Как пишется серийный убийца

- killer |ˈkɪlər|  — убийца, киллер, гангстер, бандит, что-либо сногсшибательное

маньяк-убийца — psychopathic killer
убийца-садист — sadistic killer
двойной убийца — double killer

серийный убийца — a multiple, serial killer
привычный убийца — habitual killer
осужденный убийца — convicted killer
сознавшийся убийца — self-confessed killer
прирожденный убийца — natural-born killer
хладнокровный убийца — cold-blooded killer
профессиональный убийца — professional killer
убийца, совершивший побег — escaped killer
убийца нескольких человек — mass killer
убийца по договору, наемный убийца — contract killer
лицо, совершившее убийство, убийца — unjustifiable killer
клетка убийца, стимулируемая лимфокином — lymphokine-activated killer cell
киллерный штамм; штамм-убийца; штамм-киллер — killer strain
белое кровяное тельце, которое уничтожает раковые клетки; клетка-убийца — killer cell

ещё 14 примеров свернуть

- slayer |sˈleɪər|  — убийца
- murderer |ˈmɜːrdərər|  — убийца, душегуб

массовый убийца — mass murderer
убийца был казнён — the murderer was executed
убийца не обнаружен — the murderer remains undiscovered
убийца был выслежен и схвачен — the murderer was hounded down
убийца не опасен только (тогда), когда он в тюрьме — a murderer is only safe when he is in prison

- assassin |əˈsæsn|  — убийца, террорист

убийца-одиночка — lone assassin
потенциальный убийца — would be assassin

- gunman |ˈɡʌnmən|  — убийца, бандит, преступник, оружейный мастер, вооруженный ружьем
- basher |ˈbæʃər|  — убийца
- manslayer  — убийца, человекоубийца, убийца по неосторожности
- thug |θʌɡ|  — головорез, бандит, убийца, разбойник-душитель
- homicide |ˈhɑːmɪsaɪd|  — убийство, убийца
- butcher |ˈbʊtʃər|  — мясник, палач, убийца, разносчик в поезде, искусственная муха
- assassinator |əˈsæsɪneɪtə|  — убийца, террорист
- cutthroat |ˈkʌtˌθrəʊt|  — головорез, убийца, опасная бритва
- Cain |ˈkeɪn|  — Каин, братоубийца, предатель, убийца
- gorilla |ɡəˈrɪlə|  — горилла, страшилище, бандит, убийца

Смотрите также

убийца — strong arm man
наемный убийца — bounty hunter
убийца в разбое — robber-killer
насильник-убийца — rapist-killer
игра шофер-убийца — homicidal chauffeur game
наемный убийца, киллер — hit man
наёмный убийца в банде — trigger man
жестокий человек, убийца — man of blood
застрелить; убийство; убийца — bump-off
его руки обагрены кровью, он убийца — he has red hands
рядовой член банды; наемный убийца; рядовой — button man
участник или соучастник гангстерского убийства; убийца-гангстер — gangster-killer

Родственные слова, либо редко употребляемые в данном значении

- gun |ɡʌn|  — пистолет, пушка, оружие, ружье, орудие, пулемет, револьвер
- murderess |ˈmɜːrdəres|  — женщина-убийца
- murder |ˈmɜːrdər|  — убийство, душегубство
- murderous |ˈmɜːrdərəs|  — убийственный, кровавый, смертоносный, жестокий

Tags: Как Выглядит Серийный Убийца?. Посмотрите видео ниже, где следовательно, как менялась ее наружность.
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Что значит быть друзьями с серийным убийцей?

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Что значит быть друзьями с серийным убийцей
В «Опасных местах» автор М. Уильям Фелпс берет читателей в сознание печально известного убийцы, с которым он общался в течение многих лет. «Для меня это была психологическая пытка, — сказал он МЕРРИ ДЖЕЙН.

по Сет Ferranti
Все фотографии предоставлены М. Уильям Фелпс и Кенсингтон Пресс

В тишине ягнят персонаж Джоди Фостер, Кларисса Старлинг, запутывается в странных и странно личных отношениях с Ганнибалом Лектером, культовым, убийственным психопатом Энтони Хопкинса. В сентябре 2011 года удостоенный наград журналист М. Уильям Фелпс приступил к подобным усилиям. Он начал отношения с канадским серийным убийцей Кейтом «Счастливое лицо» Джесперсоном, предоставив ему платформу на его шоу. «Исследовательская серия» Dark Minds, в котором основное внимание уделялось нераскрытым случаям убийств, которые, как считается, были работой серийных убийц. Есперсон утверждал, что убил почти 200 человек, хотя только девять были подтверждены. Он получил свое прозвище из-за смайликов, которые он, в конечном счете, включил в свои исповедальные письма после своего ареста в 1995 году. Фелпс использовал Джесперсона в качестве консультанта на шоу, позволяя ему задуматься о серийном убийце в надежде, что это помогло бы ему разрешить холодные случаи.

На протяжении многих лет Фелпс собирал более 7 000 страниц писем, сотни часов аудио-интервью, бесчисленное количество произведений искусства и три часа интервью в Skype с Джесперсоном. Это было страшное и интригующее приключение для журналиста, чья невестка Диана Феррис была задушена до смерти в 1996 году в возрасте 35 лет — случай, который до сих пор остается нерешенным. В новой книге « Опасная почва: моя дружба с серийным убийцей» , на Кенсингтоне, Фелпс берет читателей в сознание Джесперсона и, что более важно, в свою собственную психику, когда он сталкивался с сложными отношениями, которые он сформировал с холодом кровавый убийца.

В таких главах, как «Встреча с моим другом, психопатом», «Смерть становится его» и «Селективное безумие», Фелпс рассказывает историю Джесперсона, одновременно рассказывая о своем личном путешествии и о том, как дружба повлияла на него. МЕРРИ ДЖЕЙН побеседовала с Фелпсом по телефону, чтобы узнать, почему он хотел написать о своих отношениях с Счастливым Лицом, что больше всего его удивило в дружбе, и если есть надежда на душу Джесперсона. Вот что он должен был сказать.

MERRY JANE: Что вдохновило вас превратить ваши отношения с серийным убийцей «Счастливое лицо» Йесперсоном в полноформатную книгу?
М. Уильям Фелпс : Когда я начал общаться с Джесперсоном, он был анонимным голосом по телефону на моем телешоу Dark Minds, Отношения были основаны на его профилировании дел для меня по телевидению с использованием анонимного имени, Ворона. Мы начали общаться три, четыре раза в неделю в 2011 году, и за эти годы он просто вырос. Интервью, которые я делал с ним, были просто невероятными. Он был таким открытым и честным. Это заставило меня понять пару вещей. Например, одной из жертв, за которую он пишет книги, он не убивал. Он убил другую девушку. Он мог бы определить Джейн Доу, чтобы я мог принести домой семью. Я никогда не планировал писать эту книгу. Это просто росло, как «Счастливое Лицо» переняло мою жизнь духовно, эмоционально и физически.

Как вы впервые связались с «Счастливым лицом», и когда вы решили, что хотите получить его экспертное мнение о своем шоу?
Много лет назад я создал шоу под названием Murder Squad . Он был основан на решении случаев холодного серийного убийцы. Мне понадобился серийный убийца, чтобы появиться на шоу — кто-то в тюрьме, который хотел поговорить о делах, проанализировать их и профилировать. Я начал писать разным серийным убийцам [в тюрьме], и Джесперсон был тем, кто написал самые энергичные ответы. Он только начал писать и не останавливался.

Вы бы назвали это дружбой? Может ли серийный убийца стать чьим-то другом?
Я бы назвал это деловыми отношениями. То, что произошло за этот период, шесть лет, с которыми я общался с ним, заключалось в том, что он начал медленно проникать мне в голову. То, что я начал делать, как сострадательный человек, заключалось в поиске ответов и любой формы человечества в этой личности. Я хотел посмотреть, есть ли психопат, если тот, кто родился таким образом и развивается в этот чудовищный серийный убийца, имеет в себе какое-то человечество. Я решил, что могу задать правильные вопросы и, может быть, получу правильные ответы.

Кейт «Счастливое лицо» Йесперсон (слева) и автор М. Уильям Фелпс (справа)

Что вас больше всего удивило в том, что вы узнали от него в этих отношениях?
Больше всего меня удивило его честность над определенными вещами. Цинтия Роуз была жертвой номер восемь. Но он сказал мне, что узнал в 2009 году, когда увидел ее фотографию, что она не девушка, которую он убил. Они нашли Синтию Роуз близко к тому месту, где он бросил эту другую девушку, поэтому они приписывали ему Синтию Роуз. Сначала я ему не поверила. Я думаю, что он просто гребаный, лживый серийный убийца — психопат из дерьма, который пытается мне сыграть.

Но когда он все время говорил мне то же самое, я решил расследовать это дело. Я получил его журнал лоцмана. Я получил отчет о вскрытии, и все полицейские отчеты были связаны с Синтией Роуз. Я начал расспрашивать его обо всей этой информации, не зная, что у меня есть информация. Я расспрашивал его примерно полтора года по этому делу и узнал, что он говорит правду.

Что вы думаете о рынке «убийств» и о всех людях, которые торгуют произведениями убийц? Являются ли эти люди поклонниками вашего шоу и письма?
Конечно, у меня есть некоторые поклонники толпы убийц и толпы серийных убийц, но большинство моих читателей — женщины в возрасте от 35 до 85 лет. Я думаю, что отвратительно, что кто-то возьмет кусок одежды или расческу или картинку что серийный убийца нарисовал и продал его за чертовски деньги, потому что за этой картиной, за этим серийным убийцей, есть семьи жертв, которые страдают. Я знаю это, потому что моя невестка была убита в 1996 году, неразрешенный случай. Я знаю, что переживают семьи, когда их любимый убит. Для меня убийства — это просто плевка на могилу этих людей.

Скажете ли вы, что ваша карьера — это попытка понять человека, который мог убить вашу невестку?
Я думаю, ты ударил ноготь по голове. Что. Конечно, это не сознательно, но это подсознание. Есперсон продолжал говорить мне: «Я хочу помочь вам понять человека, который убил вашу сестру». Но я продолжал отталкивать его, говоря: «Давайте не будем делать это между нами, это о вас, и это касается вопросов, Прошу Вас. Дело не в том, что вы пытаетесь мне помочь, это о том, что я задаю вам вопросы, и вы отвечаете им ». В конце концов, он действительно раскрыл мне какую-то информацию, которая помогла мне понять не только человека, который убил мою сестру -Лав, но тот человек, которого она видит в обществе.

Картина, сделанная в тюрьме серийным убийцей Кейтом «Счастливое лицо», Джесперсон

Каково было быть в голове серийного убийцы? Вы нашли то, что искали?
Это была пытка. Это началось не так, но для меня это превратилось в психологическую пытку. Это начало ухудшать мою душу, мое физическое здоровье, мой разум. Один мой друг, психолог, рассказал мне в 2011 году, когда я впервые обратился к Джесперсону: «Фелпс, ты большой парень, ты поднимаешь тяжести, ты духовный парень, крутой парень, но позволь мне дать тебе некоторые советы. Если дьявол стучит в твою дверь, и ты приглашаешь его, тебе лучше быть готовым танцевать с ним, или он будет в твоей голове ». Я как бы рассмеялся и сказал:« Давай, я делаю это в течение многих лет я писал эти книги годами, ничто не может сломать меня ». Но в конце концов я больше не смеялся над психологом. Он был прав.

Какова ваша окончательная оценка Happy Face? Какого человека он? Есть ли надежда для его души?
Я написал 34 книги, и семь из них посвящены серийным убийцам. Могу сказать, серийные убийцы не могут прекратить убийство. Они не прекратят убивать. Я спросил Джесперсона: «Если завтра тебя выпустили из тюрьмы, вы бы снова убили?»

Его ответ был: «Я не скажу вам, Фелпс, потому что это то, что вы хотите услышать, вы хотите услышать, что меня реабилитировали. Поэтому я бы сказал, нет. Но на самом деле, правда, я бы это сделал ».

Я мог бы взять слово «вероятно» оттуда и сказать, что он определенно будет, потому что он родился психопатом, и он превратился в этого действительно жестокого убийцу. Он не может измениться. Он не может изменить, кто он, даже если бы захотел.

Следуйте за Сет Ферранти в Твиттере.

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«Рожденный преступник»? Ломброзо и истоки современной криминологии?

«Рожденный преступник»? Ломброзо и истоки современной криминологии
«Рожденный преступник»? Ломброзо и истоки современной криминологии
Описанный как отец современной криминологии, теория Чезаре Ломброзо о «рожденном преступнике» доминировала над мышлением о преступном поведении в конце 19-го и начале 20-го века
Чезаре Ломброзо. (Фото: Беттманн / Getty Images)
9 октября 2016 года в 10:00
Эта статья была впервые опубликована «Историей Экстра» в 2015 году

Полагая, что преступность была унаследована и что преступники могут быть идентифицированы с помощью физических атрибутов, таких как ястребиные носы и налитые кровью глаза, Ломброзо был одним из первых людей в истории, использующих научные методы для изучения преступлений.

Ломброзо является предметом исторического романа бывшей преступной адвокатуры Дианы Бретерик. Здесь, написав для Истории Экстра , Бретерик рассказывает вам все, что вам нужно знать о нем, и объясняет, почему его влияние на сегодняшнее исследование преступности нельзя игнорировать …

Это началось в Италии в 1871 году с встречи между преступником и ученым. Преступником был человек по имени Джузеппе Виллелла, пресловутый калабрийский вор и поджигатель. Ученый был армейским врачом по имени Чезаре Ломброзо, который начал свою карьеру в сумасшедших домах, а затем стал интересоваться преступностью и преступниками во время изучения итальянских солдат. Теперь он пытался выявить различия между сумасшедшими, преступниками и обычными людьми, изучив заключенных в итальянских тюрьмах.

Ломброзо нашел Виллелу интересным, учитывая его необычайную ловкость и цинизм, а также его склонность хвастаться своими выходками и способностями. После смерти Виллеллы Ломброзо провел вскрытие и обнаружил, что у его предмета был отпечаток в задней части черепа, похожий на то, что было обнаружено у обезьян. Ломброзо сделал вывод из этого доказательства, а также из других преступников, которые он изучал, что некоторые из них родились с склонностью к оскорблению и были также дикими возвратами раннему человеку. Это открытие стало началом работы Ломброзо как преступного антрополога.

Ломброзо писал: «При виде этого черепа я, казалось, внезапно увидел, освещенный, как огромная равнина под пылающим небом, проблема природы преступника — атавистического существа, которое воспроизводит в его лице свирепые инстинкты первобытного человечества и низших животных.

«Таким образом, были анатомически объяснены огромные челюсти, высокие скуловые кости, видные надрешечные арки, одиночные линии в ладонях, экстремальный размер орбит, ручные или сидячие уши, обнаруженные у преступников, дикарей и обезьян, бесчувственность к боли, чрезвычайно острое зрение, татуировка, чрезмерная безделье, любовь к оргиям и непреодолимая тяга к злу ради самого себя, желание не только потушить жизнь в жертве, но и калечить труп, разорвать его плоть и выпить свою кровь ».

По сути, Ломброзо считал, что преступность унаследована и что преступники могут быть идентифицированы физическими дефектами, которые подтвердили их как атавистические или дикие. Например, вор мог быть идентифицирован его выразительным лицом, ручным ловкостью и маленькими, блуждающими глазами. Между тем у привычных убийц были холодные, стеклянные взгляды, налитые кровью глаза и большие ястребиные носы, а у насильников были «кувшины ушей». Однако Ломброзо не ограничивал свои взгляды на мужчин-преступников — он написал одну из первых книг для изучения причин женского преступления и заключил, среди прочего, что женщины-преступники были гораздо более жестокими, чем мужчины; склонны быть похотливыми и нескромными; были короче и более морщинистыми; и имели более темные волосы и меньшие черепа, чем «нормальные» женщины. Однако у них было меньше облысения, сказал Ломброзо.

Вдохновленный его открытием, Ломброзо продолжил свою работу и выпустил первое из пяти изданий Криминального Человека в 1876 году. В результате Ломброзо стал известен как отец современной криминологии. Один из первых, кто понял, что преступность и преступники могут быть изучены с научной точки зрения, теория Ломброзо о рожденном преступнике доминировала над мышлением о преступном поведении в конце 19-го и начале 20-го века.

В течение тысяч лет до этого момента доминирующее мнение заключалось в том, что, поскольку преступление было грехом против Бога, оно должно наказываться надлежащим образом — «глаз для глаза» и т. Д. Во время Просвещения мыслители, такие как Джереми Бентам и итальянец Чезаре Беккария, решили, что, поскольку мы все были разумными существами, выбор совершить преступление был сделан путем взвешивания затрат и выгод. Если бы цены были высокими с жесткими штрафами, то это отбросило всех, кроме самых решительных преступников.

Это была интересная философия, но критики отметили ее недостатки — не все рациональны, и некоторые преступления, особенно жестокие, являются чисто эмоциональными, говорят они. Ломброзо и его коллеги-преступники-антропологи также оспаривали эти идеи и были первыми, кто выступал за изучение преступлений и преступников с научной точки зрения. В частности, Ломброзо поддержал его использование в уголовных расследованиях, и один из его помощников Сальваторе Оттоленги основал первую школу научной полиции в Риме в 1903 году.

На протяжении всей своей карьеры Ломброзо не только рисовал работу других криминальных антропологов по всей Европе, но и проводил многие свои эксперименты, чтобы доказать свои теории. Они включали использование причудливых приспособлений для измерения различных частей тела, а также более абстрактные вещи, такие как чувствительность к боли и склонность говорить неправды. Действительно, Ломброзо в конечном итоге разработал рудиментарный прототип детектора лжи.

Ломброзо использовал различные устройства для различных целей. Например, гидроспигмограф использовался для изучения изменений артериального давления у его субъектов, среди которых были преступники с длинными рекордами оскорблений и «нормальные» предметы. В то время как их левая рука была прикреплена к машине, и право на индукционную катушку, называемую Румкорффом, испытуемые подвергались различным раздражителям — как неприятным, например, электрическим током, так и звуком стрельбы из пистолета и, например, приятным музыки, еды, денег или картины обнаженной женщины.

Проблема заключалась в том, что запись результатов была иногда хаотичной, что сделало выводы ненадежными, мягко говоря. Чтобы усугубить ситуацию, Ломброзо, как правило, использовал необычные доказательства, чтобы добавить вес к его теориям, таким как старые пословицы и анекдоты, которые ему рассказывали друзья и коллеги на протяжении многих лет. Это оставило его работу уязвимой для нападения критиков по всей Европе. Все это, возможно, отражает вид человека, которого Ломброзо был: капризным, кипучим и, вероятно, безумным для работы, хотя, можно было бы представить, никогда не скучно.

Знакомое лицо

Ломброзо был известной личностью в Италии, давал распродажи лекций и разговоров и комментировал всевозможные вещи в популярной прессе. Он интересовался многими вещами, и иногда им было трудно сосредоточиться на одном. Одна из его дочерей, Паола, описала типичный день в своей жизни: «… сочиняя пишущую машинку, исправляя доказательства, бегая от Бокки (его издателя) к набору, от набора текста до библиотеки и от библиотеки до лаборатории в безумие движения …; и вечером, не уставая и не желая ходить в театр, в переустройство двух или трех городских театров, принимая первый акт в одном, платя пассажирский визит в другой и заканчивая вечер в третьем ».

Ломброзо бесконечно интересовался преступностью, преступниками и их мотивацией для оскорблений, а также их культурой. В результате он собрал артефакты, созданные и принадлежащие заключенным, с которыми он столкнулся во время своей долгой карьеры. Он также имел в своем распоряжении маски смерти от различных преступников, которые были казнены, а также много скелетов и черепов. Первоначально они были размещены у него дома, а затем в Туринском университете, где он работал. В 1892 году Ломброзо открыл музей для этих артефактов. Это закрылось в 1914 году, но вновь открылось в Турине в 2010 году и стоит посетить. Одним из самых выдающихся экспонатов был голова Ломброзо в банке консерванта, которую он согласился бы пожертвовать после его смерти (в 1909 году).

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Пара, рассматривающая главу итальянского криминалиста Чезаре Ломброзо, сохранилась в банке формалина на выставке в Болонье в 1978 году. (Фото: Romano Cagnoni / Hulton Archive / Getty Images)
Ранний сексолог

Другие интересы Ломброзо включали гипноз и паранормальные явления, особенно спиритуализм. Он также был описан как ранний сексолог, учитывая, что он был одним из первых, кто изучал и каталогизировал сексуальные практики. Его работа « Криминальная женщина» (1893) включала разделы о прелюбодеянии, фригидности, лесбиянстве, мастурбации и добрачном сексе, а также обсуждение причин и характеристик проституции.

По словам Ломброзо, его интерес к оккультизму начался, когда в 1882 году его попросили исследовать 14-летнюю дочь друга семьи. Считалось, что она страдает от истерии, рвота, лунатизм и жалоб на усталость. Ломброзо пришел к выводу, что эта девушка смогла увидеть в будущем, а также описать, что делали другие, когда они были далеко. По-видимому, она также могла видеть, читать и обонять другими частями своего тела. Ломброзо не мог объяснить это.

Другим известным примером было то, что он описал как случай с призрачным погребом. Здесь его вызвала семья винных торговцев, которые считали, что один из их винных погребов подвергся нападению невидимых сущностей. Когда Ломброзо посетил его, он спустился в подвал и ждал, чтобы узнать, что произошло. Бутылки начали падать, и к тому времени, когда он покинул Ломброзо, было свидетелем того, что 15 были сломаны. Опять же, он не смог дать объяснения тому, что видел.

Ломброзо также охарактеризовал как основоположник парапсихологии (лженаука, связанная с исследованием паранормальных и психических явлений, в том числе телепатия, переживания смерти и реинкарнация]. Он исследовал психическое средство под названием Eusapia Palladino, участвовавшее в сеансах во главе с ней. В одном, который состоялся в 1892 году, и увидел, что среда привязана к койке, кажется, представилось несколько духов. Это убеждало Ломброзо, среди других свидетелей, что духовный мир был реальностью, и он считал своим долгом ставить под сомнение (с помощью науки), что призраки были реальными.

Последняя книга Ломброзо, опубликованная после его смерти, была обсуждением биологии духовного мира. Неудивительно, что у него был смешанный прием, и его исследование призраков, полтергейстов, телепатии и левитации надлежащим образом исчезло в эфире. Однако это привело к общей дискредитации идей Ломброзо на протяжении многих лет, и в течение некоторого времени его работа рассматривалась как более ценная ценность для любопытства, чем что-либо еще. Это усугублялось ростом популярности евгеники и использованием нацистами биологических теорий о преступлениях, чтобы оправдать убийство миллионами людей. В послевоенный период стали более популярными другие, более социологические, объяснения преступного поведения, и, следовательно, биологические теории были в основном отвергнуты.

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Однако в последние годы биокриминология вновь появилась, в основном из-за наследия Ломброзо. Он представил идею о том, что преступность не является вопросом греха или свободной воли, а может быть медицинской проблемой, которая должна быть проверена экспертами в этой области. Ломброзо также выступал за то, чтобы рассматривать преступника как отдельного человека, а не сосредотачиваться только на преступлении.

