Kennedy in 1963 and of Dr. Martin Luther King in 1968 were single perpetrator crimes or terrorism orchestrated by conspiracies. Most agree, though, that SirhanSirhan acted alone when he assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy on May 6, 1968, in Los Angeles, California. Born a Palestinian, Sirhan's diary revealed that he attacked Senator Kennedy because of his support for Israel and his pledge to send bombers to that country.6 Ten years later, Ted Kaczynski, known as the "Unabomber," began a deadly bombing campaign. Starting in 1978, he placed or mailed sixteen bombs until his eventual arrest in 1996. He had left a tenure-track position as a mathematician at the University of California to begin living a solitary life in a remote mountain cabin. Identifying himself as an anarchist, Kaczynski believed that a technological society is ultimately incompatible with individual freedom and must, therefore, be destroyed in order to free humanity. His attacks wounded twenty-three and killed
Kennedy in 1963 and of Dr. Martin Luther King in 1968 were single perpetrator crimes or terrorism orchestrated by conspiracies. Most agree, though, that SirhanSirhan acted alone when he assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy on May 6, 1968, in Los Angeles, California. Born a Palestinian, Sirhan's diary revealed that he attacked Senator Kennedy because of his support for Israel and his pledge to send bombers to that country.6 Ten years later, Ted Kaczynski, known as the "Unabomber," began a deadly bombing campaign. Starting in 1978, he placed or mailed sixteen bombs until his eventual arrest in 1996. He had left a tenure-track position as a mathematician at the University of California to begin living a solitary life in a remote mountain cabin. Identifying himself as an anarchist, Kaczynski believed that a technological society is ultimately incompatible with individual freedom and must, therefore, be destroyed in order to free humanity. His attacks wounded twenty-three and killed