This is an example of the type of person the current courts return to the streets after capture.
Vronsky said that while Cottingham began admitting to additional crimes in 2009, the killer feels no actual remorse, but something he called "cognitive remorse."
"He confessed to me that he doesn't feel remorse," Vronsky said. "He's not wired up for it. But he knows what it is. He knows intellectually that he committed horrific acts."
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Vronsky said that while Cottingham began admitting to additional crimes in 2009, the killer feels no actual remorse, but something he called "cognitive remorse."
"He confessed to me that he doesn't feel remorse," Vronsky said. "He's not wired up for it. But he knows what it is. He knows intellectually that he committed horrific acts."
'Times Square Killer' used fake police badge to murder 18-year-old nursing student: deathbed confession
Serial killer Richard Cottingham confessed to the 1965 murder of nursing student Alys Eberhardt in a deathbed admission, solving a 60-year-old cold case.