В дополнение к своей новаторской работе над женщиной-правонарушителем Ломброзо был одним из первых, кто использовал научные методы для изучения преступлений, и он вдохновил многих других сделать то же самое. Сегодня нейро-криминология опирается на некоторые из теорий Ломброзо, чтобы исследовать причины криминального поведения — изучение, например, могут ли черепно-мозговые травмы или генетические аномалии привести к преступности или может ли насилие быть вызвано клиническим расстройством. Недавние исследования показали, что может существовать генетическое происхождение насильственных преступлений, и что черты личности, в том числе преступность, могут быть выведены из черт лица. Рожденный преступник, похоже, не может быть такой смешной идеей.

Диана Бретерик является преподавателем в области криминологии и уголовного правосудия в Портсмутском университете и автором Дочерей дьявола (Орион, 2015), в которой Чезаре Ломброзо является персонажем, который исследует серию похищений и убийств, когда он начинает свои исследования в уголовных женщины. Бретерик был уголовным адвокатом в течение 10 лет, прежде чем стать академиком.
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Психология Преступление и наказание Социальная история Странно и чудесно Особенность Неделя преступности и наказания
грустные последствия что не замедлили отразиться..

Часть 1

26 ноября 2017, 23:17

Доброго времени суток, дорогие читатели!

Сегодня я хотел бы поговорить на такую любопытную и весьма «взрывоопасную» (в частности, для пятых точек особо ярых моралфагов) тему, как серийные убийцы, а точнее, создание оригинальных персонажей — как ОЖП/ОМП, так и героев Ориджиналов. Каких только ошибок не делают авторы (да что уж там, даже я сам)… Вот и выходят в итоге однообразные и абсолютно не схожие с реальностью «шедевры», хотя есть, конечно, и качественные работы, но о них мы, естественно, говорить не будем.

Ну что, попробуем разложить всё по полочкам?

0. Определение

Чтобы судить о чём-то, надо хотя бы приблизительно понимать, что оно из себя представляет, верно? Итак, по запросу «серийный убийца» мне в первую очередь выдало определение из всеми любимой Википедии. Думаю, лаконичнее переформулировывать не имеет смысла.

Серийный убийца — человек, совершивший три и более криминальных убийств, разделённых по времени более чем на месяц.

Все обратили внимание на одну важную деталь? «Разделённых по времени», запомните это. Уж очень часто встречаются работы, где так называемый «серийный убийца» каждый вечер скрашивает весёлой прогулкой в каком-нибудь парке с топором наперевес, при этом нарезая толпы людей, как помидорки для салата. Фактор времени играет важную роль; с помощью него довольно легко отличить серийного убийцу от массового, ведь это всё же различные термины. Под массовыми убийствами обычно понимают стрельбу в школе (вспомним нашумевший Колумбайн), расстрел сослуживцев и прочее. Впрочем, разговор не о них, однако же стоит упомянуть, чтобы избежать неправильного использования терминов.

Так что резня, устроенная обиженной одноклассниками Катей, не делает её серийным убийцей, как бы ни пытался аффтар её так назвать.

1. Биография

Вопрос крайне спорный и крайне важный. Невозможно не коснуться его, повествуя о серийном убийце. В конце концов, наша жизнь — не только настоящее, но и прошлое, которое во многом определило наше «сейчас».

Wrong: Если хотите избежать скуки и однообразия, то настоятельно не рекомендую делать из героя эдакого Иисуса-страдальца. Бесчисленное множество фанфиков, где жизнь ГГ представлялась сплошной чередой страданий, уже не радуют уставший глаз читателя. Здесь, пожалуй, подойдёт известное выражение: «важно не количество, а качество». Не стоит убивать родителей героя (кстати, это очень частый приём. И чем мамы с папами авторам так не угодили?..), потом делать его абсолютным изгоем в школе без каких-либо оснований (конечно, встречаются случаи, когда «добрые» детишки могут возненавидеть одноклассника просто так, но обычно для этого есть конкретная причина), а затем добавить несчастную любовь/предательство друзей/изнасилование/убийство единственного близкого — нужное подчеркнуть (то бишь, всё сразу)!

Я никому не запрещаю строить сюжет фанфика именно так, превращая героя в мишень для ударов судьбы, но только если Вы на сто процентов уверены, что сможете описать это действительно хорошо, передать именно те чувства, которые он испытывал, и намекнуть на влияние трагических событий на его последующую жизнь. Прошу, не стоит разбавлять сайт очередным творением в духе «её родители погибли в автокатастрофе (кстати, самый распространённый способ устранения родителей персонажа по моим подсчётам, на втором месте — убийство каким-нибудь маньяком и пожар), в школе её избивали и обзывали, а потом её бросил парень и она решила отомстить». Будьте оригинальней.

Right: Что насчёт указать несколько более-менее нестандартных трагедий в жизни персонажа? Это может быть презрение к собственной нетрадиционной сексуальной ориентации (вспомним Джеффри Дамера), убийство любимого домашнего животного (вспомним Джона Гейси и его несчастного пса) и тому подобное. Также стоит отметить, что большинство серийных убийц в детстве терпели жестокое обращение со стороны родителей, в истории их становления зачастую играла важную роль деспотичная мать. Это пригодится в том случае, если Вы хотите создать типичного серийного убийцу, так сказать, «по всем канонам».

2. Психические расстройства

Wrong: Разумеется, серийные убийцы могут различаться по ряду существенных признаков, но у большинства всё же нет половины всех известных психических расстройств одновременно. Не стоит превращать героя в сборник отклонений. Большое количество психических расстройств у одного человека — явление редкое. Шизофрения, депрессия, раздвоение личности, биполярное расстройство — это наиболее часто встречающиеся в фанфиках варианты. Не рекомендую делать из них букет и затем преподносить его ГГ. Остановите свой выбор на чём-нибудь одном, и, что самое главное, хорошо его изучите. Выбрали диссоциативное расстройство идентичности? Будьте добры почитать о нём хотя бы статью из всё той же Википедии, а не пару фанфиков двенадцатилетних девочек. Выбрали параноидную шизофрению? Вам в помощь биография Ричарда Чейза, вводившего себе кроличью кровь и занимавшегося прочими весёлыми вещами, или Герберта Маллина, который убил тринадцать человек с целью предотвратить землетрясение (к слову, землетрясение так и не произошло… Заставляет задуматься, не так ли?).

Помимо этого, упомянем приём «расстройство в кустах». Галлюцинации просто так не появляются, голоса в голове тоже из ниоткуда не вылезают. Для всего есть предпосылки, причины — на примере всё того же Чейза разъясню подробнее: имели место родители-алкоголики, триада Макдональда, жалобы психиатру, употребление наркотиков и алкоголя, аресты. Не надо писать, что Вася вот только вчера общался с друзьями и делал уроки, а сегодня вдруг рисует кровью на стенах глаза, потому что соседская кошка ему так приказала; эти самые друзья должны были ещё раньше заметить какие-нибудь странности и хотя бы допустить такую мысль, что с Васей что-то не так, это замечали его родители, учителя, местные полицейские, которым он не раз попадался, или же сам Вася замечал в себе изменения.

Совсем иным образом обстоят дела с нашими любимыми психопатами — вот их криминальное поведение как раз зачастую является роялевкустовым для родственников и друзей благодаря «маске нормальности»; двойную жизнь они могут вести годами, внешне оставаясь примерными отцами и супругами. В качестве примера хорошо выраженной «маски нормальности» приведу всё того же Гейси, Теда Банди и Денниса Райдера, также известного как BTK.

Right: Возьмём ради примера всё то же диссоциативное расстройство идентичности, более известное в простонародье как раздвоение личности. Его причинами обычно являются эмоциональные травмы из раннего детства или повторяющееся насилие. Если Вы хотите «одарить» героя этим расстройством, не забудьте намекнуть на причины, чтобы оно не выглядело роялевкустовым. Симптомами, помимо периодически появляющейся второй личности, также являются неспособность вспомнить важную информацию о себе, порой депрессия, резкая смена настроения, тревога, нарушения сна и прочие. Герой на пустом месте и в один момент с ума не сходит, к этому нужно подводить медленно и постепенно.

3. Внешность

Wrong: Эта проблема одинаково актуальна как для ОЖП/ОМП, так и для оригинальных персонажей, поскольку очень часто герои постепенно превращаются во всеми любимых Мэри и Марти Сью. Радужные волосы, яркая одежда и прочие прелести. Серийному убийце всё это вовсе ни к чему. Никто не думал, что ему нужно не вызывать подозрений, скрываться, сливаться с толпой, нет? Любое отличие во внешности от средних показателей нежелательно, особые приметы ему не нужны.

Если такая уж охота сделать персонажа прекрасным — пожалуйста, никто не запрещает. Вспомним того же Теда Банди, которого порой называют самым очаровательным серийным убийцей. Но не стоит увлекаться, описывая красоту героя — помним, для чего она нужна.

Right: Не надо превращать персонажа в стрёмного чувака с косплей-феста. Скорее всего, он будет пытаться выглядеть максимально не подозрительно и никак не выделяться. Возможно, если его уже объявили в розыск, он может изменять свой внешний облик — парики и макияж, а также пластические операции (возьмём пример не из реальной жизни, но из вполне хорошей литературы (мы же, в конце концов, сейчас разбираем создание персонажа, а не инструкцию по становлению маньяком): небезызвестный Ганнибал Лектер проводил на себе операцию, как только ему удалось совершить успешный побег), но и здесь полно нюансов — если персонаж совершенно ничего не понимает в медицине (да и автор тоже), то лучше выбрать другой способ изменения внешности. Мужчина может отрастить бороду или побриться налысо (девушка тоже, но это, скорее всего, привлечёт больше внимания), женщина может пользоваться чудесами косметики.

4. Характер

Wrong: Не думаю, что здесь я могу давать какие-то конкретные советы — всё же серийные убийцы, как и все люди, по характеру сильно отличаются, и какие-то конкретные черты выделить сложно.

Единственное, что я могу сказать точно — это то, что стоит избегать резких необоснованных смен характера. Если в одной главе какая-нибудь Аманда мило поливает цветочки, думая о крольчатах, а в следующей она же (нет, не её вторая личность, а именно она сама) расчленяет своего сына и мужа в придачу, то… нет. Просто нет. Подведите к этому, покажите, как менялся её характер, поведение, были ли какие-то толчки к изменениям (быть может, муж на самом деле оказался жестоким тираном, а сын изводил мать на пару с отцом) — и тогда я Вам поверю. Но просто так — нет.

Right: Но, что примечательно, всё же есть некоторые общие черты для абсолютного большинства «классических» серийных убийц-психопатов, которые стоит отразить в характере своего персонажа, если Вы взялись за создание образа «по всем канонам»: низкая социальная приспособленность, обаяние, лживость, инфантильность, нарциссизм (причём выраженный гораздо в большей степени, чем у всех нас), эгоцентризм, агрессивность, замкнутость, мстительность. Если хотите лучше разобраться в этом, советую почитать Херви Клекли, у него есть пара занимательных работ.

5. Убийства

Wrong: Ох, это, пожалуй, самое сложное в описании персонажа-серийного убийцы. Если таковым становится подросток (что наблюдается в фанфиках чаще всего), то здесь есть целый ряд типичных ошибок:

1. Подросток (не огнестрельным оружием) убивает взрослых, причём в большом количестве, ещё и не только стройных дам, но и довольно «масштабных» мужчин.

Конечно, такое может быть, но при определённых условиях: если он сам либо мощного телосложения, либо занимался боевыми искусствами и тренировался с раннего детства, уповал не на грубую силу, а на собственную хитрость и быстроту, если он застал жертву врасплох либо заманил её в заранее заготовленную ловушку, да и жертва попалась физически слабая. Но всё же, ежели обратимся к нашей реальности, такое будет вряд ли возможно, особенно если убийца — хрупкая тоненькая девочка, которая раньше если и занималась искусством, то явно не боевым, а, к примеру, рисованием.

2. Подросток едва ли не бегом переносит трупы.

Нет, нет, нет, у нас тут не Хитмэн и не «Яндере симулятор». Особенно если это трупы тех самых мужчин из предыдущего пункта. Автор вообще хоть раз поднимал что-нибудь тяжелей школьного портфеля? Максимум, что может тащить на руках такой убийца — тело своей сверстницы, и то довольно лёгкой (анорексички, почему нет) (шутка, если что), или же он может переносить тело по частям. Если персонаж с хорошо развитой мускулатурой и не один год посещал «качалочку» — тогда я ещё, быть может, поверю, но только не в то, что старшеклассница резво носится с трупом какого-нибудь дяди Валеры под сто кг на руках. Хотя бы тележку из магазина сами поднимите, что ли…

3. Отсутствие сопротивления.

Серьёзно? Не стану отрицать, что перед человеком с оружием, даже если это хилый подросток, многие начнут теряться и просить пощады, но… Не все, далеко не все. Почему бы не быть оригинальней? Пускай жертвы сопротивляются и сами чуть не отправят на тот свет «убийцу»! Драки, особенно хорошо описанные (автор грустно вздыхает, взглянув на свои последние попытки описания драк), наверняка оживят работу. Пусть жертвы не будут безвольными овцами, смиренно ждущими своей участи. По крайней мере, не все жертвы.

4. Избавление от улик.

Это дело очень, очень нелёгкое. Нужно продумать тысячи вещей: алиби, отпечатки пальцев, ДНК, тело («нет тела — нет дела», хотя некоторые серийники, напротив, выставляют плоды своей деятельности напоказ — вспомним Джека-потрошителя) и прочее. Если герой интересуется детективами, узнаёт детали расследования (например, общается с друзьями из полиции или имеет родственника, работающего там) или даже сам работает полицейским (а что, идея для фанфика. Коп расследует своё же преступление. Подумайте об этом…), то его шансы на удачное избавление от улик существенно возрастают.

Right: Далеко не все убийства проходят гладко, план, даже идеально расписанный, на практике может дать сбой. И это замечательно для читателя, не так ли? Когда чёткий план рушится и герою приходится принимать быстрые решения — это ведь всегда захватывающе и интересно. Даже череда удачных убийств может внезапно прерваться (и вновь обратимся к Дамеру — известен случай, когда он пытался усыпить очередную жертву с помощью снотворного, но перепутал чашки и уснул сам). Абсолютно одинаковые убийства из главы в главу, как будто автор просто использовал Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V, выглядят нереалистично и скучно. Помните: жертвы, выбранные по одному признаку, и одинаковый способ убийства не равно точному копированию убийств.

Небольшое дополнение: чаще всего мужчины-серийники выбирают свою жертву из незнакомых; жертвами женщин-убийц, как правило, будут их родственники (часто мужья или дети), знакомые. Чаще всего женщины используют яды. Наиболее распространённой профессией у них является медсестра.

Вывод: Что же у нас получилось в итоге? Писать о серийных убийцах — очень и очень трудно. Осложняется это ещё и тем, что далеко не многие из нас (не рискну сказать «никто») могут похвастаться тем, что сами были на их месте или близко знакомы с кем-то из них. Не стоит браться за данную тему просто так, абсолютно ничего не зная о том, что они из себя представляют на самом деле (Ваш опыт чтения фанфиков по Крипипасте за такого рода знание не учитывается). Классификация серийных убийц поражает многообразием, каждый автор наверняка сможет найти тот тип, о котором захочется писать, и писать качественно.
В сети полно материалов в открытом доступе, которые позволят Вам лучше познакомиться с матчастью — надеюсь, моя скромная статья подтолкнёт к чтению правильных и документальных текстов всех желающих взяться за написание произведения на тему.

Я не строю из себя криминального психолога и не пытаюсь утверждать, что моя точка зрения является единственно верной, но всё же надеюсь, что смог рассмотреть основные недочёты максимально объективно и верно. Возможно, эта статья будет полезной, если Вы решите когда-либо писать о серийных убийцах.

Вдохновения и до встречи!

  • Сери́йный уби́йца — человек, совершивший три и более криминальных убийств, разделённых по времени («период охлаждения») более чем на месяц. В то же время, например, ФБР не принимает во внимание критерий «три или более» и определяет серийность, как «два или более убийств, совершённые как отдельные случаи, обычно, но не всегда, единичным злоумышленником-одиночкой», или, включая существенные характеристики, минимум два убийства.

    Мотивацией для серийных убийц служит патологическое стремление удовлетворить свои извращённые желания. Многие серийные убийства влекут за собой половую связь с жертвами, но ФБР отмечает, что причиной для появления нового серийного убийцы может стать гнев, психомоторное возбуждение, финансовая выгода или привлечение внимания. Убийства могут быть произвольными или подготовленными, как и жертвы могут иметь нечто общее: расу, внешность, пол, возраст и т. п.

    Серийный убийца не тождественен массовому (неистовому) убийце, поскольку последний совершает свои преступления в течение короткого промежутка времени в двух и более местах, без какого-либо перерыва. Тем не менее, случаи продолжительных убийств на протяжении недель и месяцев без перерывов («периодов охлаждения») или «возвращения к нормальной жизни» побудили некоторых экспертов предложить смешанную разновидность «серийно-массового убийцы».

  • Сегодня я расскажу о книге, которая подарила вам вот эту криминальную загадку, а мне — массу открытий и захватывающих историй, то шокирующих, то удивляющих. Эти истории абсолютно реальны и все наводят как минимум ужас от осознания того, что совершены тварями человеческими.

    Книга “Охотники за умами” написана агентом ФБР и его товарищем (Марк Олшейкер, Джон Дуглас), которые вместе с коллегами ещё на заре 70-80 годов прошлого века разработали и обкатали методику составления психологическоо портрета серийных убийц.

    Человек на 800 телефонных страницах рассказывает о случаях, которые потрясли Америку. А ещё о том, как он научился видеть убийцу до мельчайших деталей (вплоть до дефектов речи), изучая ТОЛЬКО улики преступления.

    Не буду тянуть, лучше расскажу вам то, что попало из этой книги в мой блокнот — факты о том, что отличает убийц от других людей.

    Истории ищите в книге, там очень интересно (я еле справилась с жадностью, чтобы рассказать вам о ней. Впрочем, я всегда стараюсь дооценивать людей, поэтому искренне надеюсь, что вас хватит только на пост).

    Снабжаю эти заметки комментариями, люблю поговорить с умным человеком ?. Если же и вы захотите что-либо обсудить или прокомментировать (я это тоже люблю и буду рада), просто ставьте в начале комментария номер пункта.

    Итак.
    1. Почти все серийные убийцы хотят служить в полиции.

    Так как испытывают три основных побуждающих к насилию стремления: управлять, властвовать, помыкать. А это всё свойственно полицейским (по предствлению убийц).

    Но американская система приёма в гос.органы практически исключает попадание психически нездоровых людей на службу. Отсеянные американскими специалистами ещё на первых тестах, они идут в охрану или службы безопасности (в те структуры, в которых носят форму, подобную полицейской).

    *А вот наша система тестирования будущих сотрудников полиции — дырявое ведро и никого неподходящего не отсеивает. Это я знаю очень хорошо, послушав истории из жизни сотрудников от них же самих, в непринуждённой обстановке за рюмкой чая.

    2. Если жертва задушена руками, то это говорит о “спонтанности” убийства.

    Опытный душегуб всегда продумывает свой ритуал во всех деталях (он думает об убийстве как о работе или о самом важном деле. И делает это всё время, не занятое жизнеобеспечением), поэтому редко использует такой “примитивный” и неинтересный способ убийства.

    3. Убийцу тянет на могилу жертвы.

    Вопреки мнению, что они “мучаются”, чаще они делают это для того, чтобы ещё раз “пережить” своё деяние. Убийство всегда возбуждает их. А попав на могилу (или к дому жертвы, на место преступления), они снова переживают этот опыт..

    По этой же причине они снимают что-либо с жертв (украшения, одежду) и дарят это своим подружкам и жёнам. Обычно именно эти женщины являются источником их агрессии (хотя преступники это порой даже не осознают), поэтому видеть вещи жертвы на этих женщинах и чувствовать свою власть (хочу-убью, хочу-нет) им особо приятно.

    4. Почти все серийные убийцы — мужчины.

    *Чуваки, тут мне даже сказать особо нечего, наши психики очень различны, женщины убивают по-другому, руководствуясь другими мотивами, редко — массово. Да и направляют чаще агрессию и ярость в себя, а не наружу (в отличие от серийников). Женщины, в случае внутренней ярости, часто обрекают на наказание самих себя и становятся алкоголичками, наркоманками, проститутками или совершают самоубийство.

    5. У Шерлока Холмса есть фраза:

    «Исключительность неизбежно дает нам ключ. Чем бесцветнее и обыденнее преступление, тем труднее его раскрыть». И это правда — чем сильнее преступник пытается скрыть следы, тем больше о его личности может сказать специалист бихевиористического направления в расследовании преступлений.

    Только называется это всё не дедукция (от крупного к мелкому), а индукция (по деталям преступления составляется обобщающая картина, которая “рисует портрет преступника”).

    6. Первое, чему учат курсанта в академии ФСБ — что он должен вести огонь только на поражение.

    В этом правиле жестокая философия и железная логика: раз выхватил оружие — значит, принял решение стрелять. Если оценил ситуацию как достаточно серьёзную, чтобы открывать огонь, — значит, готов отнять чужую жизнь. В сумятице события редко представляется возможность обдумывать целесообразность выстрела и заниматься гимнастикой ума.

    7. Факельщики

    Это курсанты, которые проявляют особое рвение к учёбе в академии (в жопе голубое пламя от рвения к службе). * Забавно.

    8. Как писать с кобурой.

    Вы когда-нибудь задумывались, почему в академиях (и на военной подготовке) не учат простым, но очень важным вещам. Хотя бы — как обращаться с оружием, например, в мужском туалете? Класть с портупеей на пол? Вешать на дверцу кабинки? *А как это обычно решается? Поделитесь опытом?

    9. «Фольксваген»-жучок

    Это излюбленная модель серийных убийц в 70х. *И вообще, они любят маленькие удобные машинки. Впрочем, есть ещё один излюбленный тип авто — машины, похожие на тачки полиции (см.пункт 1)

    10. Если преступник захватил заложников и требует прислать кого-то из родных, то этого не стоит делать ни при каких условиях.

    Именно этих людей он подсознательно считает первейшими виновниками всех своих неприятностей. Вызывая их в момент его “триумфа”, их подвергают опасности.

    11. Все серийные преступники делятся на три типа: профессионалы, умственно больные и фанатики. *Я не поняла, чем первый тип отличается от второго и третьего.

    12. Есть “триада” признаков, которые почти на 100 процентов помогают предположить, что человек станет серийником.

    Это — детская жестокость по отношению к мелким животным, энурез (недержание мочи по ночам) и стремление к поджогам. *Оглянитесь вокруг.

    13. Полицейский (в глазах серийника) обладает правом ради всеобщего блага наказывать нехороших людей. То же (по его мнению) делает и серийник. *Санитары леса, блядь.

    14. Источать враждебность.

    Враждебность- качество, которое обязательно требуются при переговорах в случае со взятием заложников.

    15. Парафилия

    Парафилия (загуглите, долго объяснять) всегда перерождается в нечто более и более опасное и насколько она разовьётся — зависит только от ситуации. *У меня был знакомый, который рассказывал, что у него ни разу в жизни не вставало, пока на девушке не были надеты чулки со стрелкой сзади и туфли с огромным каблуком.

    Иногда я крещусь при мысли, что наше общение было дружеским, быстро закончилось и я его (надеюсь) больше не встречу. Такие “особенности”- очень серьёзный посыл к перерождению в нечто опасное.

    16. Когда сексуальному нападению подвергается пожилой человек.

