Less than two weeks after her boyfriend killed five people in cold blood, Anne received a package from the grave.
It came from the man she’d spent the last year with, Lyndon McLeod. Inside it were the rights to Sanction—a three-volume book series McLeod wrote under a pseudonym that graphically details a killing spree carried out by a character who shares his name—and a 47-minute movie he shot and edited in his final days. The film, titled “War Horse,” contains footage that appears to tell the story of McLeod planning and carrying out the attack. The package also contained the books and movie on an SD card, and a note telling Anne she should use them to make money.
Now, after struggling to decide whether to post the film online, those closest to the mass murderer have made it available on his website, charging $10 to rent it and $30 to own it.
I really wish goodreads hadn't purged the reviews of his novels. His fans would write five paragraph long essays performing verbal fellatio on the guy like he was Neitzche crossed with Tolstoy in the body of an Aryana super solider and if you looked at their reading history it would be Rich Dad Poor Dad and Sonic The Hedgehog game guides.