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The psychology behind serial killers
The psychology behind serial killers
The psychology behind serial killers
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In 2015, 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee was brutally murdered because of gang retaliation. Tyshawn’s father is a high ranking member of a rival gang; whom they had supposedly shot the brother and mother in a car of one of the suspects. The initial retaliation of Lee was to kidnap him and cut off his ears and fingers. Instead Lee was led off the playground by (witnesses say) (LINK 9) a man.
November 2001, Gary was arrested as he was leaving his job. Now being linked to the murder of 48 women, although Gary believes he killed 61 to 71 women. Most of these were committed between 1982 and 1983, although he believes he killed one around 1985. Most of these women were prostitutes, and Gary believed they aren’t worth mentioning about since they’re dead. When Gary would meet these hookers, he’d begin by showing them pictures of his son to gain their trust.
Medical doctor Jeffrey R. MacDonald, labeled by the press in the 1980's as the "Green Beret Killer," has already spent 27 years in federal penitentiaries for murders he did not commit. To quote Harvard legal scholar Alan Dershowitz, "Jeffrey MacDonald is the most victimized person in the history of United States jurisprudence." The grisly, ritualistic-style murders of which he was convicted took place in Dr. MacDonald's home located in Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, onFebruary 17, 1970, between 2 and 3 am in the morning.
The police were stuck and had no good suspects. In 2001, Ridgway was arrested for loitering around prostitutions. This incident, however, did not make him a suspect in the Green River case. Later in the case, Ridgway passed a lie detector test, taking him off the suspect list. A polygraph is based on the guilt of committing the crime, however, Ridgeway he did not have any guilt.
Due to the high levels of publicity that surrounded this case, it was nearly impossible for the court to find a completely impartial and oblivious jury. Everyone in the surrounding area had knowledge of the atrocious way that these murders took place and many already strongly disliked Mr. Rolling. Police officers
No parents should ever have to bury their children. For the Lee family they not only lost a child but still live with the horror of not knowing who took their daughter’s life. On January 13, 1999, Baltimore, Maryland was racked with drama and tension when Woodlawn High School senior Hae Min Lee disappeared after school. Her mutilated body was discovered behind a log in Leakin Park on February 9, 1999 by a mysterious man know as Mr. S. Reports pin the cause of death on strangulation. After a long and drawn out trial, Hae Min Lee’s ex-boyfriend, Adnan Syed, was convicted of the crime and sentenced to life in prison.
They were supposed to love and care for him, instead, 7-year-old Adrian Jones father, Michael Jones, and stepmother, Heather Jones, tortured him to death. Adrian's bones were found inside a pig sty in his family's yard on Thanksgiving in 2015. The 7-year-old boy's body was put there for the pigs to eat after he died weeks before, in September or October of that year, according to KTLA. The child's death was never reported, investigators began to search for him after going to the family home for a domestic violence call.
Jasmine and her boyfriend, Jeremy committed the murder. Jeremy was 23 years-olds. Jasmine was released just 10 years after the murder and he was sentenced to life. According to Antonia Monticelli’s article, “Murderous Children: Jasmine
Serial Killer or Pathological Liar or Both? The Atlanta Child Murders was a gruesome time for the black community and families of Fulton County in Atlanta, Georgia. Wayne Williams was sentenced to two consecutive life terms on February 27, 1982 for the murder of Nathaniel Cater and Jimmy Ray Payne. Out of the 28-30 victims only two victims were linked with Williams, Nathaniel Cater, a convicted felon, and Jimmy Ray Payne, an ex-convict.
Arthur Shawcross The interview and Documentary I focused on was Arthur Shawcross who was known as the Genesee River Killer because he dumped a lot of bodies around the river. He killed 11 women Victims, including two children who he raped before he murdered them in and around Rochester, New York. Shawcross was the type of Killer who enjoys mutilate his victims and committed to acts of cannibalism. Most of the murders Shawcross committed took place when he was imprisoned and released for the child murders he did.
A Texas Ranger working with Sells said he could confidently connect Sells with fifteen murders and crimes spanned across years of time(SC12). Tommy Lynn Sells had confessed while under trial for the murder of Katlyn Harris that he had committed many crimes throughout his life and that they stretched from coast to coast of the United States which later gave him the nickname, The Coast to Coast Serial Killer. While Tommy had committed many crimes only few had gone on record. Technology was not as advanced back in his time which allowed him to get away with so many crimes. When a crime scene witness went to testify on a case that did not have a definite killer, a man giving Tommys’ description would always be seen near the act but a time too many,
The Green River Killer Convicted for the largest number of murders in the US, the “Green River Killer”, Gary Ridgway was not only the most prolific killer in our nation’s history, but also one of the hardest to catch. Committing murders for an upward of 20 years, he was a criminal mastermind. Now 15 years after his capture, Ridgway still intrigues many, as sources and volunteers continue to delve into his horrific past and search for the remains of those he killed. Born in 1949 in Salt Lake City, Utah, Ridgway was instantly launched into a troubled life.
John Wayne Gacy or "Pogo the clown" as many knew him, remains as one of today's most popular serial killers. Gacy was raised quiet boy who worked odd jobs for money. At the age of 11, Gacy hit his head while playing on a swing set causing a blood clot in his brain that was not discovered till the age of 16. A year later he was diagnosed with a heart condition that he was hospitalized for several times during the period of his life. After dropping out of high school during his senior year just prior to graduation, John Wayne Gacy flew to Las Vegas where he was employed part-time as a janitor in order to save up enough money to buy a ticket to fly to Chicago.
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee the term mockingbird symbolizes innocence in a person. In the novel it focuses on the fact that innocence, represented by the mockingbird, can be wrongfully harmed. There are two characters: Tom Robinson and Arthur “Boo” Radley that are supposed to represent the mockingbird. In the novel, Tom Robinson is the best example of a mockingbird because he is prosecuted for a crime he did not commit. Also, he was judged unfairly based on the color of his skin in his trial.
Tanya Short Professor Huffman Information Literacy 119.40 27, September 2015 Polygraph: Science Fact or Science Fiction? The roots of polygraph testing have a humble beginning at Harvard in the year 1915. A Harvard psychologist by the name William Marston paved the way for the polygraph we know today.