    ..всегда следует искать неуверенного в себе юнца, практически без какого-либо сексуального опыта. Такой преступник опасается выбирать жертву помоложе, посильнее и попривлекательнее.

    17. Женатый преступник

    по отношению к женщинам обычно проявляет себя более яростным садистом и издевается (режет, пытает, мучает) над ними не после, а до их смерти. *Хорошее дело браком не назовут, а?

    18. Преступники (по типу мышления и поведению) делятся на “организованных» и «неорганизованных».

    19. Организованные, обстоятельные люди больше любят автомобили темных цветов. *Ещё раз оглянитесь вокруг.

    20. Часто с уверенностью можно сказать, что следователь на допросе подозреваемого попал в точку, если арестованный умолкает и начинает внимательно прислушиваться к его (следователя) словам.

    21. У каждого серийника своя ахиллесова пята.

    *У каждого обычного человека, впрочем, тоже.

    22. Сексуальный убийца крайне редко орудует за пределами своей расы.

    23. Первым (и самым сильным) побуждающим мотивом для развития “склонности к убийству” и мотивом для первого убийства часто служит крупная ссора или разлад с женщиной (женой), её уход или распад семьи. “Если мужчина терпит крах в собственном доме, он терпит крах в жизни” — это слова с плаката в кабинете бихевиориста в США.

    24. Modus operandi (МО) — усвоенное поведение: то, как действует преступник, чтобы совершить преступление.

    Modus operandi проявляется в динамике и может меняться. Автограф в отличие от МО — это то, как поступает преступник, чтобы реализовать себя самого. Автограф статичен и от случая к случаю не меняется.

    Например то, чем преступник убивает жертву — это МО. А вот, если он вырезает на жертве какой-то знак, например (не помогающий ему умерщвлять жертву, а являющийся частью ритуала) — это уже автограф.

    Экзентерация — это тоже автограф. * Это лучше не гуглите.

    25. В отличие от страдающих комплексом неполноценности неорганизованных типов преступников, организованный тип уродует тела не после, а до смерти.

    26. Серийники всегда получают сексуальное переживание при убийстве. Они хотят быть творцами боли жертвы.

    27. Если тело оставлено в воде внутри дома

    В ванне, в душевом поддоне или ином контейнере, то не потому, что преступник старался смыть улики, а потому, что идёт речь об «инсценировке»: убийца стремился выдать одно за другое.

    Инсценировками занимаются только те убийцы, которые очень близки к жертвам. Раз преступник находится рядом с жертвой, ему надо позаботиться о том, чтобы отвести от себя подозрение.

    28. Знаете про Перечень прав, которые зачитывают при задержании во всех амеркоских фильмах?

    Их четыре: а) задержанный имеет право молчать; б) все, что он скажет, может быть использовано против него; в) он имеет право на допрос в присутствии своего адвоката и г) в случае, если задержанный не имеет возможности самостоятельно оплатить услуги адвоката, адвокат будет назначен ему судом.

    Они называется «предупреждением Миранды». *Надо почитать, при чём тут Миранда.

    29. Самые традиционные и широкоизвестные причины всех преступлений: любовью, ревность, алчность или месть. *Вы оглянетесь, наконец?

    30. Если убийца убивает “наугад”

    (стреляет в прохожих, кидает бомбы или что-то в этом роде) и при этом не добивается личной известности (не делает заявлений, не пишет письма или что-то в этом роде), то он мотивируются в первую очередь безграничной яростью.

    31. Если активно действующий убийца внезапно прекращает свои злодеяния.

    Этому находятся три причины (конечно, кроме его собственного желания «завязать» — вероятность чего стремится к нулю). Первое: он покончил жизнь самоубийством, что для некоторых типов личностей вполне логично. Второе: уехал из данной местности и продолжает орудовать где-то еще. И третье: преступник получил срок за другое, менее тяжкое преступление. *Если ваш сосед уже был судим за разбой, нападение, изнасилование или поджог (см. пункт 12), то держите подальше от него своих детишек.

    32. Бомбисты и вымогатели

    обычно используют в своих сообщениях местоимение «мы», дабы заставить думать, что где-то затаилась большая группа сообщников. В действительности же почти все эти люди — никому не доверяющие, подозрительные одиночки.

    33. Бомбисты обычно подпадают под одну из трёх категорий.

    Первые — личности, стремящиеся к власти, которых привлекает разрушение как таковое. Вторые — выполняющие «особую миссию» и испытывающие возбуждение от разработки, изготовления и установки взрывных устройств. И третьи — прирожденные технари, которые получают наслаждение от гениальности создаваемого ими механизма.

    34. Бомбисты готовы пожертвовать чужой жизнью ради своих эгоистических целей, а это одна из отличительных черт социопатического поведения.

    35. Часто предметом похищения становятся не только знаменитости, но и бывшие супруги или любовники.

    А смертельный исход наступает, когда похититель рассуждает так: «Если я не могу обладать ею (или им), то и никто другой не получит ее (или его)».

    36. Сексуальное насилие является преступлением злобы.

    Отрезав человеку яйца, вы не сделаете его добрее. Поэтому автор книги выступает не за кастрацию или заключение под стражу маньков, а за смертную казнь. *И тут пипец как сложно. Я с сама собой так и не пришла к какой-то однозначной позицией в этом вопросе. А вы?

    37. Не следует забывать, что невменяемость — официальное юридическое понятие, а не медицинский или психиатрический термин.

    Оно не означает, что кто-то «болен» или «не болен». Оно свидетельствует о том, что лицо отвечает или не отвечает за свои действия.

    «Ни один из серийных убийц, с которыми мне приходилось встречаться и которых приходилось изучать, официально ненормальным не являлся. Но никто из них не был и абсолютно здоров. У каждого мы находили какое-то психическое расстройство, которое, как правило, было связано с сексуальной сферой и недостатками характера. Но, несмотря на это, они прекрасно понимали, что делали, сознавали, что поступать так плохо, и, тем не менее, совершали свой выбор».

    38. Большинство, если не все случаи криминального поведения являются результатом детских обид или психологических травм в сочетании с определенным физическим состоянием: эпилепсией, последствиями ранения, поражением некоторых органов, кистой или опухолью.

    39. Все серийники ощущают себя неудачниками и страдают комплексом неполноценности.

    Им кажется, что все против них и никто не способен оценить их талантов. Как только побудительные стрессы (их два — разлад в личной жизни и…увольнение с работы) окажутся невыносимыми, преступник делает первый шаг от фантазий к реальности. Он будет гоняться за кем-нибудь слабее себя, младше, неудачливее. Потому что он трус. И не решится напасть на ровню. Но это не значит, что он обязательно примется убивать детей. Скорее всего, он выберет кого-то из групп риска — проститутку, родственника, старика. Или ту, чей типаж максимально походит внешностью на “первого агрессора”.

    40. Когда страх жизни превозмогает страх смерти, человек совершает насилие повторно.

    В преддверии события он будет вести себя тихо, затаится в окружении, станет болтать с полицейскими и местными агентами, журналистами. И не вызовет подозрений. Они не сочтут его опасным. *Так было и с битцевским маньяком — на него показывали его несостоявшиеся жертвы (один мальчик прибежал и указывал пальцем, говоря, что “этот дядя хотел меня убить”), он ходил и общался с полицией, его вроде даже допрашивали.

    Вот такое, блин, кино. Точнее, книга.

    Ну, есть чё сказать? А если найду?

    Популярные статьи:

    Содержание

    • 1 Русский
      • 1.1 Тип и синтаксические свойства сочетания
      • 1.2 Произношение
      • 1.3 Семантические свойства
        • 1.3.1 Значение
        • 1.3.2 Синонимы
        • 1.3.3 Антонимы
        • 1.3.4 Гиперонимы
        • 1.3.5 Гипонимы
      • 1.4 Этимология
      • 1.5 Перевод
      • 1.6 Библиография

    Русский[править]

    Тип и синтаксические свойства сочетания[править]

    сери́йный у·би́йца

    Устойчивое сочетание (термин). Используется в качестве именной группы.

    Произношение[править]

    • МФА: [sʲɪˈrʲiɪ̯nɨɪ̯ ʊˈbʲiɪ̯t͡sə]

    Семантические свойства[править]

    Значение[править]

    1. человек, совершивший несколько убийств, разделённых по времени ◆ Отсутствует пример употребления (см. рекомендации).

    Синонимы[править]

    Антонимы[править]

    Гиперонимы[править]

    1. убийца

    Гипонимы[править]

    Этимология[править]

    Перевод[править]

    Список переводов
    • Албанскийsq: vrasësi serik
    • Английскийen: serial killer (en)
    • Арабскийar: قاتل متسلسل (qātil mutasalsil)
    • Баскскийeu: serieko hiltzaile
    • Болгарскийbg: сериен убиец
    • Венгерскийhu: sorozatgyilkos
    • Греческийel: σίριαλ κίλερ ср. (sírial kíler)
    • Грузинскийka: სერიული მკვლელი (seriuli mḳvleli)
    • Датскийda: seriemorder (da) общ.
    • Индонезийскийid: pembunuh berantai
    • Исландскийis: raðmorðingi м.
    • Итальянскийit: assassino seriale м., assassina seriale ж., serial killer (it) м./ж., omicida seriale м.
    • Китайский (традиц.): 連環殺手 (liánhuán shāshǒu)
    • Китайский (упрощ.): 连环杀手 (liánhuán shāshǒu)
    • Корейскийko: 연쇄살인범 (yeonswaesarinbeom)
    • Латышскийlv: sērijveida slepkava
    • Люксембургскийlb: Seriemäerder м.
    • Македонскийmk: сериски убиец
    • Монгольскийmn: цуврал алуурчин
    • Немецкийde: Serienmörder (de) м., Serienkiller (de) м.
    • Нидерландскийnl: seriemoordenaar (nl) м.
    • Норвежскийno: seriemorder м.
    • Польскийpl: seryjny morderca
    • Португальскийpt: assassino em série (pt) м., assassina em série (pt) ж., serial killer (pt) м./ж.
    • Украинскийuk: серійний убивця
    • Финскийfi: sarjamurhaaja (fi)
    • Французскийfr: tueur en série (fr) м.
    • Шведскийsv: seriemördare (sv) общ.
    • Эстонскийet: sarimõrvar
    • Японскийja: シリアルキラー (shiriaru kirā)

    Библиография[править]

    An 1829 illustration of British serial killer William Burke murdering Margery Campbell.

    A serial killer is typically a person who murders three or more persons,[1] with the murders taking place over more than a month and including a significant period of time between them.[1][2] While most authorities set a threshold of three murders,[1] others extend it to four or lessen it to two.[3]

    Psychological gratification is the usual motive for serial killing, and many serial murders involve sexual contact with the victim. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) states that the motives of serial killers can include anger, thrill-seeking, financial gain, and attention seeking, and killings may be executed as such.[5] The victims may have something in common; for example, demographic profile, appearance, gender or race.[6] Often the FBI will focus on a particular pattern serial killers follow.[7] Based on this pattern, this will give key clues into finding the killer along with their motives.[8]

    Although a serial killer is a distinct classification that differs from that of a mass murderer, spree killer, or contract killer, there exist conceptual overlaps between them. Some debate exists on the specific criteria for each category, especially with regard to the distinction between spree killers and serial killers.[9]

    Etymology and definition[edit]

    The English term and concept of serial killer are commonly attributed to former FBI Special agent Robert Ressler, who used the term serial homicide in 1974 in a lecture at Police Staff Academy in Bramshill, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom.[10] Author Ann Rule postulates in her 2004 book Kiss Me, Kill Me, that the English-language credit for coining the term goes to LAPD detective Pierce Brooks, who created the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) system in 1985.[11]

    The German term and concept were coined by criminologist Ernst Gennat, who described Peter Kürten as a Serienmörder (‘serial-murderer’) in his article «Die Düsseldorfer Sexualverbrechen» (1930).[12] In his book, Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004), criminal justice historian Peter Vronsky notes that while Ressler might have coined the English term «serial homicide» within the law in 1974, the terms serial murder and serial murderer appear in John Brophy’s book The Meaning of Murder (1966).[13] The Washington, D.C., newspaper Evening Star, in a 1967 review of the book:[14]

    There is the mass murderer, or what he [Brophy] calls the «serial» killer, who may be actuated by greed, such as insurance, or retention or growth of power, like the Medicis of Renaissance Italy, or Landru, the «bluebeard» of the World War I period, who murdered numerous wives after taking their money.

    Vronsky states that the term serial killing first entered into broader American popular usage when published in The New York Times in the spring of 1981, to describe Atlanta serial killer Wayne Williams. Subsequently, throughout the 1980s, the term was used again in the pages of The New York Times, one of the major national news publications of the United States, on 233 occasions. By the end of the 1990s, the use of the term had increased to 2,514 instances in the paper.[15]

    When defining serial killers, researchers generally use «three or more murders» as the baseline,[1] considering it sufficient to provide a pattern without being overly restrictive.[16] Independent of the number of murders, they need to have been committed at different times, and are usually committed in different places.[17] The lack of a cooling-off period (a significant break between the murders) marks the difference between a spree killer and a serial killer. The category has, however, been found to be of no real value to law enforcement, because of definitional problems relating to the concept of a «cooling-off period».[18] Cases of extended bouts of sequential killings over periods of weeks or months with no apparent «cooling off period» or «return to normality» have caused some experts to suggest a hybrid category of «spree-serial killer».[13]

    In Controversial Issues in Criminology, Fuller and Hickey write that «[t]he element of time involved between murderous acts is primary in the differentiation of serial, mass, and spree murderers», later elaborating that spree killers «will engage in the killing acts for days or weeks» while the «methods of murder and types of victims vary». Andrew Cunanan is given as an example of spree killing, while Charles Whitman is mentioned in connection with mass murder, and Jeffrey Dahmer with serial killing.[19]

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) defines serial killing as «a series of two or more murders, committed as separate events, usually, but not always, by one offender acting alone».[20] In 2005, the FBI hosted a multi-disciplinary symposium in San Antonio, Texas, which brought together 135 experts on serial murder from a variety of fields and specialties with the goal of identifying the commonalities of knowledge regarding serial murder. The group also settled on a definition of serial murder which FBI investigators widely accept as their standard: «The unlawful killing of two or more victims by the same offender(s) in separate events».[18] The definition does not consider the motivation for killing nor define a cooling-off period.

    History[edit]

    Juhani Aataminpoika, a Finnish serial killer also known as «Kerpeikkari» (which means ‘executioner’), was one of the most active serial killers of the 19th century, killing as many as 12 people in 1849 within five weeks before being caught.[21]

    A phantom brandishing a knife floats through a slum street

    The ‘Nemesis of Neglect’: Jack the Ripper depicted as a phantom stalking Whitechapel, and as an embodiment of social neglect, in a Punch cartoon of 1888.

    Historical criminologists suggest that there have been serial killers throughout history.[22] Some sources suggest that legends such as werewolves and vampires were inspired by medieval serial killers.[23] In Africa, there have been periodic outbreaks of murder by Lion and Leopard men.[24]

    Liu Pengli of China, nephew of the Han Emperor Jing, was made Prince of Jidong in the sixth year of the middle period of Jing’s reign (144 BC). According to the Chinese historian Sima Qian, he would «go out on marauding expeditions with 20 or 30 slaves or with young men who were in hiding from the law, murdering people and seizing their belongings for sheer sport». Although many of his subjects knew about these murders, it was not until the 29th year of his reign that the son of one of his victims finally sent a report to the emperor. Eventually, it was discovered that he had murdered at least 100 people. The officials of the court requested that Liu Pengli be executed; however, the emperor could not bear to have his own nephew killed, so Liu Pengli was made a commoner and banished.[25]

    In the 9th century (year 257 of the Islamic Calendar), «a strangler from Baghdad was apprehended. He had murdered a number of women and buried them in the house where he was living.»[26]

    In the 15th century, one of the wealthiest men in Europe and a former companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc, Gilles de Rais, was alleged to have sexually assaulted and killed peasant children, mainly boys, whom he had abducted from the surrounding villages and had taken to his castle.[27] It is estimated that his victims numbered between 140 and 800.[28]

    The Hungarian aristocrat Elizabeth Báthory, born into one of the wealthiest families in Transylvania, allegedly tortured and killed as many as 650 girls and young women before her arrest in 1610.[29]

    Members of the Thuggee cult in India may have murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840.[30] Thug Behram, a member of the cult, may have murdered as many as 931 victims.[31]

    In his 1886 book, Psychopathia Sexualis, psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing noted a case of a serial murderer in the 1870s, a Frenchman named Eusebius Pieydagnelle who had a sexual obsession with blood and confessed to murdering six people.[32]

    The unidentified killer Jack the Ripper, who has been called the first modern serial killer,[33] killed at least five women, and possibly more, in London in 1888. He was the subject of a massive manhunt and investigation by the Metropolitan Police, during which many modern criminal investigation techniques were pioneered. A large team of policemen conducted house-to-house inquiries, forensic material was collected and suspects were identified and traced.[34] Police surgeon Thomas Bond assembled one of the earliest character profiles of the offender.[35]

    The Ripper murders also marked an important watershed in the treatment of crime by journalists.[36] While not the first serial killer in history, Jack the Ripper’s case was the first to create a worldwide media frenzy.[36] The dramatic murders of financially destitute women in the midst of the wealth of London focused the media’s attention on the plight of the urban poor and gained coverage worldwide. Jack the Ripper has also been called the most infamous serial killer of all time, and his legend has spawned hundreds of theories on his real identity and many works of fiction.[37]

    H. H. Holmes was one of the first documented modern serial killers in the United States, responsible for the death of at least nine victims in the early 1890s. The case gained notoriety and wide publicity through possibly sensationalized accounts in William Randolph Hearst’s newspapers. At the same time in France, Joseph Vacher became known as «The French Ripper» after killing and mutilating 11 women and children. He was executed in 1898 after confessing to his crimes.[38][39]

    The majority of documented serial killers in the 20th century are from the United States.[40][41]

    Late 20th century[edit]

    The serial killing phenomenon in the United States was especially prominent from 1970 to 2000, which has been described as the «golden age of serial murder.»[42] The cause of the spike in serial killings has been attributed to urbanization, which put people in close proximity and offered anonymity.

    The number of active serial killers in the country peaked in 1989 and has been steadily trending downward since, coinciding with an overall decrease in crime in the United States since that time. The decline in serial killers has no known single cause but is attributed to a number of factors. Mike Aamodt, emeritus professor at Radford University in Virginia, attributes the decline in number of serial killings to less frequent use of parole, improved forensic technology, and people behaving more cautiously.[43] Causes for the general reduction in violent crime following the 1990s include increased incarceration in the United States, the end of the crack epidemic in the United States, and decreased lead exposure in early childhood.[44][45][46]

    Characteristics[edit]

    Some commonly found characteristics of serial killers include the following:

    • They may exhibit varying degrees of mental illness or psychopathy, which may contribute to their homicidal behavior.[47]
      • For example, someone who is mentally ill may have psychotic breaks that cause them to believe they are another person or are compelled to murder by other entities.[48]
      • Psychopathic behavior that is consistent with traits common to some serial killers include sensation seeking, a lack of remorse or guilt, impulsivity, the need for control, and predatory behavior.[18] Psychopaths can seem ‘normal’ and often quite charming, a state of adaptation that psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley called the «mask of sanity».[citation needed]
    • They were often abused—emotionally, physically, or sexually—by a family member.[6]
    • Serial killers may be more likely to engage in fetishism, partialism or necrophilia, which are paraphilias that involve a strong tendency to experience the object of erotic interest almost as if it were a physical representation of the symbolized body. Individuals engage in paraphilias which are organized along a continuum; participating in varying levels of fantasy perhaps by focusing on body parts (partialism), symbolic objects which serve as physical extensions of the body (fetishism), or the anatomical physicality of the human body; specifically regarding its inner parts and sexual organs (one example being necrophilia).[49]
    • A disproportionate number exhibit one, two, or all three of the Macdonald triad[dubious – discuss] of predictors of future violent behavior:
      • Many are fascinated with fire setting.[6]
      • They are involved in sadistic activity; especially in children who have not reached sexual maturity, this activity may take the form of torturing animals.[6]
      • More than 60 percent, or simply a large proportion, wet their beds beyond the age of 12.[6][50]
    • They were frequently bullied or socially isolated as children.[6] For example, Henry Lee Lucas was ridiculed as a child and later cited the mass rejection by his peers as a cause for his hatred of everyone. Kenneth Bianchi was teased as a child because he urinated in his pants, suffered twitching, and as a teenager was ignored by his peers.[6]
    • Some were involved in petty crimes, such as fraud, theft, vandalism, or similar offenses.[51]
    • Often, they have trouble staying employed and tend to work in menial jobs. The FBI, however, states, «Serial murderers often seem normal; have families and/or a steady job.»[18] Other sources state they often come from unstable families.[6]
    • Studies have suggested that serial killers generally have an average or low-average IQ, although they are often described, and perceived, as possessing IQs in the above-average range.[6][18][52] A sample of 202 IQs of serial killers had a median IQ of 89.[53] Some organized serial killers have a slightly higher IQ score averaging a little bit over 99, to where disorganized killers average just under 93 in theirs. The average IQ of serial killers is 94.7.[54]

    There are exceptions to these criteria, however. For example, Harold Shipman was a successful professional (a General Practitioner working for the NHS). He was considered a pillar of the local community; he even won a professional award for a children’s asthma clinic and was interviewed by Granada Television’s World in Action on ITV.[55] Dennis Nilsen was an ex-soldier turned civil servant and trade unionist who had no previous criminal record when arrested. Neither was known to have exhibited many of the tell-tale signs.[56] Vlado Taneski, a crime reporter, was a career journalist who was caught after a series of articles he wrote gave clues that he had murdered people.[57] Russell Williams was a successful and respected career Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel who was convicted of murdering two women, along with fetish burglaries and rapes.[58]

    Juana Barraza, also known as the Old Lady Killer, was a professional wrestler. From the years of 1998-2006 she committed over 12 murders, all of which were of older women. She would rob them after knocking on their door pretending to be a government worker. This stems from hatred and resentment from her mother. [59]

    Development[edit]

    Many serial killers have faced similar problems in their childhood development.[60] Hickey’s Trauma Control Model explains how early childhood trauma can set the child up for deviant behavior in adulthood; the child’s environment (either their parents or society) is the dominant factor determining whether or not the child’s behavior escalates into homicidal activity.[61]

    Family, or lack thereof, is the most prominent part of a child’s development because it is what the child can identify with on a regular basis.[62] «The serial killer is no different from any other individual who is instigated to seek approval from parents, sexual partners, or others.»[63] This need for approval is what influences children to attempt to develop social relationships with their family and peers. «The quality of their attachments to parents and other members of the family is critical to how these children relate to and value other members of society.»[64]

    Wilson and Seaman (1990) conducted a study on incarcerated serial killers, and what they concluded was the most influential factor that contributed to their homicidal activity.[65] Almost all of the serial killers in the study had experienced some sort of environmental problems during their childhood, such as a broken home caused by divorce, or a lack of a parental figure to discipline the child. Nearly half of the serial killers had experienced some type of physical or sexual abuse, and more of them had experienced emotional neglect.[64]

