They almost always end with the actual murderer being accused and then immediately getting angry and confessing thereby giving them the only actual hard evidence that could ever be used in a conviction. It’s convenient that way. (See, for an extreme example, one of the episodes of the recent season 3 of Sherlock.)
They almost always end with the actual murderer being accused and then immediately getting angry and confessing thereby giving them the only actual hard evidence that could ever be used in a conviction. It’s convenient that way. (See, for an extreme example, one of the episodes of the recent season 3 of Sherlock.)