Reader Ad Slot
Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Criminal Profiling — Part 5
Page 22
22 / 25
ag, up two flights of stairs to the
apartment he shared with his mother,
passing two persons coming down the
stairs. He said, “It took meticulous
work ... about four hours .. . dis-
membering it, getting rid of the blood,
the gore, completely cleaning the
bathroom.”
Some murderers became __in-
volved with the body through sexually
sadistic acts. This may be part of the
old fantasy or development of a new
one. While the offender who ‘freaked
out’ and gave himself up was ‘in
prison, he spent an enormous amount
of psychic energy rehearsing and
mastering the body disposal phase.
After his release, .he murdered eight
more women. He stated, ‘‘l got rid of
that icky feeling of messing with the
dead. Only one guy that gets more
casual around a body thanme...a
mortician or a pathologist. But some
of my fantasies were so bizarre that it
would turn the stomach of a patholo-
gist.”
Phase 4: Postcrime Behavior
During this phase, the murderer’s
fantasy becomes reality, providing a
sense of purpose for the offender.
The authorities are looking for him so
he now focuses his energies on not
getting caught and perhaps even into
improving his methods for the next
murder.
An important aspect of the post-
crime behavior is the discovery of the
body. This discovery is sometimes in-
cluded in the fantasy, and the murder-
er may try to maintain his level of ex-
citement. He may telephone or write
to the police, or he may be in a crowd
at the scene when the body is discov-
ered. The murderer may even confess
to the crime in order to accompany
police to the location of the body.
The importance of postcrime
events to the overall fantasy is illus-
trated by one case in which the of-
fender worked as a hospital ambu-
lance driver. He kidnaped his victims
from the parking lot of a restaurant
and took them te another location,
where he raped and murdered them.
He then anonymously telephoned the
police to report seeing a body, re-
turned to the hospital to receive the
ambulance call, and then drave the
ambulance with the body back to the
hospital. In essence, he orchestrated
a scene that he had rehearsed nu-
merous times in his mind.
Conclusion
Sexual homicide is an act of
control, dominance, and performance
that is representative of an underlying
fantasy embedded with violence, sex-
uality, and death. Yet, for some killers,
one act of murder fulfills their fantasy,
while others feel compelled to contin-
ue killing.
Some murderers, while in prison,
attempt to determine how they failed
in the murder in order to be success-
ful the next time. Their need to repeat
the act of murder is connected with
their sense of control.
Other murderers live in fear of re-
peating the crime; their compulsion to
kill is bewildering to them. They don’t
want to get caught, yet at the same
time they are hoping they will be
caught. Several murderers wrote
“stop me” statements in notes to
police or on the wall at the murder
scene, while others turned themselves
in to police. Yet, the fantasies contin-
ued. One killer stated, “It is a
development . . . getting tired of a
certain level of fantasy and then going
even farther and even more bizarre.
Year after year [the development con-
tinued] and finally it got off in such
deep ends that I’m still not exposed
107
to the worst of the fantasies that |
have.”
Interviews with sexual murderers
provided information about their fanta-
sies which, in turn, provide us with a
partial answer to murders that appear
to be motiveless. These crimes are
committed, in part, as a result of the
acting out of a psychological fantasy.
These fantasies are extremely violent
and range from rape to mutilation or
torture and murder. Fantasies are an
important part of the offender's basic
personality and move beyond normal
sexual, consenting, pleasure-based
daydreams to aggressive, sadistic,
and destructive thoughts. These fan-
tasies become so vivid that they pro-
vide the impetus for the offender to
act them out with victims of opportunity.
It is important for law entorce-
ment officers to be aware of the exist-
ence of these fantasies and of the
types of individuals who have them.
While the crime, and therefore the
fantasy, may appear to be bizarre to
law enforcement, it is essential to re-
alize that these fantasies play an im-
portant part in the offender's basic
personality. Therefore, as law en-
forcement officers become sensitive
to this phenomenon and seek out
clues which imply the presence of
fantasy, they will aid in profiling and
apprehending the offender. FBI
Footnote
Serial murderer convicted of killing 10 peopte.
Community corrections
No user corrections yet.
Comments
No comments on this document yet.
Bottom Reader Ad Slot
Bottom Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.
Continue Exploring
Agency Collection
Explore This Archive Cluster
Broad Topic Hub
Topic Hub
letter
bureau
Related subtopics
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic
Subtopic