    German serial killer Fritz Haarmann with police detectives, November 1924

    When a parent has a drug or alcohol problem, the attention in the household is on the parents rather than the child. This neglect of the child leads to the lowering of their self-esteem and helps develop a fantasy world in which they are in control. Hickey’s Trauma Control Model supports how parental neglect can facilitate deviant behavior, especially if the child sees substance abuse in action.[66] This then leads to disposition (the inability to attach), which can further lead to homicidal behavior, unless the child finds a way to develop substantial relationships and fight the label they receive. If a child receives no support from anyone, then they are unlikely to recover from the traumatic event in a positive way. As stated by E. E. Maccoby, «the family has continued to be seen as a major—perhaps the major—arena for socialization».[67]

    Chromosomal makeup[edit]

    There have been studies looking into the possibility that an abnormality with one’s chromosomes could be the trigger for serial killers.[68] Two serial killers, Bobby Joe Long and Richard Speck, came to attention for reported chromosomal abnormalities. Long had an extra X chromosome.[69] Speck was erroneously reported to have an extra Y chromosome; in fact, his karyotype was performed twice and was normal each time.[70] While attempts have been made to link the XYY karyotype to violence, including serial murder, research has consistently found little or no association between violent criminal behaviour and an extra Y chromosome.[71]

    Fantasy[edit]

    Children who do not have the power to control the mistreatment they suffer sometimes create a new reality to which they can escape. This new reality becomes their fantasy that they have total control of and becomes part of their daily existence. In this fantasy world, their emotional development is guided and maintained. According to Garrison (1996), «the child becomes sociopathic because the normal development of the concepts of right and wrong and empathy towards others is retarded because the child’s emotional and social development occurs within his self-centered fantasies. A person can do no wrong in his own world and the pain of others is of no consequence when the purpose of the fantasy world is to satisfy the needs of one person» (Garrison, 1996). Boundaries between fantasy and reality are lost and fantasies turn to dominance, control, sexual conquest, and violence, eventually leading to murder. Fantasy can lead to the first step in the process of a dissociative state, which, in the words of Stephen Giannangelo, «allows the serial killer to leave the stream of consciousness for what is, to him, a better place».[72]

    Criminologist Jose Sanchez reports, «the young criminal you see today is more detached from his victim, more ready to hurt or kill. The lack of empathy for their victims among young criminals is just one symptom of a problem that afflicts the whole society.»[62] Lorenzo Carcaterra, author of Gangster (2001), explains how potential criminals are labeled by society, which can then lead to their offspring also developing in the same way through the cycle of violence. The ability for serial killers to appreciate the mental life of others is severely compromised, presumably leading to their dehumanization of others.[73]

    This process may be considered an expression of the intersubjectivity associated with a cognitive deficit regarding the capability to make sharp distinctions between other people and inanimate objects. For these individuals, objects can appear to possess animistic or humanistic power while people are perceived as objects.[73] Before he was executed, serial killer Ted Bundy stated media violence and pornography had stimulated and increased his need to commit homicide, although this statement was made during last-ditch efforts to appeal his death sentence.[64] There are exceptions to the typical fantasy patterns of serial killers, as in the case of Dennis Rader, who was a loving family man and the leader of his church.[citation needed]

    Organized, disorganized, and mixed[edit]

    Ted Bundy in custody, Florida, United States, July 1978 (State Archives of Florida)

    The FBI’s Crime Classification Manual places serial killers into three categories: organized, disorganized, and mixed (i.e., offenders who exhibit organized and disorganized characteristics).[74][75] Some killers descend from being organized into disorganized as their killings continue,[76] as in the case of psychological decompensation or overconfidence due to having evaded capture, or vice versa, as when a previously disorganized killer identifies one or more specific aspects of the act of killing as their source of gratification and develops a modus operandi that focuses on them.[citation needed]

    Organized serial killers often plan their crimes methodically, usually abducting victims, killing them in one place and disposing of them in another. They often lure the victims with ploys appealing to their sense of sympathy. Others specifically target prostitutes, who are likely to go voluntarily with a stranger. These killers maintain a high degree of control over the crime scene and usually have a solid knowledge of forensic science that enables them to cover their tracks, such as burying the body or weighing it down and sinking it in a river. They follow their crimes in the news media carefully and often take pride in their actions as if it were all a grand project.[77]

    Often, organized killers have social and other interpersonal skills sufficient to enable them to develop both personal and romantic relationships, friends and lovers and sometimes even attract and maintain a spouse and sustain a family including children. Among serial killers, those of this type are in the event of their capture most likely to be described by acquaintances as kind and unlikely to hurt anyone. Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy are examples of organized serial killers.[77] In general, the IQs of organized serial killers tend to be normal range, with a mean of 98.7.[78]

    Disorganized serial killers are usually far more impulsive, often committing their murders with a random weapon available at the time, and usually do not attempt to hide the body. They are likely to be unemployed, a loner, or both, with very few friends. They often turn out to have a history of mental illness, and their modus operandi (M.O.) or lack thereof is often marked by excessive violence and sometimes necrophilia or sexual violence.[79] Disorganized serial killers have been found to have a lower mean IQ than organized serial killers, at 89.4. Mixed serial killers, with both organized and disorganized traits, have an average IQ of 100.9, but a low sample size.[78]

    Medical professionals[edit]

    Some people with a pathological interest in the power of life and death tend to be attracted to medical professions or acquiring such a job.[80] These kinds of killers are sometimes referred to as «angels of death»[81] or angels of mercy. Medical professionals will kill their patients for money, for a sense of sadistic pleasure, for a belief that they are «easing» the patient’s pain, or simply «because they can».[82] Perhaps the most prolific of these was the British doctor Harold Shipman. Another such killer was nurse Jane Toppan, who admitted during her murder trial that she was sexually aroused by death.[83] She would administer a drug mixture to patients she chose as her victims, lie in bed with them and hold them close to her body as they died.[83]

    Another medical professional serial killer is Genene Jones. It is believed she killed 11 to 46 infants and children while working at Bexar County Medical Center Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, United States.[84] She is currently serving a 99-year sentence for the murder of Chelsea McClellan and the attempted murder of Rolando Santos,[84] and became eligible for parole in 2017 due to a law in Texas at the time of her sentencing to reduce prison overcrowding.[84] A similar case occurred in Britain in 1991, where nurse Beverley Allitt killed four children at the hospital where she worked, attempted to kill three more, and injured a further six over the course of two months.

    A 21st-century example is Canadian nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer, who murdered elderly patients in the nursing homes where she worked. William George Davis is another hospital nurse who was sentenced to death in Texas for the murdering of four patients.[85]

    Female[edit]

    Highway prostitute Aileen Wuornos killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990

    Female serial killers are rare compared to their male counterparts.[86] Sources suggest that female serial killers represented less than one in every six known serial murderers in the United States between 1800 and 2004 (64 females from a total of 416 known offenders), or that around 15% of U.S. serial killers have been women, with a collective number of victims between 427 and 612.[87] The authors of Lethal Ladies, Amanda L. Farrell, Robert D. Keppel, and Victoria B. Titterington, state that «the Justice Department indicated 36 female serial killers have been active over the course of the last century.»[88] According to The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, there is evidence that 16% of all serial killers are women.[89]

    Kelleher and Kelleher (1998) created several categories to describe female serial killers. They used the classifications of black widow, angel of death, sexual predator, revenge, profit or crime, team killer, question of sanity, unexplained, and unsolved. In using these categories, they observed that most women fell into the categories of the black widow or team killer.[90] Although motivations for female serial killers can include attention seeking, addiction, or the result of psychopathological behavioral factors,[91] female serial killers are commonly categorized as murdering men for material gain, usually being emotionally close to their victims,[86] and generally needing to have a relationship with the victim,[90] hence the traditional cultural image of the «black widow».

    The methods that female serial killers use for murder are frequently covert or low-profile, such as murder by poison (the preferred choice for killing).[92] Other methods used by female serial killers include shootings (used by 20%), suffocation (16%), stabbing (11%), and drowning (5%).[91] They commit killings in specific places, such as their home or a health-care facility, or at different locations within the same city or state.[93] A notable exception to the typical characteristics of female serial killers is Aileen Wuornos,[94] who killed outdoors instead of at home, used a gun instead of poison, and killed strangers instead of friends or family.[95] One «analysis of 86 female serial killers from the United States found that the victims tended to be spouses, children or the elderly».[90] Other studies indicate that since 1975, increasingly strangers are marginally the most preferred victim of female serial killers,[96] or that only 26% of female serial killers kill for material gain only.[97] Sources state that each killer will have her own proclivities, needs and triggers.[98][90] A review of the published literature on female serial murder stated that «sexual or sadistic motives are believed to be extremely rare in female serial murderers, and psychopathic traits and histories of childhood abuse have been consistently reported in these women.»[90]

    A study by Eric W. Hickey (2010) of 64 female serial killers in the United States indicated that sexual activity was one of several motives in 10% of the cases, enjoyment in 11% and control in 14% and that 51% of all U.S. female serial killers murdered at least one woman and 31% murdered at least one child.[99] In other cases, women have been involved as an accomplice with a male serial killer as a part of a serial killing team.[98][90] A 2015 study published in The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology found that the most common motive for female serial killers was for financial gain and almost 40% of them had experienced some sort of mental illness.[100]

    Peter Vronsky in Female Serial Killers (2007) maintains that female serial killers today often kill for the same reason males do: as a means of expressing rage and control. He suggests that sometimes the theft of the victims’ property by the female «black widow» type serial killer appears to be for material gain, but really is akin to a male serial killer’s collecting of totems (souvenirs) from the victim as a way of exerting continued control over the victim and reliving it.[101] By contrast, Hickey states that although popular perception sees «black widow» female serial killers as something of the Victorian past, in his statistical study of female serial killer cases reported in the United States since 1826, approximately 75% occurred since 1950.[102]

    Elizabeth Báthory is sometimes cited as the most prolific female serial killer in all of history. Formally countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed (Báthory Erzsébet in Hungarian, August 7, 1560 – August 21, 1614), she was a countess from the renowned Báthory family. Before her husband’s death, Elizabeth took great pleasure in torturing the staff, by jamming pins under the servant’s fingernails or stripping servants and throwing them into the snow.[103] After her husband’s death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and young women, with one witness attributing to them over 600 victims, though the number for which they were convicted was 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted. In 1610, however, she was imprisoned in the Csejte Castle, where she remained bricked in a set of rooms until her death four years later.[104]

    A 2010 article by Perri and Lichtenwald addressed some of the misconceptions concerning female criminality.[105] In the article, Perri and Lichtenwald analyze the current research regarding female psychopathy, including case studies of female psychopathic killers featuring Münchausen syndrome by proxy, cesarean section homicide, fraud detection homicide, female kill teams, and a female serial killer.[105]

    Juvenile[edit]

    Juvenile serial killers are rare. There are three main categories that juvenile serial killers can fit into: primary, maturing, and secondary killers. There have been studies done to compare and contrast these three groups and to discover similarities and differences between them.[106] Although these types of serial killers are less common, oftentimes adult serial killers may make their debut at an early age and it can be an opportunity for researchers to study what factors brought about the behavior. While juvenile serial killers are rare, the youngest felon on death row is a juvenile serial killer named Harvey Miguel Robinson who was 17 at the time of his crimes and 18 at the time of his arrest.[107][108]

    Ethnicity and demographics in the United States[edit]

    The racial demographics regarding serial killers are often subject to debate. In the United States, the majority of reported and investigated serial killers are white males, from a lower-to-middle-class background, usually in their late 20s to early 30s.[6][18] However, there are African American, Asian, and Hispanic (of any race) serial killers as well, and, according to the FBI, based on percentages of the U.S. population, whites are not more likely than other races to be serial killers.[18] Criminal profiler Pat Brown says serial killers are usually reported as white because serial killers usually target victims of their own race, and argues the media typically focuses on «All-American» white and pretty female victims who were the targets of white male offenders; that crimes among minority offenders in urban communities, where crime rates are higher, are under-investigated; and that minority serial killers likely exist at the same ratios as white serial killers for the population. She believes that the myth that serial killers are always white might have become «truth» in some research fields due to the over-reporting of white serial killers in the media.[109]

    According to some sources, the percentage of serial killers who are African American is estimated to be between 13% and 22%.[110][111] Another study has shown that 16% of serial killers are African American, what author Maurice Godwin describes as a «sizeable portion».[112] A 2014 Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database annual statistics report indicated that for the decades 1900–2010, the percentage of white serial killers was 52.1% while the percentage of African American serial killers was 40.3%.[78]

    In a 2005 article Anthony Walsh, professor of criminal justice at Boise State University, argued a review of post-WWII serial killings in America finds that the prevalence of non-white serial killers has typically been drastically underestimated in both professional research literature and the mass media. As a paradigmatic case of this media double standard, Walsh cites news reporting on white killer Gary M. Heidnik and African-American killer Harrison Graham. Both men were residents of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; both imprisoned, tortured, and killed several women; and both were arrested only months apart in 1987. «Heidnik received widespread national attention, became the subject of books and television shows, and served as a model for the fictitious Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs«, writes Walsh, while «Graham received virtually no media attention outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, despite having been convicted of four more murders than Heidnik».[113]

    Outside the United States[edit]

    There is not much research about serial homicide in non-Western countries, or outside the U.S.

    In one study of serial homicide in South Africa, many patterns were similar to established patterns in the U.S., with some exceptions: no offenders were female, offenders were lower educated than in the U.S., and both victims and offenders were predominantly black.[114]

    There are many more serial killers outside of the United States. Most notably is Jack The Ripper, a serial killer from the United Kingdom who was active in the autumn of 1888. He killed 5 women but it is believed that he killed more than that.[115]

    Another notable non-American serial killer  is Pedro Lopez, a serial killer from South America. He killed a minimum of 110 young girls between 1969 and 1980. However, he claims that the number is over 300. He was released from a mental facility in 1998 and his whereabouts are still unknown. He is commonly nicknamed the Monster of the Andes.

    A final notable non-American serial is Luis Garavito who was a serial killer in Columbia. Garavito would kill and torture boys using various disguises. He murdered around 140 boys ranging in ages from 8 to 16. He would dump his victims’ bodies in mass graves.[116]

    Motives[edit]

    According to psychiatric reports, Jukka Lindholm, the so-called «serial strangler» reportedly admired the primordial, violent manhood of his teenage years.[117]

    The motives of serial killers are generally placed into four categories: visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control; however, the motives of any given killer may display considerable overlap among these categories.[118]

    Visionary[edit]

    Visionary serial killers suffer from psychotic breaks with reality,[119] sometimes believing they are another person or are compelled to murder by entities such as the Devil or God.[120] The two most common subgroups are «demon mandated» and «God mandated».[48]

    Herbert Mullin believed the American casualties in the Vietnam War were preventing California from experiencing the Big One. As the war wound down, Mullin claimed his father instructed him via telepathy to raise the number of «human sacrifices to nature» to delay a catastrophic earthquake that would plunge California into the ocean.[121] David Berkowitz («Son of Sam») may also be an example of a visionary serial killer, having claimed a demon transmitted orders through his neighbor’s dog and instructed him to commit murder.[122] Berkowitz later described those claims as a hoax, as originally concluded by psychiatrist David Abrahamsen.[123]

    Mission-oriented[edit]

    Mission-oriented killers typically justify their acts as «ridding the world» of certain types of people perceived as undesirable, such as the homeless, ex-cons, homosexuals, drug users, prostitutes, or people of different ethnicity or religion; however, they are generally not psychotic.[124] Some see themselves as attempting to change society, often to cure a societal ill.[125]

    An example of a mission-oriented killer would be Joseph Paul Franklin, an American white supremacist who exclusively targeted Jewish, biracial, and African-American individuals for the purpose of inciting a «race war».[126][127]

    Hedonistic[edit]

    This type of serial killer seeks thrills and derives pleasure and satisfaction from killing, seeing people as expendable means to this goal. Forensic psychologists have identified three subtypes of the hedonistic killer: «lust», «thrill», and «comfort».[128]

    Lust[edit]

    Sex is the primary motive of lust killers, whether or not the victims are dead, and fantasy plays a large role in their killings.[129] Their sexual gratification depends on the amount of torture and mutilation they perform on their victims. The sexual serial murderer has a psychological need to have absolute control, dominance, and power over their victims, and the infliction of torture, pain, and ultimately death is used in an attempt to fulfill their need.[130] They usually use weapons that require close contact with the victims, such as knives or hands. As lust killers continue with their murders, the time between killings decreases or the required level of stimulation increases, sometimes both.[131]

    Kenneth Bianchi, one of the «Hillside Stranglers», murdered women and girls of different ages, races, and appearance because his sexual urges required different types of stimulation and increasing intensity.[132] Jeffrey Dahmer searched for his perfect fantasy lover—beautiful, submissive and eternal. As his desire increased, he experimented with drugs, alcohol, and exotic sex. His increasing need for stimulation was demonstrated by the dismemberment of victims, whose heads and genitals he preserved, and by his attempts to create a «living zombie» under his control (by pouring acid into a hole drilled into the victim’s skull).[133]

    Dahmer once said, «Lust played a big part of it. Control and lust. Once it happened the first time, it just seemed like it had control of my life from there on in. The killing was just a means to an end. That was the least satisfactory part. I didn’t enjoy doing that. That’s why I tried to create living zombies with acid and the drill.» He further elaborated on this, also saying, «I wanted to see if it was possible to make—again, it sounds really gross—uh, zombies, people that would not have a will of their own, but would follow my instructions without resistance. So after that, I started using the drilling technique.»[134] He experimented with cannibalism to «ensure his victims would always be a part of him».[135]

    Thrill[edit]

    The primary motive of a thrill killer is to induce pain or terror in their victims, which provides stimulation and excitement for the killer.[129] They seek the adrenaline rush provided by hunting and killing victims. Thrill killers murder only for the kill; usually, the attack is not prolonged, and there is no sexual aspect. Usually, the victims are strangers, although the killer may have followed them for a period of time. Thrill killers can abstain from killing for long periods of time and become more successful at killing as they refine their murder methods. Many attempt to commit the perfect crime and believe they will not be caught.[136]

    Robert Hansen took his victims to a secluded area, where he would let them loose and then hunt and kill them.[137] In one of his letters to San Francisco Bay Area newspapers in San Francisco, California, the Zodiac Killer wrote «[killing] gives me the most thrilling experience it is even better than getting your rocks off with a girl».[138] Carl Watts was described by a surviving victim as «excited and hyper and clappin’ and just making noises like he was excited, that this was gonna be fun» during the 1982 attack.[139] Slashing, stabbing, hanging, drowning, asphyxiating, and strangling were among the ways Watts killed.[140]

    Comfort (profit)[edit]

    Material gain and a comfortable lifestyle are the primary motives of comfort killers.[141] Usually, the victims are family members and close acquaintances.[129] After a murder, a comfort killer will usually wait for a period of time before killing again to allow any suspicions by family or authorities to subside. They often use poison, most notably arsenic, to kill their victims. Female serial killers are often comfort killers, although not all comfort killers are female.[142]

    Dorothea Puente killed her tenants for their Social Security checks and buried them in the backyard of her home.[143] H. H. Holmes killed for insurance and business profits.[144] Puente and Holmes had previous records of crimes such as theft, fraud, non-payment of debts, embezzlement and others of a similar nature. Dorothea Puente was finally arrested on a parole violation, having been on parole for a previous fraud conviction.[145]

    Contract killers («hitmen») may exhibit serial killers traits, but are generally not classified as such because of third-party killing objectives and detached financial and emotional incentives.[146][147][148] Nevertheless, there are occasionally individuals that are labeled as both a hitman and a serial killer.[149]

    Power/control[edit]

    The main objective for this type of serial killer is to gain and exert power over their victim. Such killers are sometimes abused as children, leaving them with feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy as adults. Many power- or control-motivated killers sexually abuse their victims, but they differ from hedonistic killers in that rape is not motivated by lust (as it would be with a lust murder) but as simply another form of dominating the victim.[150] Ted Bundy is an example of a power/control-oriented serial killer. He traveled around the United States seeking women to control.[151]

    Media influences[edit]

    Many serial killers claim that a violent culture influenced them to commit murders. During his final interview, Ted Bundy stated that hardcore pornography was responsible for his actions. Others idolise figures for their deeds or perceived vigilante justice, such as Peter Kürten, who idolized Jack the Ripper, or John Wayne Gacy and Ed Kemper, who both idolized the actor John Wayne.[6]

    Killers who have a strong desire for fame or to be renowned for their actions desire media attention as a way of validating and spreading their crimes; fear is also a component here, as some serial killers enjoy causing fear. An example is Dennis Rader, who sought attention from the press during his murder spree.[152]

    In popular culture[edit]

    Many movies, books, and documentaries have been created, detailing serial killers’ lives and crimes. For example, the biographical films Ted Bundy (2002) and Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile focuses on serial killer Ted Bundy’s personal life in college, leading up to his execution, and Dahmer (2002) tells the story of Jeffrey Dahmer. A Netflix series on the life of Jeffrey Dahmer and his victims was released in 2022.

    Serial killers are also portrayed in fictional media, oftentimes as having substantial intelligence and looking for difficult targets, despite the contradiction with the psychological profile of serial killers.[153]

    Theories[edit]

    Biological and sociological[edit]

    Theories for why certain people commit serial murder have been advanced. Some theorists believe the reasons are biological, suggesting serial killers are born, not made, and that their violent behavior is a result of abnormal brain activity. Holmes believe that «until a reliable sample can be obtained and tested, there is no scientific statement that can be made concerning the exact role of biology as a determining factor of a serial killer personality.»[154]

    The «Fractured Identity Syndrome» (FIS) is a merging of Charles Cooley’s «looking glass self» and Erving Goffman’s «virtual» and «actual social identity» theories. The FIS suggests a social event, or series of events, during one’s childhood results in a fracturing of the personality of the serial killer. The term «fracture» is defined as a small breakage of the personality which is often not visible to the outside world and is only felt by the killer.[155]

    «Social Process Theory» has also been suggested as an explanation for serial murder. Social process theory states that offenders may turn to crime due to peer pressure, family and friends. Criminal behavior is a process of interaction with social institutions, in which everyone has the potential for criminal behavior.[156] A lack of family structure and identity could also be a cause leading to serial murder traits. A child used as a scapegoat will be deprived of their capacity to feel guilt. Displaced anger could result in animal torture, as identified in the Macdonald triad, and a further lack of basic identity.[157]

    Military[edit]

    A dishonorably discharged Marine, Charles Ng participated in the kidnapping, sadistic torture, rape, and murder of numerous victims

    The «military theory» has been proposed as an explanation for why serial murderers kill, as some serial murderers have served in the military or related fields. According to Castle and Hensley, 7% of the serial killers studied had military experience.[158] This figure may be a proportional under-representation when compared to the number of military veterans in a nation’s total population. For example, according to the United States census for the year 2000, military veterans comprised 12.7% of the U.S. population;[159] in England, it was estimated in 2007 that military veterans comprised 9.1% of the population.[160] Though by contrast, about 2.5% of the population of Canada in 2006 consisted of military veterans.[161][162]

    There are two theories that can be used to study the correlation between serial killing and military training: Applied learning theory states that serial killing can be learned. The military is training for higher kill rates from servicemen while training the soldiers to be desensitized to taking a human life.[163] Social learning theory can be used when soldiers get praised and accommodated for killing. They learn or believe that they learn, that it is acceptable to kill because they were praised for it in the military. Serial killers want accreditation for the work that they have done.[164]

    In both military and serial killing, the offender or the soldier may become desensitized to killing as well as compartmentalized; the soldiers do not see enemy personnel as «human» and neither do serial killers see their victims as humans.[165] The theories do not imply that military institutions make a deliberate effort to produce serial killers; to the contrary, all military personnel are trained to recognize when, where, and against whom it is appropriate to use deadly force, which starts with the basic Law of Land Warfare, taught during the initial training phase, and may include more stringent policies for military personnel in law enforcement or security.[166]

    Investigation[edit]

    FBI: Issues and practices[edit]

    In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published a handbook titled Serial Murder which was the product of a symposium held in 2005 to bring together the many issues surrounding serial murder, including its investigation.[167]

    Identification[edit]

    According to the FBI, identifying one, or multiple, murders as being the work of a serial killer is the first challenge an investigation faces, especially if the victim(s) come from a marginalized or high-risk population and is normally linked through forensic or behavioral evidence (FBI 2008).[167] Should the cases cross multiple jurisdictions, the law enforcement system in the United States is fragmented and thus not configured to detect multiple similar murders across a large geographic area (Egger 1998).[168] Ted Bundy was particularly famous for such geographic exploitations. He used his knowledge about the lack of communication between multiple jurisdictions to avoid arrest and detection.[169] The FBI suggests utilizing databases and increasing interdepartmental communication. Keppel (1989)[170] suggests holding multi-jurisdictional conferences regularly to compare cases giving departments a greater chance to detect linked cases and overcome linkage blindness.

