer…

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      1. Even better in, say, Arizona in the summer. 120 degrees in the shade, weapon self destructs in minutes. And yes, you would have to make your own.

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  7. I loved this article. Mystery writers are always looking for interesting, exotic and unusual murder weapons for their novels. It makes the books so much more interesting for readers.

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