It is Friday night, so turn out the lights and tune in to NBC to scare you out of the work week. The hit NBC thriller, Hannibal is all new tonight. Check our preview below to see what the killer drama has in store for you. Speaking of killers and drama, the man called the “real life, Dr. Lector” has been set free after confessing to murder, rape, and cannibalism.
Tonight, NBC’s hit Silence of the Lambs prequel series Hannibal is all new. According to a report on Fansided, the plot for tonight’s episode, titled “Takiawase“ reads:
“Our team is called in when a body is found in a meadow, the cranial cavity converted into a beehive. Meanwhile, Beverly Katz continues to work on the mural killer case, secretly consulting with Will Graham to decipher the killer’s human tapestry. Will insists that the killer was put in the mural by Hannibal Lecter, and urges her to prove that Hannibal is the real Chesapeake Ripper and Copycat Killer.”
Meanwhile, the Swedish man who confessed a large number of horrendous crimes, has been set free. Sture Bergwall, A.K.A. Thomas Quick, A.K.A. the self professed “real life Hannibal Lecter,” was released from prison this week, after lying about being a serial killer for two decades.
Dan Josefsson, the man who literally wrote the book on Bergwa, (Translated) “The Man Who Stopped Lying” recently told Time all about the controversial ex-convict and his twisted motives for confessing to horrible crimes he didn’t commit:
“It’s the judicial scandal of a century. And it all has to do with a therapeutic idea that was in fashion in the nineties.”
Bergwall apparently confessed to a number of crimes in order to receive access to drugs and privileges while in prison on another charge:
“It’s fairly typical for a mixed-substance addict as Bergwall to lie to gain privileges. He started telling the psychologists what they wanted to hear, and he was rewarded with drugs and encouragement.”
The authorities where apparently all too happy to have a fail guy for the crimes that they reportedly ignored severl inconsistencies in Bergwall confessions.
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