    One such collaboration, the Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database Project[171] was proposed at the 2012 FDIAI Annual Conference.[172] Utilizing Radford’s Serial Killer Database as a starting point, the new collaboration,[173] hosted by FGCU Justice Studies, has invited and is working in conjunction with other universities to maintain and expand the scope of the database to also include spree and mass murders. Utilizing over 170 data points, multiple-murderer methodology and victimology; researchers and Law Enforcement Agencies can build case studies and statistical profiles to further research the Who, What, Why and How of these types of crimes.

    Leadership[edit]

    Leadership, or administration, should play a small or virtually non-existent role in the actual investigation past assigning knowledgeable or experienced homicide investigators to lead positions. The administration’s role is not to run the investigation but to establish and reaffirm the primary goal of catching the serial killer, as well as provide support for the investigators. The FBI (2008) suggests completing Memorandums of Understanding to facilitate support and commitment of resources from different jurisdictions to an investigation.[167] Egger (1998) takes this one step further and suggests completing mutual aid pacts, which are written agreements to provide support to each other in a time of need, with surrounding jurisdictions. Doing this in advance would save time and resources that could be used on the investigation.[168]

    Organization[edit]

    The structural organization of an investigation is key to its success, as demonstrated by the investigation of Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Once a serial murder case was established, a task force was created to track down and arrest the offender. Over the course of the investigation, for various reasons, the task force’s organization was radically changed and reorganized multiple times – at one point including more than 50 full-time personnel, and at another, only a single investigator. Eventually, what led to the end of the investigation was a conference of 25 detectives organized to share ideas to solve the case.[174]

    The FBI handbook provides a description of how a task force should be organized but offers no additional options on how to structure the investigation. While it appears advantageous to have a full-time staff assigned to a serial murder investigation, it can become prohibitively expensive. For example, the Green River Task Force cost upwards of $2 million per year,[174] and as was witnessed with the Green River Killer investigation, other strategies can prevail where a task force fails.

    A common strategy, already employed by many departments for other reasons, is the conference, in which departments get together and focus on a specific set of topics.[175] With serial murders, the focus is typically on unsolved cases, with evidence thought to be related to the case at hand.

    Similar to a conference is an information clearing-house in which a jurisdiction with a suspected serial murder case collects all of its evidence and actively seeks data that may be related from other jurisdictions.[175] By collecting all of the related information into one place, they provide a central point in which it can be organized and easily accessed by other jurisdictions working toward the goal of arresting an offender and ending the murders.

    Already mentioned was the task force,[175] FBI 2008,[167] Keppel 1989[170] which provides for a flexible, organized, framework for jurisdictions depending on the needs of the investigation. Unfortunately due to the need to commit resources (manpower, money, equipment, etc.) for long periods of time it can be an unsustainable option.

    In the case of the investigation of Aileen Wournos, the Marion County Sheriff coordinated multiple agencies without any written or formal agreement.[168] While not a specific strategy for a serial murder investigation, this is certainly a best practice in so far as the agencies were able to work easily together toward a common goal.

    Finally, once a serial murder investigation has been identified, the use of an FBI Rapid Response Team can assist both experienced and inexperienced jurisdictions in setting up a task force. This is completed by organizing and delegating jobs, by compiling and analyzing clues, and by establishing communication between the parties involved.[168]

    Resource augmentation[edit]

    During the course of a serial murder investigation, it may become necessary to call in additional resources; the FBI defines this as Resource Augmentation. Within the structure of a task force, the addition of a resource should be thought of as either long-term or short-term. If the task force’s framework is expanded to include the new resource, then it should be permanent and not removed. For short-term needs, such as setting up roadblocks or canvassing a neighborhood, additional resources should be called in on a short-term basis. The decision of whether resources are needed short or long term should be left to the lead investigator and facilitated by the administration (FBI 2008).[167]

    The confusion and counter productiveness created by changing the structure of a task force mid investigation is illustrated by the way the Green River Task Force’s staffing and structure was changed multiple times throughout the investigation. This made an already complicated situation more difficult, resulting in the delay or loss of information, which allowed Ridgway to continue killing (Guillen 2007).[174] The FBI model does not take into account that permanently expanding a task force, or investigative structure, may not be possible due to cost or personnel availability. Egger (1998) offers several alternative strategies including; using investigative consultants, or experienced staff to augment an investigative team. Not all departments have investigators experienced in serial murder and by temporarily bringing in consultants, they can educate a department to a level of competence then step out. This would reduce the initially established framework of the investigation team and save the department the cost of retaining the consultants until the conclusion of the investigation.[168]

    Communication[edit]

    The FBI handbook (2008)[167] and Keppel (1989)[170] both stress communication as paramount. The difference is that the FBI handbook (2008)[167] concentrates primarily on communication within a task force while Keppel (1989)[170] makes getting information out to and allowing information to be passed back from patrol officers a priority. The FBI handbook (2008)[167] suggests having daily e-mail or in-person briefings for all staff involved in the investigation and providing periodic summary briefings to patrol officers and managers. Looking back on a majority of serial murderer arrests, most are exercised by patrol officers in the course of their everyday duties and unrelated to the ongoing serial murder investigation (Egger 1998,[168] Keppel 1989).[170]

    Keppel (1989)[170] provides examples of Larry Eyler, who was arrested during a traffic stop for a parking violation, and Ted Bundy, who was arrested during a traffic stop for operating a stolen vehicle. In each case, it was uniformed officers, not directly involved in the investigation, who knew what to look for and took the direct action that stopped the killer. By providing up-to-date (as opposed to periodic) briefings and information to officers on the street the chances of catching a serial killer, or finding solid leads, are increased.

    Data management[edit]

    A serial murder investigation generates staggering amounts of data, all of which needs to be reviewed and analyzed. A standardized method of documenting and distributing information must be established and investigators must be allowed time to complete reports while investigating leads and at the end of a shift (FBI 2008).[167] When the mechanism for data management is insufficient, leads are not only lost or buried but the investigation can be hindered and new information can become difficult to obtain or become corrupted.[174]

    During the Green River Killer investigation, reporters would often find and interview possible victims or witnesses ahead of investigators. The understaffed investigation was unable to keep up the information flow, which prevented them from promptly responding to leads. To make matters worse, investigators believed that the journalists, untrained in interviewing victims or witnesses of crimes, would corrupt the information and result in unreliable leads (Guillen 2007).[174]

    Memorabilia[edit]

    Notorious and infamous serial killers number in the thousands[176] and a subculture revolves around their legacies. That subculture includes the collection, sale, and display of serial killer memorabilia, dubbed «murderabilia» by Andrew Kahan, one of the best-known opponents of collectors of serial killer remnants. Kahan is the director of the Mayor’s Crime Victims Office in Houston. He is backed by the families of murder victims and «Son of Sam laws» existing in some states that prevent murderers from profiting from the publicity generated by their crimes.[177]

    Such memorabilia includes the paintings, writings, and poems of these killers.[178] Recently, marketing has capitalized even more upon interest in serial killers with the rise of various merchandise such as trading cards, action figures, and books such as The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers by Harold Schechter, and The A-Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers by Schecter and David Everitt. Some serial killers attain celebrity status in the way they acquire fans and may have previous personal possessions auctioned off on websites like eBay. A few examples of this are Ed Gein’s 150-pound stolen gravestone and Bobby Joe Long’s sunglasses.[179]

    See also[edit]

    • List of serial killers before 1900
    • List of serial killers by country
    • List of serial killers by number of victims
    • List of songs about or referencing serial killers
    • Offender profiling
    • Serial crime
    • Serial rapist
    • Son of Sam law

    Footnotes[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d
      • Holmes & Holmes 1998, Serial murder is the killing of three or more people over a period of more than 30 days, with a significant cooling-off period between the murders The baseline number of three victims appears to be most common among those who are the academic authorities in the field. The time frame also appears to be an agreed-upon component of the definition.
      • Petherick 2005, p. 190 Three killings seem to be required in the most popular definition of serial killing since they are enough to provide a pattern within the killings without being overly restrictive.
      • Flowers 2012, p. 195 in general, most experts on serial murder require that a minimum of three murders be committed at different times and usually different places for a person to qualify as a serial killer.
      • Schechter 2012, p. 73 Most experts seem to agree, however, that to qualify as a serial killer, an individual has to slay a minimum of three unrelated victims.

    2. ^ Burkhalter Chmelir 2003, p. 1.
    3. ^ Hough & McCorkle 2016, p. […] Serial killing has been defined by different researchers or groups as either two or more, three or more or even four or more people killed over at least one month with a cooling off period between each of the murders.
    4. ^ Geberth 1995, p. ? «The base population was 387 serial murderers, who killed (under various motivations), three or more persons over a period of time with cooling-off periods between the events. The author identified 232 male serial murderers who violated their victims sexually».
    5. ^ Morton 2005, p. 4, 9.
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    Further reading[edit]

    • Borgeson; Kristen Kuehnle (2010). Serial Offenders: Theory and Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-7730-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Brady, Ian; Colin Wilson (Introduction); Peter Sotos (Afterword) (2001). The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and Its Analysis. Feral House. ISBN 978-0922915736.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Journey into Darkness. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-00394-4. Archived from the original on August 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Mind Hunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-01375-2. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Douglas, John E.; Allen G. Burgess; Robert K. Ressler; Ann W. Burgess (2006). Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crimes (Second ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7879-8501-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Haggerty, Kevin D. (2009). «Crime, Media, Culture: Modern Serial Killer». Crime, Media, Culture. 5 (2): 1–21. doi:10.1177/1741659009335714. S2CID 11395289. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (1998). Contemporary Perspectives on Serial Murder. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-1421-1. Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (2000). Murder in America (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-2092-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Jensen, Sybil (2014). Top 10 American Serial Killers:Inside The Minds of Psychopaths. Haselton Media Group. ASIN B00KGDUJ2U.
    • Kiam, O.M. (2013). The Second One: A Serial Killer’s Account of His First Two Kills. Milford Press. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
    • Lane, Brian (2006). The New Encyclopedia of Serial Killers (2nd ed.). Facts on File. ISBN 978-0816061952. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Leyton, Elliott (1986). Hunting Humans: The Rise of the Modern Multiple Murderer. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-5025-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Lukin, Grigory (2013). Madmen’s Manifestos: Chris Dorner, Charles Manson, Timothy McVeigh and others. ASIN B00BM5L2HW.
    • MacDonald, J. M (1963). «The threat to kill». American Journal of Psychiatry. American Psychiatric Association. 120 (2): 125–130. doi:10.1176/ajp.120.2.125. Archived from the original on March 3, 2014. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
    • Newitz, Annalee (2006). Pretend We’re Dead: Capitalist Monsters in American Pop Culture. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-3745-4. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Norris, Joel (1990). Serial Killers: The Growing Menace. Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0-09-971750-8.
    • Panzram, Carl (2002) [1970]. Gaddis, Thomas E.; Long, James O. (eds.). Killer: A Journal of Murder. Amok Books.
    • Ramsland, Katherine (2007). Inside the Minds of Healthcare Serial Killers: Why They Kill. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-99422-8. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 16, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 10, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Reavill, Gil (2007). Aftermath, Inc.: Cleaning Up After CSI Goes Home. Gotham. ISBN 978-1-59240-296-0.
    • Robinson, Bryan (January 7, 2006). «Serial Killer Action Figures For Sale». ABC News. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
    • Rosner, Lisa (2010). The Anatomy Murders. Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4191-4.
    • Roy, Jody M. (2002). Love to Hate: America’s Obsession with Hatred and Violence. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12569-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rushby, Kevin (2003). Children of Kali: Through India in Search of Bandits, the Thug Cult, and the British Raj. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1418-3.
    • Seltzer, Mark (1998). Serial Killers: Death and Life in America’s Wound Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91481-9. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Wilson, Colin (1995). A Plague of Murder. Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-85487-249-4.
    • Yudofsky, Stuart C. (2005). Fatal Flaws: Navigating Destructive Relationships with People with Disorders of Personality and Character. American Psychiatric Publishing. ISBN 9781585626588. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.

    External links[edit]

    • Crime Library’s Serial Killer page
    • Serial Murder: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives for Investigators Official FBI publication
    • Dr. James Fallon: The Brains of Serial Killers (Talk)
    • Unknown Serial Killings

    An 1829 illustration of British serial killer William Burke murdering Margery Campbell.

    A serial killer is typically a person who murders three or more persons,[1] with the murders taking place over more than a month and including a significant period of time between them.[1][2] While most authorities set a threshold of three murders,[1] others extend it to four or lessen it to two.[3]

    Psychological gratification is the usual motive for serial killing, and many serial murders involve sexual contact with the victim. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) states that the motives of serial killers can include anger, thrill-seeking, financial gain, and attention seeking, and killings may be executed as such.[5] The victims may have something in common; for example, demographic profile, appearance, gender or race.[6] Often the FBI will focus on a particular pattern serial killers follow.[7] Based on this pattern, this will give key clues into finding the killer along with their motives.[8]

    Although a serial killer is a distinct classification that differs from that of a mass murderer, spree killer, or contract killer, there exist conceptual overlaps between them. Some debate exists on the specific criteria for each category, especially with regard to the distinction between spree killers and serial killers.[9]

    Etymology and definition[edit]

    The English term and concept of serial killer are commonly attributed to former FBI Special agent Robert Ressler, who used the term serial homicide in 1974 in a lecture at Police Staff Academy in Bramshill, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom.[10] Author Ann Rule postulates in her 2004 book Kiss Me, Kill Me, that the English-language credit for coining the term goes to LAPD detective Pierce Brooks, who created the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) system in 1985.[11]

    The German term and concept were coined by criminologist Ernst Gennat, who described Peter Kürten as a Serienmörder (‘serial-murderer’) in his article «Die Düsseldorfer Sexualverbrechen» (1930).[12] In his book, Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004), criminal justice historian Peter Vronsky notes that while Ressler might have coined the English term «serial homicide» within the law in 1974, the terms serial murder and serial murderer appear in John Brophy’s book The Meaning of Murder (1966).[13] The Washington, D.C., newspaper Evening Star, in a 1967 review of the book:[14]

    There is the mass murderer, or what he [Brophy] calls the «serial» killer, who may be actuated by greed, such as insurance, or retention or growth of power, like the Medicis of Renaissance Italy, or Landru, the «bluebeard» of the World War I period, who murdered numerous wives after taking their money.

    Vronsky states that the term serial killing first entered into broader American popular usage when published in The New York Times in the spring of 1981, to describe Atlanta serial killer Wayne Williams. Subsequently, throughout the 1980s, the term was used again in the pages of The New York Times, one of the major national news publications of the United States, on 233 occasions. By the end of the 1990s, the use of the term had increased to 2,514 instances in the paper.[15]

    When defining serial killers, researchers generally use «three or more murders» as the baseline,[1] considering it sufficient to provide a pattern without being overly restrictive.[16] Independent of the number of murders, they need to have been committed at different times, and are usually committed in different places.[17] The lack of a cooling-off period (a significant break between the murders) marks the difference between a spree killer and a serial killer. The category has, however, been found to be of no real value to law enforcement, because of definitional problems relating to the concept of a «cooling-off period».[18] Cases of extended bouts of sequential killings over periods of weeks or months with no apparent «cooling off period» or «return to normality» have caused some experts to suggest a hybrid category of «spree-serial killer».[13]

    In Controversial Issues in Criminology, Fuller and Hickey write that «[t]he element of time involved between murderous acts is primary in the differentiation of serial, mass, and spree murderers», later elaborating that spree killers «will engage in the killing acts for days or weeks» while the «methods of murder and types of victims vary». Andrew Cunanan is given as an example of spree killing, while Charles Whitman is mentioned in connection with mass murder, and Jeffrey Dahmer with serial killing.[19]

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) defines serial killing as «a series of two or more murders, committed as separate events, usually, but not always, by one offender acting alone».[20] In 2005, the FBI hosted a multi-disciplinary symposium in San Antonio, Texas, which brought together 135 experts on serial murder from a variety of fields and specialties with the goal of identifying the commonalities of knowledge regarding serial murder. The group also settled on a definition of serial murder which FBI investigators widely accept as their standard: «The unlawful killing of two or more victims by the same offender(s) in separate events».[18] The definition does not consider the motivation for killing nor define a cooling-off period.

    History[edit]

    Juhani Aataminpoika, a Finnish serial killer also known as «Kerpeikkari» (which means ‘executioner’), was one of the most active serial killers of the 19th century, killing as many as 12 people in 1849 within five weeks before being caught.[21]

    A phantom brandishing a knife floats through a slum street

    The ‘Nemesis of Neglect’: Jack the Ripper depicted as a phantom stalking Whitechapel, and as an embodiment of social neglect, in a Punch cartoon of 1888.

    Historical criminologists suggest that there have been serial killers throughout history.[22] Some sources suggest that legends such as werewolves and vampires were inspired by medieval serial killers.[23] In Africa, there have been periodic outbreaks of murder by Lion and Leopard men.[24]

    Liu Pengli of China, nephew of the Han Emperor Jing, was made Prince of Jidong in the sixth year of the middle period of Jing’s reign (144 BC). According to the Chinese historian Sima Qian, he would «go out on marauding expeditions with 20 or 30 slaves or with young men who were in hiding from the law, murdering people and seizing their belongings for sheer sport». Although many of his subjects knew about these murders, it was not until the 29th year of his reign that the son of one of his victims finally sent a report to the emperor. Eventually, it was discovered that he had murdered at least 100 people. The officials of the court requested that Liu Pengli be executed; however, the emperor could not bear to have his own nephew killed, so Liu Pengli was made a commoner and banished.[25]

    In the 9th century (year 257 of the Islamic Calendar), «a strangler from Baghdad was apprehended. He had murdered a number of women and buried them in the house where he was living.»[26]

    In the 15th century, one of the wealthiest men in Europe and a former companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc, Gilles de Rais, was alleged to have sexually assaulted and killed peasant children, mainly boys, whom he had abducted from the surrounding villages and had taken to his castle.[27] It is estimated that his victims numbered between 140 and 800.[28]

    The Hungarian aristocrat Elizabeth Báthory, born into one of the wealthiest families in Transylvania, allegedly tortured and killed as many as 650 girls and young women before her arrest in 1610.[29]

    Members of the Thuggee cult in India may have murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840.[30] Thug Behram, a member of the cult, may have murdered as many as 931 victims.[31]

    In his 1886 book, Psychopathia Sexualis, psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing noted a case of a serial murderer in the 1870s, a Frenchman named Eusebius Pieydagnelle who had a sexual obsession with blood and confessed to murdering six people.[32]

    The unidentified killer Jack the Ripper, who has been called the first modern serial killer,[33] killed at least five women, and possibly more, in London in 1888. He was the subject of a massive manhunt and investigation by the Metropolitan Police, during which many modern criminal investigation techniques were pioneered. A large team of policemen conducted house-to-house inquiries, forensic material was collected and suspects were identified and traced.[34] Police surgeon Thomas Bond assembled one of the earliest character profiles of the offender.[35]

    The Ripper murders also marked an important watershed in the treatment of crime by journalists.[36] While not the first serial killer in history, Jack the Ripper’s case was the first to create a worldwide media frenzy.[36] The dramatic murders of financially destitute women in the midst of the wealth of London focused the media’s attention on the plight of the urban poor and gained coverage worldwide. Jack the Ripper has also been called the most infamous serial killer of all time, and his legend has spawned hundreds of theories on his real identity and many works of fiction.[37]

    H. H. Holmes was one of the first documented modern serial killers in the United States, responsible for the death of at least nine victims in the early 1890s. The case gained notoriety and wide publicity through possibly sensationalized accounts in William Randolph Hearst’s newspapers. At the same time in France, Joseph Vacher became known as «The French Ripper» after killing and mutilating 11 women and children. He was executed in 1898 after confessing to his crimes.[38][39]

    The majority of documented serial killers in the 20th century are from the United States.[40][41]

    Late 20th century[edit]

    The serial killing phenomenon in the United States was especially prominent from 1970 to 2000, which has been described as the «golden age of serial murder.»[42] The cause of the spike in serial killings has been attributed to urbanization, which put people in close proximity and offered anonymity.

    The number of active serial killers in the country peaked in 1989 and has been steadily trending downward since, coinciding with an overall decrease in crime in the United States since that time. The decline in serial killers has no known single cause but is attributed to a number of factors. Mike Aamodt, emeritus professor at Radford University in Virginia, attributes the decline in number of serial killings to less frequent use of parole, improved forensic technology, and people behaving more cautiously.[43] Causes for the general reduction in violent crime following the 1990s include increased incarceration in the United States, the end of the crack epidemic in the United States, and decreased lead exposure in early childhood.[44][45][46]

    Characteristics[edit]

    Some commonly found characteristics of serial killers include the following:

    • They may exhibit varying degrees of mental illness or psychopathy, which may contribute to their homicidal behavior.[47]
      • For example, someone who is mentally ill may have psychotic breaks that cause them to believe they are another person or are compelled to murder by other entities.[48]
      • Psychopathic behavior that is consistent with traits common to some serial killers include sensation seeking, a lack of remorse or guilt, impulsivity, the need for control, and predatory behavior.[18] Psychopaths can seem ‘normal’ and often quite charming, a state of adaptation that psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley called the «mask of sanity».[citation needed]
    • They were often abused—emotionally, physically, or sexually—by a family member.[6]
    • Serial killers may be more likely to engage in fetishism, partialism or necrophilia, which are paraphilias that involve a strong tendency to experience the object of erotic interest almost as if it were a physical representation of the symbolized body. Individuals engage in paraphilias which are organized along a continuum; participating in varying levels of fantasy perhaps by focusing on body parts (partialism), symbolic objects which serve as physical extensions of the body (fetishism), or the anatomical physicality of the human body; specifically regarding its inner parts and sexual organs (one example being necrophilia).[49]
    • A disproportionate number exhibit one, two, or all three of the Macdonald triad[dubious – discuss] of predictors of future violent behavior:
      • Many are fascinated with fire setting.[6]
      • They are involved in sadistic activity; especially in children who have not reached sexual maturity, this activity may take the form of torturing animals.[6]
      • More than 60 percent, or simply a large proportion, wet their beds beyond the age of 12.[6][50]
    • They were frequently bullied or socially isolated as children.[6] For example, Henry Lee Lucas was ridiculed as a child and later cited the mass rejection by his peers as a cause for his hatred of everyone. Kenneth Bianchi was teased as a child because he urinated in his pants, suffered twitching, and as a teenager was ignored by his peers.[6]
    • Some were involved in petty crimes, such as fraud, theft, vandalism, or similar offenses.[51]
    • Often, they have trouble staying employed and tend to work in menial jobs. The FBI, however, states, «Serial murderers often seem normal; have families and/or a steady job.»[18] Other sources state they often come from unstable families.[6]
    • Studies have suggested that serial killers generally have an average or low-average IQ, although they are often described, and perceived, as possessing IQs in the above-average range.[6][18][52] A sample of 202 IQs of serial killers had a median IQ of 89.[53] Some organized serial killers have a slightly higher IQ score averaging a little bit over 99, to where disorganized killers average just under 93 in theirs. The average IQ of serial killers is 94.7.[54]

    There are exceptions to these criteria, however. For example, Harold Shipman was a successful professional (a General Practitioner working for the NHS). He was considered a pillar of the local community; he even won a professional award for a children’s asthma clinic and was interviewed by Granada Television’s World in Action on ITV.[55] Dennis Nilsen was an ex-soldier turned civil servant and trade unionist who had no previous criminal record when arrested. Neither was known to have exhibited many of the tell-tale signs.[56] Vlado Taneski, a crime reporter, was a career journalist who was caught after a series of articles he wrote gave clues that he had murdered people.[57] Russell Williams was a successful and respected career Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel who was convicted of murdering two women, along with fetish burglaries and rapes.[58]

    Juana Barraza, also known as the Old Lady Killer, was a professional wrestler. From the years of 1998-2006 she committed over 12 murders, all of which were of older women. She would rob them after knocking on their door pretending to be a government worker. This stems from hatred and resentment from her mother. [59]

    Development[edit]

    Many serial killers have faced similar problems in their childhood development.[60] Hickey’s Trauma Control Model explains how early childhood trauma can set the child up for deviant behavior in adulthood; the child’s environment (either their parents or society) is the dominant factor determining whether or not the child’s behavior escalates into homicidal activity.[61]

    Family, or lack thereof, is the most prominent part of a child’s development because it is what the child can identify with on a regular basis.[62] «The serial killer is no different from any other individual who is instigated to seek approval from parents, sexual partners, or others.»[63] This need for approval is what influences children to attempt to develop social relationships with their family and peers. «The quality of their attachments to parents and other members of the family is critical to how these children relate to and value other members of society.»[64]

    Wilson and Seaman (1990) conducted a study on incarcerated serial killers, and what they concluded was the most influential factor that contributed to their homicidal activity.[65] Almost all of the serial killers in the study had experienced some sort of environmental problems during their childhood, such as a broken home caused by divorce, or a lack of a parental figure to discipline the child. Nearly half of the serial killers had experienced some type of physical or sexual abuse, and more of them had experienced emotional neglect.[64]

    German serial killer Fritz Haarmann with police detectives, November 1924

    When a parent has a drug or alcohol problem, the attention in the household is on the parents rather than the child. This neglect of the child leads to the lowering of their self-esteem and helps develop a fantasy world in which they are in control. Hickey’s Trauma Control Model supports how parental neglect can facilitate deviant behavior, especially if the child sees substance abuse in action.[66] This then leads to disposition (the inability to attach), which can further lead to homicidal behavior, unless the child finds a way to develop substantial relationships and fight the label they receive. If a child receives no support from anyone, then they are unlikely to recover from the traumatic event in a positive way. As stated by E. E. Maccoby, «the family has continued to be seen as a major—perhaps the major—arena for socialization».[67]

    Chromosomal makeup[edit]

    There have been studies looking into the possibility that an abnormality with one’s chromosomes could be the trigger for serial killers.[68] Two serial killers, Bobby Joe Long and Richard Speck, came to attention for reported chromosomal abnormalities. Long had an extra X chromosome.[69] Speck was erroneously reported to have an extra Y chromosome; in fact, his karyotype was performed twice and was normal each time.[70] While attempts have been made to link the XYY karyotype to violence, including serial murder, research has consistently found little or no association between violent criminal behaviour and an extra Y chromosome.[71]

    Fantasy[edit]

    Children who do not have the power to control the mistreatment they suffer sometimes create a new reality to which they can escape. This new reality becomes their fantasy that they have total control of and becomes part of their daily existence. In this fantasy world, their emotional development is guided and maintained. According to Garrison (1996), «the child becomes sociopathic because the normal development of the concepts of right and wrong and empathy towards others is retarded because the child’s emotional and social development occurs within his self-centered fantasies. A person can do no wrong in his own world and the pain of others is of no consequence when the purpose of the fantasy world is to satisfy the needs of one person» (Garrison, 1996). Boundaries between fantasy and reality are lost and fantasies turn to dominance, control, sexual conquest, and violence, eventually leading to murder. Fantasy can lead to the first step in the process of a dissociative state, which, in the words of Stephen Giannangelo, «allows the serial killer to leave the stream of consciousness for what is, to him, a better place».[72]

    Criminologist Jose Sanchez reports, «the young criminal you see today is more detached from his victim, more ready to hurt or kill. The lack of empathy for their victims among young criminals is just one symptom of a problem that afflicts the whole society.»[62] Lorenzo Carcaterra, author of Gangster (2001), explains how potential criminals are labeled by society, which can then lead to their offspring also developing in the same way through the cycle of violence. The ability for serial killers to appreciate the mental life of others is severely compromised, presumably leading to their dehumanization of others.[73]

    This process may be considered an expression of the intersubjectivity associated with a cognitive deficit regarding the capability to make sharp distinctions between other people and inanimate objects. For these individuals, objects can appear to possess animistic or humanistic power while people are perceived as objects.[73] Before he was executed, serial killer Ted Bundy stated media violence and pornography had stimulated and increased his need to commit homicide, although this statement was made during last-ditch efforts to appeal his death sentence.[64] There are exceptions to the typical fantasy patterns of serial killers, as in the case of Dennis Rader, who was a loving family man and the leader of his church.[citation needed]

    Organized, disorganized, and mixed[edit]

    Ted Bundy in custody, Florida, United States, July 1978 (State Archives of Florida)

    The FBI’s Crime Classification Manual places serial killers into three categories: organized, disorganized, and mixed (i.e., offenders who exhibit organized and disorganized characteristics).[74][75] Some killers descend from being organized into disorganized as their killings continue,[76] as in the case of psychological decompensation or overconfidence due to having evaded capture, or vice versa, as when a previously disorganized killer identifies one or more specific aspects of the act of killing as their source of gratification and develops a modus operandi that focuses on them.[citation needed]

    Organized serial killers often plan their crimes methodically, usually abducting victims, killing them in one place and disposing of them in another. They often lure the victims with ploys appealing to their sense of sympathy. Others specifically target prostitutes, who are likely to go voluntarily with a stranger. These killers maintain a high degree of control over the crime scene and usually have a solid knowledge of forensic science that enables them to cover their tracks, such as burying the body or weighing it down and sinking it in a river. They follow their crimes in the news media carefully and often take pride in their actions as if it were all a grand project.[77]

    Often, organized killers have social and other interpersonal skills sufficient to enable them to develop both personal and romantic relationships, friends and lovers and sometimes even attract and maintain a spouse and sustain a family including children. Among serial killers, those of this type are in the event of their capture most likely to be described by acquaintances as kind and unlikely to hurt anyone. Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy are examples of organized serial killers.[77] In general, the IQs of organized serial killers tend to be normal range, with a mean of 98.7.[78]

    Disorganized serial killers are usually far more impulsive, often committing their murders with a random weapon available at the time, and usually do not attempt to hide the body. They are likely to be unemployed, a loner, or both, with very few friends. They often turn out to have a history of mental illness, and their modus operandi (M.O.) or lack thereof is often marked by excessive violence and sometimes necrophilia or sexual violence.[79] Disorganized serial killers have been found to have a lower mean IQ than organized serial killers, at 89.4. Mixed serial killers, with both organized and disorganized traits, have an average IQ of 100.9, but a low sample size.[78]

    Medical professionals[edit]

    Some people with a pathological interest in the power of life and death tend to be attracted to medical professions or acquiring such a job.[80] These kinds of killers are sometimes referred to as «angels of death»[81] or angels of mercy. Medical professionals will kill their patients for money, for a sense of sadistic pleasure, for a belief that they are «easing» the patient’s pain, or simply «because they can».[82] Perhaps the most prolific of these was the British doctor Harold Shipman. Another such killer was nurse Jane Toppan, who admitted during her murder trial that she was sexually aroused by death.[83] She would administer a drug mixture to patients she chose as her victims, lie in bed with them and hold them close to her body as they died.[83]

    Another medical professional serial killer is Genene Jones. It is believed she killed 11 to 46 infants and children while working at Bexar County Medical Center Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, United States.[84] She is currently serving a 99-year sentence for the murder of Chelsea McClellan and the attempted murder of Rolando Santos,[84] and became eligible for parole in 2017 due to a law in Texas at the time of her sentencing to reduce prison overcrowding.[84] A similar case occurred in Britain in 1991, where nurse Beverley Allitt killed four children at the hospital where she worked, attempted to kill three more, and injured a further six over the course of two months.

    A 21st-century example is Canadian nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer, who murdered elderly patients in the nursing homes where she worked. William George Davis is another hospital nurse who was sentenced to death in Texas for the murdering of four patients.[85]

    Female[edit]

    Highway prostitute Aileen Wuornos killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990

    Female serial killers are rare compared to their male counterparts.[86] Sources suggest that female serial killers represented less than one in every six known serial murderers in the United States between 1800 and 2004 (64 females from a total of 416 known offenders), or that around 15% of U.S. serial killers have been women, with a collective number of victims between 427 and 612.[87] The authors of Lethal Ladies, Amanda L. Farrell, Robert D. Keppel, and Victoria B. Titterington, state that «the Justice Department indicated 36 female serial killers have been active over the course of the last century.»[88] According to The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, there is evidence that 16% of all serial killers are women.[89]

    Kelleher and Kelleher (1998) created several categories to describe female serial killers. They used the classifications of black widow, angel of death, sexual predator, revenge, profit or crime, team killer, question of sanity, unexplained, and unsolved. In using these categories, they observed that most women fell into the categories of the black widow or team killer.[90] Although motivations for female serial killers can include attention seeking, addiction, or the result of psychopathological behavioral factors,[91] female serial killers are commonly categorized as murdering men for material gain, usually being emotionally close to their victims,[86] and generally needing to have a relationship with the victim,[90] hence the traditional cultural image of the «black widow».

    The methods that female serial killers use for murder are frequently covert or low-profile, such as murder by poison (the preferred choice for killing).[92] Other methods used by female serial killers include shootings (used by 20%), suffocation (16%), stabbing (11%), and drowning (5%).[91] They commit killings in specific places, such as their home or a health-care facility, or at different locations within the same city or state.[93] A notable exception to the typical characteristics of female serial killers is Aileen Wuornos,[94] who killed outdoors instead of at home, used a gun instead of poison, and killed strangers instead of friends or family.[95] One «analysis of 86 female serial killers from the United States found that the victims tended to be spouses, children or the elderly».[90] Other studies indicate that since 1975, increasingly strangers are marginally the most preferred victim of female serial killers,[96] or that only 26% of female serial killers kill for material gain only.[97] Sources state that each killer will have her own proclivities, needs and triggers.[98][90] A review of the published literature on female serial murder stated that «sexual or sadistic motives are believed to be extremely rare in female serial murderers, and psychopathic traits and histories of childhood abuse have been consistently reported in these women.»[90]

    A study by Eric W. Hickey (2010) of 64 female serial killers in the United States indicated that sexual activity was one of several motives in 10% of the cases, enjoyment in 11% and control in 14% and that 51% of all U.S. female serial killers murdered at least one woman and 31% murdered at least one child.[99] In other cases, women have been involved as an accomplice with a male serial killer as a part of a serial killing team.[98][90] A 2015 study published in The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology found that the most common motive for female serial killers was for financial gain and almost 40% of them had experienced some sort of mental illness.[100]

    Peter Vronsky in Female Serial Killers (2007) maintains that female serial killers today often kill for the same reason males do: as a means of expressing rage and control. He suggests that sometimes the theft of the victims’ property by the female «black widow» type serial killer appears to be for material gain, but really is akin to a male serial killer’s collecting of totems (souvenirs) from the victim as a way of exerting continued control over the victim and reliving it.[101] By contrast, Hickey states that although popular perception sees «black widow» female serial killers as something of the Victorian past, in his statistical study of female serial killer cases reported in the United States since 1826, approximately 75% occurred since 1950.[102]

    Elizabeth Báthory is sometimes cited as the most prolific female serial killer in all of history. Formally countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed (Báthory Erzsébet in Hungarian, August 7, 1560 – August 21, 1614), she was a countess from the renowned Báthory family. Before her husband’s death, Elizabeth took great pleasure in torturing the staff, by jamming pins under the servant’s fingernails or stripping servants and throwing them into the snow.[103] After her husband’s death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and young women, with one witness attributing to them over 600 victims, though the number for which they were convicted was 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted. In 1610, however, she was imprisoned in the Csejte Castle, where she remained bricked in a set of rooms until her death four years later.[104]

    A 2010 article by Perri and Lichtenwald addressed some of the misconceptions concerning female criminality.[105] In the article, Perri and Lichtenwald analyze the current research regarding female psychopathy, including case studies of female psychopathic killers featuring Münchausen syndrome by proxy, cesarean section homicide, fraud detection homicide, female kill teams, and a female serial killer.[105]

    Juvenile[edit]

    Juvenile serial killers are rare. There are three main categories that juvenile serial killers can fit into: primary, maturing, and secondary killers. There have been studies done to compare and contrast these three groups and to discover similarities and differences between them.[106] Although these types of serial killers are less common, oftentimes adult serial killers may make their debut at an early age and it can be an opportunity for researchers to study what factors brought about the behavior. While juvenile serial killers are rare, the youngest felon on death row is a juvenile serial killer named Harvey Miguel Robinson who was 17 at the time of his crimes and 18 at the time of his arrest.[107][108]

    Ethnicity and demographics in the United States[edit]

    The racial demographics regarding serial killers are often subject to debate. In the United States, the majority of reported and investigated serial killers are white males, from a lower-to-middle-class background, usually in their late 20s to early 30s.[6][18] However, there are African American, Asian, and Hispanic (of any race) serial killers as well, and, according to the FBI, based on percentages of the U.S. population, whites are not more likely than other races to be serial killers.[18] Criminal profiler Pat Brown says serial killers are usually reported as white because serial killers usually target victims of their own race, and argues the media typically focuses on «All-American» white and pretty female victims who were the targets of white male offenders; that crimes among minority offenders in urban communities, where crime rates are higher, are under-investigated; and that minority serial killers likely exist at the same ratios as white serial killers for the population. She believes that the myth that serial killers are always white might have become «truth» in some research fields due to the over-reporting of white serial killers in the media.[109]

    According to some sources, the percentage of serial killers who are African American is estimated to be between 13% and 22%.[110][111] Another study has shown that 16% of serial killers are African American, what author Maurice Godwin describes as a «sizeable portion».[112] A 2014 Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database annual statistics report indicated that for the decades 1900–2010, the percentage of white serial killers was 52.1% while the percentage of African American serial killers was 40.3%.[78]

    In a 2005 article Anthony Walsh, professor of criminal justice at Boise State University, argued a review of post-WWII serial killings in America finds that the prevalence of non-white serial killers has typically been drastically underestimated in both professional research literature and the mass media. As a paradigmatic case of this media double standard, Walsh cites news reporting on white killer Gary M. Heidnik and African-American killer Harrison Graham. Both men were residents of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; both imprisoned, tortured, and killed several women; and both were arrested only months apart in 1987. «Heidnik received widespread national attention, became the subject of books and television shows, and served as a model for the fictitious Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs«, writes Walsh, while «Graham received virtually no media attention outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, despite having been convicted of four more murders than Heidnik».[113]

    Outside the United States[edit]

    There is not much research about serial homicide in non-Western countries, or outside the U.S.

    In one study of serial homicide in South Africa, many patterns were similar to established patterns in the U.S., with some exceptions: no offenders were female, offenders were lower educated than in the U.S., and both victims and offenders were predominantly black.[114]

    There are many more serial killers outside of the United States. Most notably is Jack The Ripper, a serial killer from the United Kingdom who was active in the autumn of 1888. He killed 5 women but it is believed that he killed more than that.[115]

    Another notable non-American serial killer  is Pedro Lopez, a serial killer from South America. He killed a minimum of 110 young girls between 1969 and 1980. However, he claims that the number is over 300. He was released from a mental facility in 1998 and his whereabouts are still unknown. He is commonly nicknamed the Monster of the Andes.

    A final notable non-American serial is Luis Garavito who was a serial killer in Columbia. Garavito would kill and torture boys using various disguises. He murdered around 140 boys ranging in ages from 8 to 16. He would dump his victims’ bodies in mass graves.[116]

    Motives[edit]

    According to psychiatric reports, Jukka Lindholm, the so-called «serial strangler» reportedly admired the primordial, violent manhood of his teenage years.[117]

    The motives of serial killers are generally placed into four categories: visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control; however, the motives of any given killer may display considerable overlap among these categories.[118]

    Visionary[edit]

    Visionary serial killers suffer from psychotic breaks with reality,[119] sometimes believing they are another person or are compelled to murder by entities such as the Devil or God.[120] The two most common subgroups are «demon mandated» and «God mandated».[48]

    Herbert Mullin believed the American casualties in the Vietnam War were preventing California from experiencing the Big One. As the war wound down, Mullin claimed his father instructed him via telepathy to raise the number of «human sacrifices to nature» to delay a catastrophic earthquake that would plunge California into the ocean.[121] David Berkowitz («Son of Sam») may also be an example of a visionary serial killer, having claimed a demon transmitted orders through his neighbor’s dog and instructed him to commit murder.[122] Berkowitz later described those claims as a hoax, as originally concluded by psychiatrist David Abrahamsen.[123]

    Mission-oriented[edit]

    Mission-oriented killers typically justify their acts as «ridding the world» of certain types of people perceived as undesirable, such as the homeless, ex-cons, homosexuals, drug users, prostitutes, or people of different ethnicity or religion; however, they are generally not psychotic.[124] Some see themselves as attempting to change society, often to cure a societal ill.[125]

    An example of a mission-oriented killer would be Joseph Paul Franklin, an American white supremacist who exclusively targeted Jewish, biracial, and African-American individuals for the purpose of inciting a «race war».[126][127]

    Hedonistic[edit]

    This type of serial killer seeks thrills and derives pleasure and satisfaction from killing, seeing people as expendable means to this goal. Forensic psychologists have identified three subtypes of the hedonistic killer: «lust», «thrill», and «comfort».[128]

    Lust[edit]

    Sex is the primary motive of lust killers, whether or not the victims are dead, and fantasy plays a large role in their killings.[129] Their sexual gratification depends on the amount of torture and mutilation they perform on their victims. The sexual serial murderer has a psychological need to have absolute control, dominance, and power over their victims, and the infliction of torture, pain, and ultimately death is used in an attempt to fulfill their need.[130] They usually use weapons that require close contact with the victims, such as knives or hands. As lust killers continue with their murders, the time between killings decreases or the required level of stimulation increases, sometimes both.[131]

    Kenneth Bianchi, one of the «Hillside Stranglers», murdered women and girls of different ages, races, and appearance because his sexual urges required different types of stimulation and increasing intensity.[132] Jeffrey Dahmer searched for his perfect fantasy lover—beautiful, submissive and eternal. As his desire increased, he experimented with drugs, alcohol, and exotic sex. His increasing need for stimulation was demonstrated by the dismemberment of victims, whose heads and genitals he preserved, and by his attempts to create a «living zombie» under his control (by pouring acid into a hole drilled into the victim’s skull).[133]

    Dahmer once said, «Lust played a big part of it. Control and lust. Once it happened the first time, it just seemed like it had control of my life from there on in. The killing was just a means to an end. That was the least satisfactory part. I didn’t enjoy doing that. That’s why I tried to create living zombies with acid and the drill.» He further elaborated on this, also saying, «I wanted to see if it was possible to make—again, it sounds really gross—uh, zombies, people that would not have a will of their own, but would follow my instructions without resistance. So after that, I started using the drilling technique.»[134] He experimented with cannibalism to «ensure his victims would always be a part of him».[135]

    Thrill[edit]

    The primary motive of a thrill killer is to induce pain or terror in their victims, which provides stimulation and excitement for the killer.[129] They seek the adrenaline rush provided by hunting and killing victims. Thrill killers murder only for the kill; usually, the attack is not prolonged, and there is no sexual aspect. Usually, the victims are strangers, although the killer may have followed them for a period of time. Thrill killers can abstain from killing for long periods of time and become more successful at killing as they refine their murder methods. Many attempt to commit the perfect crime and believe they will not be caught.[136]

    Robert Hansen took his victims to a secluded area, where he would let them loose and then hunt and kill them.[137] In one of his letters to San Francisco Bay Area newspapers in San Francisco, California, the Zodiac Killer wrote «[killing] gives me the most thrilling experience it is even better than getting your rocks off with a girl».[138] Carl Watts was described by a surviving victim as «excited and hyper and clappin’ and just making noises like he was excited, that this was gonna be fun» during the 1982 attack.[139] Slashing, stabbing, hanging, drowning, asphyxiating, and strangling were among the ways Watts killed.[140]

    Comfort (profit)[edit]

    Material gain and a comfortable lifestyle are the primary motives of comfort killers.[141] Usually, the victims are family members and close acquaintances.[129] After a murder, a comfort killer will usually wait for a period of time before killing again to allow any suspicions by family or authorities to subside. They often use poison, most notably arsenic, to kill their victims. Female serial killers are often comfort killers, although not all comfort killers are female.[142]

    Dorothea Puente killed her tenants for their Social Security checks and buried them in the backyard of her home.[143] H. H. Holmes killed for insurance and business profits.[144] Puente and Holmes had previous records of crimes such as theft, fraud, non-payment of debts, embezzlement and others of a similar nature. Dorothea Puente was finally arrested on a parole violation, having been on parole for a previous fraud conviction.[145]

    Contract killers («hitmen») may exhibit serial killers traits, but are generally not classified as such because of third-party killing objectives and detached financial and emotional incentives.[146][147][148] Nevertheless, there are occasionally individuals that are labeled as both a hitman and a serial killer.[149]

    Power/control[edit]

    The main objective for this type of serial killer is to gain and exert power over their victim. Such killers are sometimes abused as children, leaving them with feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy as adults. Many power- or control-motivated killers sexually abuse their victims, but they differ from hedonistic killers in that rape is not motivated by lust (as it would be with a lust murder) but as simply another form of dominating the victim.[150] Ted Bundy is an example of a power/control-oriented serial killer. He traveled around the United States seeking women to control.[151]

    Media influences[edit]

    Many serial killers claim that a violent culture influenced them to commit murders. During his final interview, Ted Bundy stated that hardcore pornography was responsible for his actions. Others idolise figures for their deeds or perceived vigilante justice, such as Peter Kürten, who idolized Jack the Ripper, or John Wayne Gacy and Ed Kemper, who both idolized the actor John Wayne.[6]

    Killers who have a strong desire for fame or to be renowned for their actions desire media attention as a way of validating and spreading their crimes; fear is also a component here, as some serial killers enjoy causing fear. An example is Dennis Rader, who sought attention from the press during his murder spree.[152]

    In popular culture[edit]

    Many movies, books, and documentaries have been created, detailing serial killers’ lives and crimes. For example, the biographical films Ted Bundy (2002) and Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile focuses on serial killer Ted Bundy’s personal life in college, leading up to his execution, and Dahmer (2002) tells the story of Jeffrey Dahmer. A Netflix series on the life of Jeffrey Dahmer and his victims was released in 2022.

    Serial killers are also portrayed in fictional media, oftentimes as having substantial intelligence and looking for difficult targets, despite the contradiction with the psychological profile of serial killers.[153]

    Theories[edit]

    Biological and sociological[edit]

    Theories for why certain people commit serial murder have been advanced. Some theorists believe the reasons are biological, suggesting serial killers are born, not made, and that their violent behavior is a result of abnormal brain activity. Holmes believe that «until a reliable sample can be obtained and tested, there is no scientific statement that can be made concerning the exact role of biology as a determining factor of a serial killer personality.»[154]

    The «Fractured Identity Syndrome» (FIS) is a merging of Charles Cooley’s «looking glass self» and Erving Goffman’s «virtual» and «actual social identity» theories. The FIS suggests a social event, or series of events, during one’s childhood results in a fracturing of the personality of the serial killer. The term «fracture» is defined as a small breakage of the personality which is often not visible to the outside world and is only felt by the killer.[155]

    «Social Process Theory» has also been suggested as an explanation for serial murder. Social process theory states that offenders may turn to crime due to peer pressure, family and friends. Criminal behavior is a process of interaction with social institutions, in which everyone has the potential for criminal behavior.[156] A lack of family structure and identity could also be a cause leading to serial murder traits. A child used as a scapegoat will be deprived of their capacity to feel guilt. Displaced anger could result in animal torture, as identified in the Macdonald triad, and a further lack of basic identity.[157]

    Military[edit]

    A dishonorably discharged Marine, Charles Ng participated in the kidnapping, sadistic torture, rape, and murder of numerous victims

    The «military theory» has been proposed as an explanation for why serial murderers kill, as some serial murderers have served in the military or related fields. According to Castle and Hensley, 7% of the serial killers studied had military experience.[158] This figure may be a proportional under-representation when compared to the number of military veterans in a nation’s total population. For example, according to the United States census for the year 2000, military veterans comprised 12.7% of the U.S. population;[159] in England, it was estimated in 2007 that military veterans comprised 9.1% of the population.[160] Though by contrast, about 2.5% of the population of Canada in 2006 consisted of military veterans.[161][162]

    There are two theories that can be used to study the correlation between serial killing and military training: Applied learning theory states that serial killing can be learned. The military is training for higher kill rates from servicemen while training the soldiers to be desensitized to taking a human life.[163] Social learning theory can be used when soldiers get praised and accommodated for killing. They learn or believe that they learn, that it is acceptable to kill because they were praised for it in the military. Serial killers want accreditation for the work that they have done.[164]

    In both military and serial killing, the offender or the soldier may become desensitized to killing as well as compartmentalized; the soldiers do not see enemy personnel as «human» and neither do serial killers see their victims as humans.[165] The theories do not imply that military institutions make a deliberate effort to produce serial killers; to the contrary, all military personnel are trained to recognize when, where, and against whom it is appropriate to use deadly force, which starts with the basic Law of Land Warfare, taught during the initial training phase, and may include more stringent policies for military personnel in law enforcement or security.[166]

    Investigation[edit]

    FBI: Issues and practices[edit]

    In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published a handbook titled Serial Murder which was the product of a symposium held in 2005 to bring together the many issues surrounding serial murder, including its investigation.[167]

    Identification[edit]

    According to the FBI, identifying one, or multiple, murders as being the work of a serial killer is the first challenge an investigation faces, especially if the victim(s) come from a marginalized or high-risk population and is normally linked through forensic or behavioral evidence (FBI 2008).[167] Should the cases cross multiple jurisdictions, the law enforcement system in the United States is fragmented and thus not configured to detect multiple similar murders across a large geographic area (Egger 1998).[168] Ted Bundy was particularly famous for such geographic exploitations. He used his knowledge about the lack of communication between multiple jurisdictions to avoid arrest and detection.[169] The FBI suggests utilizing databases and increasing interdepartmental communication. Keppel (1989)[170] suggests holding multi-jurisdictional conferences regularly to compare cases giving departments a greater chance to detect linked cases and overcome linkage blindness.

    One such collaboration, the Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database Project[171] was proposed at the 2012 FDIAI Annual Conference.[172] Utilizing Radford’s Serial Killer Database as a starting point, the new collaboration,[173] hosted by FGCU Justice Studies, has invited and is working in conjunction with other universities to maintain and expand the scope of the database to also include spree and mass murders. Utilizing over 170 data points, multiple-murderer methodology and victimology; researchers and Law Enforcement Agencies can build case studies and statistical profiles to further research the Who, What, Why and How of these types of crimes.

    Leadership[edit]

    Leadership, or administration, should play a small or virtually non-existent role in the actual investigation past assigning knowledgeable or experienced homicide investigators to lead positions. The administration’s role is not to run the investigation but to establish and reaffirm the primary goal of catching the serial killer, as well as provide support for the investigators. The FBI (2008) suggests completing Memorandums of Understanding to facilitate support and commitment of resources from different jurisdictions to an investigation.[167] Egger (1998) takes this one step further and suggests completing mutual aid pacts, which are written agreements to provide support to each other in a time of need, with surrounding jurisdictions. Doing this in advance would save time and resources that could be used on the investigation.[168]

    Organization[edit]

    The structural organization of an investigation is key to its success, as demonstrated by the investigation of Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Once a serial murder case was established, a task force was created to track down and arrest the offender. Over the course of the investigation, for various reasons, the task force’s organization was radically changed and reorganized multiple times – at one point including more than 50 full-time personnel, and at another, only a single investigator. Eventually, what led to the end of the investigation was a conference of 25 detectives organized to share ideas to solve the case.[174]

    The FBI handbook provides a description of how a task force should be organized but offers no additional options on how to structure the investigation. While it appears advantageous to have a full-time staff assigned to a serial murder investigation, it can become prohibitively expensive. For example, the Green River Task Force cost upwards of $2 million per year,[174] and as was witnessed with the Green River Killer investigation, other strategies can prevail where a task force fails.

    A common strategy, already employed by many departments for other reasons, is the conference, in which departments get together and focus on a specific set of topics.[175] With serial murders, the focus is typically on unsolved cases, with evidence thought to be related to the case at hand.

    Similar to a conference is an information clearing-house in which a jurisdiction with a suspected serial murder case collects all of its evidence and actively seeks data that may be related from other jurisdictions.[175] By collecting all of the related information into one place, they provide a central point in which it can be organized and easily accessed by other jurisdictions working toward the goal of arresting an offender and ending the murders.

    Already mentioned was the task force,[175] FBI 2008,[167] Keppel 1989[170] which provides for a flexible, organized, framework for jurisdictions depending on the needs of the investigation. Unfortunately due to the need to commit resources (manpower, money, equipment, etc.) for long periods of time it can be an unsustainable option.

    In the case of the investigation of Aileen Wournos, the Marion County Sheriff coordinated multiple agencies without any written or formal agreement.[168] While not a specific strategy for a serial murder investigation, this is certainly a best practice in so far as the agencies were able to work easily together toward a common goal.

    Finally, once a serial murder investigation has been identified, the use of an FBI Rapid Response Team can assist both experienced and inexperienced jurisdictions in setting up a task force. This is completed by organizing and delegating jobs, by compiling and analyzing clues, and by establishing communication between the parties involved.[168]

    Resource augmentation[edit]

    During the course of a serial murder investigation, it may become necessary to call in additional resources; the FBI defines this as Resource Augmentation. Within the structure of a task force, the addition of a resource should be thought of as either long-term or short-term. If the task force’s framework is expanded to include the new resource, then it should be permanent and not removed. For short-term needs, such as setting up roadblocks or canvassing a neighborhood, additional resources should be called in on a short-term basis. The decision of whether resources are needed short or long term should be left to the lead investigator and facilitated by the administration (FBI 2008).[167]

    The confusion and counter productiveness created by changing the structure of a task force mid investigation is illustrated by the way the Green River Task Force’s staffing and structure was changed multiple times throughout the investigation. This made an already complicated situation more difficult, resulting in the delay or loss of information, which allowed Ridgway to continue killing (Guillen 2007).[174] The FBI model does not take into account that permanently expanding a task force, or investigative structure, may not be possible due to cost or personnel availability. Egger (1998) offers several alternative strategies including; using investigative consultants, or experienced staff to augment an investigative team. Not all departments have investigators experienced in serial murder and by temporarily bringing in consultants, they can educate a department to a level of competence then step out. This would reduce the initially established framework of the investigation team and save the department the cost of retaining the consultants until the conclusion of the investigation.[168]

    Communication[edit]

    The FBI handbook (2008)[167] and Keppel (1989)[170] both stress communication as paramount. The difference is that the FBI handbook (2008)[167] concentrates primarily on communication within a task force while Keppel (1989)[170] makes getting information out to and allowing information to be passed back from patrol officers a priority. The FBI handbook (2008)[167] suggests having daily e-mail or in-person briefings for all staff involved in the investigation and providing periodic summary briefings to patrol officers and managers. Looking back on a majority of serial murderer arrests, most are exercised by patrol officers in the course of their everyday duties and unrelated to the ongoing serial murder investigation (Egger 1998,[168] Keppel 1989).[170]

    Keppel (1989)[170] provides examples of Larry Eyler, who was arrested during a traffic stop for a parking violation, and Ted Bundy, who was arrested during a traffic stop for operating a stolen vehicle. In each case, it was uniformed officers, not directly involved in the investigation, who knew what to look for and took the direct action that stopped the killer. By providing up-to-date (as opposed to periodic) briefings and information to officers on the street the chances of catching a serial killer, or finding solid leads, are increased.

    Data management[edit]

    A serial murder investigation generates staggering amounts of data, all of which needs to be reviewed and analyzed. A standardized method of documenting and distributing information must be established and investigators must be allowed time to complete reports while investigating leads and at the end of a shift (FBI 2008).[167] When the mechanism for data management is insufficient, leads are not only lost or buried but the investigation can be hindered and new information can become difficult to obtain or become corrupted.[174]

    During the Green River Killer investigation, reporters would often find and interview possible victims or witnesses ahead of investigators. The understaffed investigation was unable to keep up the information flow, which prevented them from promptly responding to leads. To make matters worse, investigators believed that the journalists, untrained in interviewing victims or witnesses of crimes, would corrupt the information and result in unreliable leads (Guillen 2007).[174]

    Memorabilia[edit]

    Notorious and infamous serial killers number in the thousands[176] and a subculture revolves around their legacies. That subculture includes the collection, sale, and display of serial killer memorabilia, dubbed «murderabilia» by Andrew Kahan, one of the best-known opponents of collectors of serial killer remnants. Kahan is the director of the Mayor’s Crime Victims Office in Houston. He is backed by the families of murder victims and «Son of Sam laws» existing in some states that prevent murderers from profiting from the publicity generated by their crimes.[177]

    Such memorabilia includes the paintings, writings, and poems of these killers.[178] Recently, marketing has capitalized even more upon interest in serial killers with the rise of various merchandise such as trading cards, action figures, and books such as The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers by Harold Schechter, and The A-Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers by Schecter and David Everitt. Some serial killers attain celebrity status in the way they acquire fans and may have previous personal possessions auctioned off on websites like eBay. A few examples of this are Ed Gein’s 150-pound stolen gravestone and Bobby Joe Long’s sunglasses.[179]

    See also[edit]

    • List of serial killers before 1900
    • List of serial killers by country
    • List of serial killers by number of victims
    • List of songs about or referencing serial killers
    • Offender profiling
    • Serial crime
    • Serial rapist
    • Son of Sam law

    Footnotes[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d
      • Holmes & Holmes 1998, Serial murder is the killing of three or more people over a period of more than 30 days, with a significant cooling-off period between the murders The baseline number of three victims appears to be most common among those who are the academic authorities in the field. The time frame also appears to be an agreed-upon component of the definition.
      • Petherick 2005, p. 190 Three killings seem to be required in the most popular definition of serial killing since they are enough to provide a pattern within the killings without being overly restrictive.
      • Flowers 2012, p. 195 in general, most experts on serial murder require that a minimum of three murders be committed at different times and usually different places for a person to qualify as a serial killer.
      • Schechter 2012, p. 73 Most experts seem to agree, however, that to qualify as a serial killer, an individual has to slay a minimum of three unrelated victims.

    2. ^ Burkhalter Chmelir 2003, p. 1.
    3. ^ Hough & McCorkle 2016, p. […] Serial killing has been defined by different researchers or groups as either two or more, three or more or even four or more people killed over at least one month with a cooling off period between each of the murders.
    4. ^ Geberth 1995, p. ? «The base population was 387 serial murderers, who killed (under various motivations), three or more persons over a period of time with cooling-off periods between the events. The author identified 232 male serial murderers who violated their victims sexually».
    5. ^ Morton 2005, p. 4, 9.
    6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Scott, Shirley Lynn. «What Makes Serial Killers Tick?». truTV. Archived from the original on July 28, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2011.
    7. ^ Freeman, Shanna (October 2, 2007). «How Serial Killers Work». HowStuffWorks. HowStuffWorks. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
    8. ^ Osowki, Kaylee (December 11, 2018). «Investigating a Serial Killer: The Development of the FBI’s Role Told Through Public Documents». DTTP: Documents to the People. Documents to the People. 46 (4): 19–24. doi:10.5860/dttp.v46i4.6892. S2CID 189532259. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
    9. ^ *Robert Shanafelt; Nathan W. Pino (2014). Rethinking Serial Murder, Spree Killing, and Atrocities: Beyond the Usual Distinctions. Routledge. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-317-56468-3. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
      • Wayne Petherick (2009). Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling. Academic Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-08-096175-0. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
      • Jennifer M. Brown; Elizabeth A. Campbell (2010). The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology. Cambridge University Press. p. 532. ISBN 978-1-139-48945-4. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
      • RJ Parker, Ph.D.; Dr. Scott Bonn (2017). Blood Money: The Method and Madness of Assassins. ABC-CLIO. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-1-987902-34-1. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.

    10. ^ Ressler & Schachtman 1993, p. 29, Schechter 2003, p. 5
    11. ^ Rule 2004, p. 225.
    12. ^ Gennat 1930, pp. 7, 27–32, 49–54, 79–82.
    13. ^ a b Vronsky 2004
    14. ^ «Review: The Meaning of Murder«. Evening Star. Washington, D.C. May 30, 1967. p. 12, col. 4.
    15. ^ Vronsky 2013.
    16. ^ Petherick 2005, p. 190.
    17. ^ Flowers 2012, p. 195.
    18. ^ a b c d e f g Morton 2005
    19. ^ Fuller, John R. & Hickey, Eric W.: Controversial Issues in Criminology; Allyn and Bacon, 1999. pp. 36.
    20. ^ Burkhalter Chmelir 2003, p. 1, Morton 2005, pp. 4, 9
    21. ^ Jarmo Haapalainen (2007). Twelve murders in five weeks, Heinola’s «beast» Finnish record (in Finnish). Heinola. ISBN 978-952-99946-0-1.
    22. ^ S. Waller (2011). Serial Killers – Philosophy for Everyone: Being and Killing. John Wiley & Sons. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-4443-4140-9. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
    23. ^ Schlesinger 2000, p. 5.
    24. ^ «Tanganyika: Murder by Lion». Time. November 4, 1957. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
    25. ^ Qian 1993, p. 387.
    26. ^ Al-Tabari (868–879). «Al-Tabari’s History, vol. 36» (PDF). p. 123. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
    27. ^ Vronsky 2004, p. 45-48.
    28. ^ Vronsky 2004, p. 47.
    29. ^ Vronsky 2007, p. 78.
    30. ^ Rubinstein 2004, pp. 82–83.
    31. ^ Newton 2006, p. 117.
    32. ^ Norder, Vanderlinden & Begg 2004.
    33. ^ «Jack The Ripper: The First Serial Killer». Archived from the original on February 2, 2015. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
    34. ^ Canter 1994, pp. 12–13.
    35. ^ Canter 1994, pp. 5–6.
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    • Mellor, Lee (2012). Cold North Killers: Canadian Serial Murder. Dundurn. ISBN 9781459701243. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
    • Mitchell, Corey (2006). Evil Eyes. Pinnacle Books. ISBN 9780786016761.
    • Morton, RJ (2005). «Serial murder multi-disciplinary perspectives for investigators» (PDF). Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on June 15, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
    • Mount, George (2007). «Predicting Dangerousness». Journal of Police Crisis Negotiations. 7: 131–133. doi:10.1300/j173v07n01_11. S2CID 216088854.
    • Myers, Wade C.; McElroy, Ross; Burton, Karen; Recoppa, Lawrence (1993). «Malignant Sex and Aggression: An Overview of Serial Sexual Homicide». Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. 21 (4): 435–451. PMID 8054674.
    • Newton, Michael (2006). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9780816069873. Archived from the original on June 1, 2020. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Norder, Dan; Vanderlinden, Wolf; Begg, Paul (2004). Ripper Notes: Madmen, Myths and Magic. Inklings Press. ISBN 9780975912911.
    • Peck, Dennis L.; Dolche, Norman Allan (2000). Extraordinary Behavior: A Case Study Approach to Understanding Social Problems. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-275-97057-4. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Perri, Frank S.; Lichtenwald, Terrance G. (2010). «The Last Frontier: Myths & The Female Psychopathic Killer» (PDF). Forensic Examiner. 19 (2). Archived (PDF) from the original on July 7, 2011. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
    • Petherick, Wayne (2005). Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling. Elsevier. ISBN 9780080468549. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
    • Qian, Sima (1993). «Han Dynasty». Records of the Grand Historian: Han dynasty. Vol. I (Revised ed.). Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-08164-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Ressler, Robert K.; Schachtman, Thomas (1993). Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI. New York: Macmillan/St. Martin’s. ISBN 978-0-312-95044-6.
    • Rubinstein, W. D. (2004). Genocide: A History. Pearson Longman. ISBN 9780582506015. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rule, Ann (2004). Kiss Me, Kill Me: Ann Rule’s Crime Files. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416500032.
    • Schechter, Harold (2003). The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers. Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-47200-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Schechter, Harold (2012). The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781439138854. Archived from the original on September 1, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
    • Schlesinger, Louis B. (2000). Serial Offenders: Current Thought, Recent Findings. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-2236-5.
    • Schmid, David (2005). Natural Born Celebrities: Serial Killers in American Culture. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-73867-3. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Sitpond, M. (2000). Addicted to murder: The true story of Dr Harold Shipman. Virgin Books. ISBN 978-0-7535-0445-1.
    • Silva, J. Arturo; Leong, Gregory B.; Ferrari, Michelle M. (2004). «A neuropsychiatric developmental model of serial homicidal behavior». Behavioral Sciences & the Law. 22 (6): 787–799. doi:10.1002/bsl.620. PMID 15568202.
    • Singer, S.D; Hensley, C (2004). «Learning theory to childhood and adolescent fire-setting: Can it lead to serial murder». International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology. 48 (4): 461–476. doi:10.1177/0306624X04265087. PMID 15245657. S2CID 5991918.
    • Skeem, J. L.; Polaschek, D. L. L.; Patrick, C. J.; Lilienfeld, S. O. (2011). «Psychopathic Personality: Bridging the Gap Between Scientific Evidence and Public Policy». Psychological Science in the Public Interest. 12 (3): 95–162. doi:10.1177/1529100611426706. PMID 26167886. S2CID 8521465. Archived from the original on February 22, 2016. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
    • Tithecott, R (1997). Of Men and Monsters: Jeffrey Dahmer and the Construction of the Serial Killer. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-15680-0. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2007). Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become Monsters. New York: Berkley Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-425-21390-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2013). «Serial Killer Zombie Apocalypse and the Dawn of the Less Dead: An Introduction to Sexual Serial Murder Today», in Serial Killers: True Crime Anthology 2014. RJ Parker Publishing. ISBN 978-1494325893.
    • Walsh, Anthony (November 2005). «African Americans and Serial Killing in the Media». Homicide Studies. 9 (4): 271–291. doi:10.1177/1088767905280080. ISSN 1088-7679. S2CID 143399844. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
    • Whittle, Brian; Ritchie, Jean (2000). Prescription for Murder: The True Story of Mass Murderer Dr Harold Frederick Shipman. Warner. ISBN 9780751529982.
    • Wilson, W.; Hilton, T. (1998). «Modus operandi of female serial killers». Psychological Reports. 82 (2): 495–498. doi:10.2466/PR0.82.2.495-498. PMID 9621726.
    • Wilson, Colin; Seaman, Donald (1992). The Serial Killers: A Study in the Psychology of Violence. True Crime. ISBN 9780863696152. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
    • Woodhead, Charlotte; Sloggett; Bray, Issy; Bradbury, Jason; McManus, Sally; Meltzer, Howard; Brugha, Terry; Jenkins, Rachel; Greenberg, Neil; Wessely, Simon; Fear, Nicola (2009). «An Estimate of the Veteran Population in England: Based on data from the 2007 Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey». Population Trends. 138 (1): 50–54. doi:10.1057/pt.2009.47. PMID 20120251. S2CID 8483631.
    • Woods, Paul; Baddeley, Gavin (2009). Saucy Jack: The Elusive Ripper. Ian Allan. ISBN 9780711034105. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
    • Yardley, Elizabeth; Wilson, David (2015). Female Serial Killers in Social Context: Criminological Institutionalism and the Case of Mary Ann Cotton. Policy Press. ISBN 9781447327639. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.

    Further reading[edit]

    • Borgeson; Kristen Kuehnle (2010). Serial Offenders: Theory and Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-7730-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Brady, Ian; Colin Wilson (Introduction); Peter Sotos (Afterword) (2001). The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and Its Analysis. Feral House. ISBN 978-0922915736.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Journey into Darkness. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-00394-4. Archived from the original on August 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Mind Hunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-01375-2. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Douglas, John E.; Allen G. Burgess; Robert K. Ressler; Ann W. Burgess (2006). Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crimes (Second ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7879-8501-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Haggerty, Kevin D. (2009). «Crime, Media, Culture: Modern Serial Killer». Crime, Media, Culture. 5 (2): 1–21. doi:10.1177/1741659009335714. S2CID 11395289. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (1998). Contemporary Perspectives on Serial Murder. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-1421-1. Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (2000). Murder in America (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-2092-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Jensen, Sybil (2014). Top 10 American Serial Killers:Inside The Minds of Psychopaths. Haselton Media Group. ASIN B00KGDUJ2U.
    • Kiam, O.M. (2013). The Second One: A Serial Killer’s Account of His First Two Kills. Milford Press. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
    • Lane, Brian (2006). The New Encyclopedia of Serial Killers (2nd ed.). Facts on File. ISBN 978-0816061952. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Leyton, Elliott (1986). Hunting Humans: The Rise of the Modern Multiple Murderer. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-5025-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Lukin, Grigory (2013). Madmen’s Manifestos: Chris Dorner, Charles Manson, Timothy McVeigh and others. ASIN B00BM5L2HW.
    • MacDonald, J. M (1963). «The threat to kill». American Journal of Psychiatry. American Psychiatric Association. 120 (2): 125–130. doi:10.1176/ajp.120.2.125. Archived from the original on March 3, 2014. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
    • Newitz, Annalee (2006). Pretend We’re Dead: Capitalist Monsters in American Pop Culture. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-3745-4. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Norris, Joel (1990). Serial Killers: The Growing Menace. Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0-09-971750-8.
    • Panzram, Carl (2002) [1970]. Gaddis, Thomas E.; Long, James O. (eds.). Killer: A Journal of Murder. Amok Books.
    • Ramsland, Katherine (2007). Inside the Minds of Healthcare Serial Killers: Why They Kill. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-99422-8. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 16, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 10, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Reavill, Gil (2007). Aftermath, Inc.: Cleaning Up After CSI Goes Home. Gotham. ISBN 978-1-59240-296-0.
    • Robinson, Bryan (January 7, 2006). «Serial Killer Action Figures For Sale». ABC News. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
    • Rosner, Lisa (2010). The Anatomy Murders. Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4191-4.
    • Roy, Jody M. (2002). Love to Hate: America’s Obsession with Hatred and Violence. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12569-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rushby, Kevin (2003). Children of Kali: Through India in Search of Bandits, the Thug Cult, and the British Raj. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1418-3.
    • Seltzer, Mark (1998). Serial Killers: Death and Life in America’s Wound Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91481-9. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Wilson, Colin (1995). A Plague of Murder. Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-85487-249-4.
    • Yudofsky, Stuart C. (2005). Fatal Flaws: Navigating Destructive Relationships with People with Disorders of Personality and Character. American Psychiatric Publishing. ISBN 9781585626588. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.

    External links[edit]

    • Crime Library’s Serial Killer page
    • Serial Murder: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives for Investigators Official FBI publication
    • Dr. James Fallon: The Brains of Serial Killers (Talk)
    • Unknown Serial Killings

    An 1829 illustration of British serial killer William Burke murdering Margery Campbell.

    A serial killer is typically a person who murders three or more persons,[1] with the murders taking place over more than a month and including a significant period of time between them.[1][2] While most authorities set a threshold of three murders,[1] others extend it to four or lessen it to two.[3]

    Psychological gratification is the usual motive for serial killing, and many serial murders involve sexual contact with the victim. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) states that the motives of serial killers can include anger, thrill-seeking, financial gain, and attention seeking, and killings may be executed as such.[5] The victims may have something in common; for example, demographic profile, appearance, gender or race.[6] Often the FBI will focus on a particular pattern serial killers follow.[7] Based on this pattern, this will give key clues into finding the killer along with their motives.[8]

    Although a serial killer is a distinct classification that differs from that of a mass murderer, spree killer, or contract killer, there exist conceptual overlaps between them. Some debate exists on the specific criteria for each category, especially with regard to the distinction between spree killers and serial killers.[9]

    Etymology and definition[edit]

    The English term and concept of serial killer are commonly attributed to former FBI Special agent Robert Ressler, who used the term serial homicide in 1974 in a lecture at Police Staff Academy in Bramshill, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom.[10] Author Ann Rule postulates in her 2004 book Kiss Me, Kill Me, that the English-language credit for coining the term goes to LAPD detective Pierce Brooks, who created the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) system in 1985.[11]

    The German term and concept were coined by criminologist Ernst Gennat, who described Peter Kürten as a Serienmörder (‘serial-murderer’) in his article «Die Düsseldorfer Sexualverbrechen» (1930).[12] In his book, Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004), criminal justice historian Peter Vronsky notes that while Ressler might have coined the English term «serial homicide» within the law in 1974, the terms serial murder and serial murderer appear in John Brophy’s book The Meaning of Murder (1966).[13] The Washington, D.C., newspaper Evening Star, in a 1967 review of the book:[14]

    There is the mass murderer, or what he [Brophy] calls the «serial» killer, who may be actuated by greed, such as insurance, or retention or growth of power, like the Medicis of Renaissance Italy, or Landru, the «bluebeard» of the World War I period, who murdered numerous wives after taking their money.

    Vronsky states that the term serial killing first entered into broader American popular usage when published in The New York Times in the spring of 1981, to describe Atlanta serial killer Wayne Williams. Subsequently, throughout the 1980s, the term was used again in the pages of The New York Times, one of the major national news publications of the United States, on 233 occasions. By the end of the 1990s, the use of the term had increased to 2,514 instances in the paper.[15]

    When defining serial killers, researchers generally use «three or more murders» as the baseline,[1] considering it sufficient to provide a pattern without being overly restrictive.[16] Independent of the number of murders, they need to have been committed at different times, and are usually committed in different places.[17] The lack of a cooling-off period (a significant break between the murders) marks the difference between a spree killer and a serial killer. The category has, however, been found to be of no real value to law enforcement, because of definitional problems relating to the concept of a «cooling-off period».[18] Cases of extended bouts of sequential killings over periods of weeks or months with no apparent «cooling off period» or «return to normality» have caused some experts to suggest a hybrid category of «spree-serial killer».[13]

    In Controversial Issues in Criminology, Fuller and Hickey write that «[t]he element of time involved between murderous acts is primary in the differentiation of serial, mass, and spree murderers», later elaborating that spree killers «will engage in the killing acts for days or weeks» while the «methods of murder and types of victims vary». Andrew Cunanan is given as an example of spree killing, while Charles Whitman is mentioned in connection with mass murder, and Jeffrey Dahmer with serial killing.[19]

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) defines serial killing as «a series of two or more murders, committed as separate events, usually, but not always, by one offender acting alone».[20] In 2005, the FBI hosted a multi-disciplinary symposium in San Antonio, Texas, which brought together 135 experts on serial murder from a variety of fields and specialties with the goal of identifying the commonalities of knowledge regarding serial murder. The group also settled on a definition of serial murder which FBI investigators widely accept as their standard: «The unlawful killing of two or more victims by the same offender(s) in separate events».[18] The definition does not consider the motivation for killing nor define a cooling-off period.

    History[edit]

    Juhani Aataminpoika, a Finnish serial killer also known as «Kerpeikkari» (which means ‘executioner’), was one of the most active serial killers of the 19th century, killing as many as 12 people in 1849 within five weeks before being caught.[21]

    A phantom brandishing a knife floats through a slum street

    The ‘Nemesis of Neglect’: Jack the Ripper depicted as a phantom stalking Whitechapel, and as an embodiment of social neglect, in a Punch cartoon of 1888.

    Historical criminologists suggest that there have been serial killers throughout history.[22] Some sources suggest that legends such as werewolves and vampires were inspired by medieval serial killers.[23] In Africa, there have been periodic outbreaks of murder by Lion and Leopard men.[24]

    Liu Pengli of China, nephew of the Han Emperor Jing, was made Prince of Jidong in the sixth year of the middle period of Jing’s reign (144 BC). According to the Chinese historian Sima Qian, he would «go out on marauding expeditions with 20 or 30 slaves or with young men who were in hiding from the law, murdering people and seizing their belongings for sheer sport». Although many of his subjects knew about these murders, it was not until the 29th year of his reign that the son of one of his victims finally sent a report to the emperor. Eventually, it was discovered that he had murdered at least 100 people. The officials of the court requested that Liu Pengli be executed; however, the emperor could not bear to have his own nephew killed, so Liu Pengli was made a commoner and banished.[25]

    In the 9th century (year 257 of the Islamic Calendar), «a strangler from Baghdad was apprehended. He had murdered a number of women and buried them in the house where he was living.»[26]

    In the 15th century, one of the wealthiest men in Europe and a former companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc, Gilles de Rais, was alleged to have sexually assaulted and killed peasant children, mainly boys, whom he had abducted from the surrounding villages and had taken to his castle.[27] It is estimated that his victims numbered between 140 and 800.[28]

    The Hungarian aristocrat Elizabeth Báthory, born into one of the wealthiest families in Transylvania, allegedly tortured and killed as many as 650 girls and young women before her arrest in 1610.[29]

    Members of the Thuggee cult in India may have murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840.[30] Thug Behram, a member of the cult, may have murdered as many as 931 victims.[31]

    In his 1886 book, Psychopathia Sexualis, psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing noted a case of a serial murderer in the 1870s, a Frenchman named Eusebius Pieydagnelle who had a sexual obsession with blood and confessed to murdering six people.[32]

    The unidentified killer Jack the Ripper, who has been called the first modern serial killer,[33] killed at least five women, and possibly more, in London in 1888. He was the subject of a massive manhunt and investigation by the Metropolitan Police, during which many modern criminal investigation techniques were pioneered. A large team of policemen conducted house-to-house inquiries, forensic material was collected and suspects were identified and traced.[34] Police surgeon Thomas Bond assembled one of the earliest character profiles of the offender.[35]

    The Ripper murders also marked an important watershed in the treatment of crime by journalists.[36] While not the first serial killer in history, Jack the Ripper’s case was the first to create a worldwide media frenzy.[36] The dramatic murders of financially destitute women in the midst of the wealth of London focused the media’s attention on the plight of the urban poor and gained coverage worldwide. Jack the Ripper has also been called the most infamous serial killer of all time, and his legend has spawned hundreds of theories on his real identity and many works of fiction.[37]

    H. H. Holmes was one of the first documented modern serial killers in the United States, responsible for the death of at least nine victims in the early 1890s. The case gained notoriety and wide publicity through possibly sensationalized accounts in William Randolph Hearst’s newspapers. At the same time in France, Joseph Vacher became known as «The French Ripper» after killing and mutilating 11 women and children. He was executed in 1898 after confessing to his crimes.[38][39]

    The majority of documented serial killers in the 20th century are from the United States.[40][41]

    Late 20th century[edit]

    The serial killing phenomenon in the United States was especially prominent from 1970 to 2000, which has been described as the «golden age of serial murder.»[42] The cause of the spike in serial killings has been attributed to urbanization, which put people in close proximity and offered anonymity.

    The number of active serial killers in the country peaked in 1989 and has been steadily trending downward since, coinciding with an overall decrease in crime in the United States since that time. The decline in serial killers has no known single cause but is attributed to a number of factors. Mike Aamodt, emeritus professor at Radford University in Virginia, attributes the decline in number of serial killings to less frequent use of parole, improved forensic technology, and people behaving more cautiously.[43] Causes for the general reduction in violent crime following the 1990s include increased incarceration in the United States, the end of the crack epidemic in the United States, and decreased lead exposure in early childhood.[44][45][46]

    Characteristics[edit]

    Some commonly found characteristics of serial killers include the following:

    • They may exhibit varying degrees of mental illness or psychopathy, which may contribute to their homicidal behavior.[47]
      • For example, someone who is mentally ill may have psychotic breaks that cause them to believe they are another person or are compelled to murder by other entities.[48]
      • Psychopathic behavior that is consistent with traits common to some serial killers include sensation seeking, a lack of remorse or guilt, impulsivity, the need for control, and predatory behavior.[18] Psychopaths can seem ‘normal’ and often quite charming, a state of adaptation that psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley called the «mask of sanity».[citation needed]
    • They were often abused—emotionally, physically, or sexually—by a family member.[6]
    • Serial killers may be more likely to engage in fetishism, partialism or necrophilia, which are paraphilias that involve a strong tendency to experience the object of erotic interest almost as if it were a physical representation of the symbolized body. Individuals engage in paraphilias which are organized along a continuum; participating in varying levels of fantasy perhaps by focusing on body parts (partialism), symbolic objects which serve as physical extensions of the body (fetishism), or the anatomical physicality of the human body; specifically regarding its inner parts and sexual organs (one example being necrophilia).[49]
    • A disproportionate number exhibit one, two, or all three of the Macdonald triad[dubious – discuss] of predictors of future violent behavior:
      • Many are fascinated with fire setting.[6]
      • They are involved in sadistic activity; especially in children who have not reached sexual maturity, this activity may take the form of torturing animals.[6]
      • More than 60 percent, or simply a large proportion, wet their beds beyond the age of 12.[6][50]
    • They were frequently bullied or socially isolated as children.[6] For example, Henry Lee Lucas was ridiculed as a child and later cited the mass rejection by his peers as a cause for his hatred of everyone. Kenneth Bianchi was teased as a child because he urinated in his pants, suffered twitching, and as a teenager was ignored by his peers.[6]
    • Some were involved in petty crimes, such as fraud, theft, vandalism, or similar offenses.[51]
    • Often, they have trouble staying employed and tend to work in menial jobs. The FBI, however, states, «Serial murderers often seem normal; have families and/or a steady job.»[18] Other sources state they often come from unstable families.[6]
    • Studies have suggested that serial killers generally have an average or low-average IQ, although they are often described, and perceived, as possessing IQs in the above-average range.[6][18][52] A sample of 202 IQs of serial killers had a median IQ of 89.[53] Some organized serial killers have a slightly higher IQ score averaging a little bit over 99, to where disorganized killers average just under 93 in theirs. The average IQ of serial killers is 94.7.[54]

    There are exceptions to these criteria, however. For example, Harold Shipman was a successful professional (a General Practitioner working for the NHS). He was considered a pillar of the local community; he even won a professional award for a children’s asthma clinic and was interviewed by Granada Television’s World in Action on ITV.[55] Dennis Nilsen was an ex-soldier turned civil servant and trade unionist who had no previous criminal record when arrested. Neither was known to have exhibited many of the tell-tale signs.[56] Vlado Taneski, a crime reporter, was a career journalist who was caught after a series of articles he wrote gave clues that he had murdered people.[57] Russell Williams was a successful and respected career Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel who was convicted of murdering two women, along with fetish burglaries and rapes.[58]

    Juana Barraza, also known as the Old Lady Killer, was a professional wrestler. From the years of 1998-2006 she committed over 12 murders, all of which were of older women. She would rob them after knocking on their door pretending to be a government worker. This stems from hatred and resentment from her mother. [59]

    Development[edit]

    Many serial killers have faced similar problems in their childhood development.[60] Hickey’s Trauma Control Model explains how early childhood trauma can set the child up for deviant behavior in adulthood; the child’s environment (either their parents or society) is the dominant factor determining whether or not the child’s behavior escalates into homicidal activity.[61]

    Family, or lack thereof, is the most prominent part of a child’s development because it is what the child can identify with on a regular basis.[62] «The serial killer is no different from any other individual who is instigated to seek approval from parents, sexual partners, or others.»[63] This need for approval is what influences children to attempt to develop social relationships with their family and peers. «The quality of their attachments to parents and other members of the family is critical to how these children relate to and value other members of society.»[64]

    Wilson and Seaman (1990) conducted a study on incarcerated serial killers, and what they concluded was the most influential factor that contributed to their homicidal activity.[65] Almost all of the serial killers in the study had experienced some sort of environmental problems during their childhood, such as a broken home caused by divorce, or a lack of a parental figure to discipline the child. Nearly half of the serial killers had experienced some type of physical or sexual abuse, and more of them had experienced emotional neglect.[64]

    German serial killer Fritz Haarmann with police detectives, November 1924

    When a parent has a drug or alcohol problem, the attention in the household is on the parents rather than the child. This neglect of the child leads to the lowering of their self-esteem and helps develop a fantasy world in which they are in control. Hickey’s Trauma Control Model supports how parental neglect can facilitate deviant behavior, especially if the child sees substance abuse in action.[66] This then leads to disposition (the inability to attach), which can further lead to homicidal behavior, unless the child finds a way to develop substantial relationships and fight the label they receive. If a child receives no support from anyone, then they are unlikely to recover from the traumatic event in a positive way. As stated by E. E. Maccoby, «the family has continued to be seen as a major—perhaps the major—arena for socialization».[67]

    Chromosomal makeup[edit]

    There have been studies looking into the possibility that an abnormality with one’s chromosomes could be the trigger for serial killers.[68] Two serial killers, Bobby Joe Long and Richard Speck, came to attention for reported chromosomal abnormalities. Long had an extra X chromosome.[69] Speck was erroneously reported to have an extra Y chromosome; in fact, his karyotype was performed twice and was normal each time.[70] While attempts have been made to link the XYY karyotype to violence, including serial murder, research has consistently found little or no association between violent criminal behaviour and an extra Y chromosome.[71]

    Fantasy[edit]

    Children who do not have the power to control the mistreatment they suffer sometimes create a new reality to which they can escape. This new reality becomes their fantasy that they have total control of and becomes part of their daily existence. In this fantasy world, their emotional development is guided and maintained. According to Garrison (1996), «the child becomes sociopathic because the normal development of the concepts of right and wrong and empathy towards others is retarded because the child’s emotional and social development occurs within his self-centered fantasies. A person can do no wrong in his own world and the pain of others is of no consequence when the purpose of the fantasy world is to satisfy the needs of one person» (Garrison, 1996). Boundaries between fantasy and reality are lost and fantasies turn to dominance, control, sexual conquest, and violence, eventually leading to murder. Fantasy can lead to the first step in the process of a dissociative state, which, in the words of Stephen Giannangelo, «allows the serial killer to leave the stream of consciousness for what is, to him, a better place».[72]

    Criminologist Jose Sanchez reports, «the young criminal you see today is more detached from his victim, more ready to hurt or kill. The lack of empathy for their victims among young criminals is just one symptom of a problem that afflicts the whole society.»[62] Lorenzo Carcaterra, author of Gangster (2001), explains how potential criminals are labeled by society, which can then lead to their offspring also developing in the same way through the cycle of violence. The ability for serial killers to appreciate the mental life of others is severely compromised, presumably leading to their dehumanization of others.[73]

    This process may be considered an expression of the intersubjectivity associated with a cognitive deficit regarding the capability to make sharp distinctions between other people and inanimate objects. For these individuals, objects can appear to possess animistic or humanistic power while people are perceived as objects.[73] Before he was executed, serial killer Ted Bundy stated media violence and pornography had stimulated and increased his need to commit homicide, although this statement was made during last-ditch efforts to appeal his death sentence.[64] There are exceptions to the typical fantasy patterns of serial killers, as in the case of Dennis Rader, who was a loving family man and the leader of his church.[citation needed]

    Organized, disorganized, and mixed[edit]

    Ted Bundy in custody, Florida, United States, July 1978 (State Archives of Florida)

    The FBI’s Crime Classification Manual places serial killers into three categories: organized, disorganized, and mixed (i.e., offenders who exhibit organized and disorganized characteristics).[74][75] Some killers descend from being organized into disorganized as their killings continue,[76] as in the case of psychological decompensation or overconfidence due to having evaded capture, or vice versa, as when a previously disorganized killer identifies one or more specific aspects of the act of killing as their source of gratification and develops a modus operandi that focuses on them.[citation needed]

    Organized serial killers often plan their crimes methodically, usually abducting victims, killing them in one place and disposing of them in another. They often lure the victims with ploys appealing to their sense of sympathy. Others specifically target prostitutes, who are likely to go voluntarily with a stranger. These killers maintain a high degree of control over the crime scene and usually have a solid knowledge of forensic science that enables them to cover their tracks, such as burying the body or weighing it down and sinking it in a river. They follow their crimes in the news media carefully and often take pride in their actions as if it were all a grand project.[77]

    Often, organized killers have social and other interpersonal skills sufficient to enable them to develop both personal and romantic relationships, friends and lovers and sometimes even attract and maintain a spouse and sustain a family including children. Among serial killers, those of this type are in the event of their capture most likely to be described by acquaintances as kind and unlikely to hurt anyone. Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy are examples of organized serial killers.[77] In general, the IQs of organized serial killers tend to be normal range, with a mean of 98.7.[78]

    Disorganized serial killers are usually far more impulsive, often committing their murders with a random weapon available at the time, and usually do not attempt to hide the body. They are likely to be unemployed, a loner, or both, with very few friends. They often turn out to have a history of mental illness, and their modus operandi (M.O.) or lack thereof is often marked by excessive violence and sometimes necrophilia or sexual violence.[79] Disorganized serial killers have been found to have a lower mean IQ than organized serial killers, at 89.4. Mixed serial killers, with both organized and disorganized traits, have an average IQ of 100.9, but a low sample size.[78]

    Medical professionals[edit]

    Some people with a pathological interest in the power of life and death tend to be attracted to medical professions or acquiring such a job.[80] These kinds of killers are sometimes referred to as «angels of death»[81] or angels of mercy. Medical professionals will kill their patients for money, for a sense of sadistic pleasure, for a belief that they are «easing» the patient’s pain, or simply «because they can».[82] Perhaps the most prolific of these was the British doctor Harold Shipman. Another such killer was nurse Jane Toppan, who admitted during her murder trial that she was sexually aroused by death.[83] She would administer a drug mixture to patients she chose as her victims, lie in bed with them and hold them close to her body as they died.[83]

    Another medical professional serial killer is Genene Jones. It is believed she killed 11 to 46 infants and children while working at Bexar County Medical Center Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, United States.[84] She is currently serving a 99-year sentence for the murder of Chelsea McClellan and the attempted murder of Rolando Santos,[84] and became eligible for parole in 2017 due to a law in Texas at the time of her sentencing to reduce prison overcrowding.[84] A similar case occurred in Britain in 1991, where nurse Beverley Allitt killed four children at the hospital where she worked, attempted to kill three more, and injured a further six over the course of two months.

    A 21st-century example is Canadian nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer, who murdered elderly patients in the nursing homes where she worked. William George Davis is another hospital nurse who was sentenced to death in Texas for the murdering of four patients.[85]

    Female[edit]

    Highway prostitute Aileen Wuornos killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990

    Female serial killers are rare compared to their male counterparts.[86] Sources suggest that female serial killers represented less than one in every six known serial murderers in the United States between 1800 and 2004 (64 females from a total of 416 known offenders), or that around 15% of U.S. serial killers have been women, with a collective number of victims between 427 and 612.[87] The authors of Lethal Ladies, Amanda L. Farrell, Robert D. Keppel, and Victoria B. Titterington, state that «the Justice Department indicated 36 female serial killers have been active over the course of the last century.»[88] According to The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, there is evidence that 16% of all serial killers are women.[89]

    Kelleher and Kelleher (1998) created several categories to describe female serial killers. They used the classifications of black widow, angel of death, sexual predator, revenge, profit or crime, team killer, question of sanity, unexplained, and unsolved. In using these categories, they observed that most women fell into the categories of the black widow or team killer.[90] Although motivations for female serial killers can include attention seeking, addiction, or the result of psychopathological behavioral factors,[91] female serial killers are commonly categorized as murdering men for material gain, usually being emotionally close to their victims,[86] and generally needing to have a relationship with the victim,[90] hence the traditional cultural image of the «black widow».

    The methods that female serial killers use for murder are frequently covert or low-profile, such as murder by poison (the preferred choice for killing).[92] Other methods used by female serial killers include shootings (used by 20%), suffocation (16%), stabbing (11%), and drowning (5%).[91] They commit killings in specific places, such as their home or a health-care facility, or at different locations within the same city or state.[93] A notable exception to the typical characteristics of female serial killers is Aileen Wuornos,[94] who killed outdoors instead of at home, used a gun instead of poison, and killed strangers instead of friends or family.[95] One «analysis of 86 female serial killers from the United States found that the victims tended to be spouses, children or the elderly».[90] Other studies indicate that since 1975, increasingly strangers are marginally the most preferred victim of female serial killers,[96] or that only 26% of female serial killers kill for material gain only.[97] Sources state that each killer will have her own proclivities, needs and triggers.[98][90] A review of the published literature on female serial murder stated that «sexual or sadistic motives are believed to be extremely rare in female serial murderers, and psychopathic traits and histories of childhood abuse have been consistently reported in these women.»[90]

    A study by Eric W. Hickey (2010) of 64 female serial killers in the United States indicated that sexual activity was one of several motives in 10% of the cases, enjoyment in 11% and control in 14% and that 51% of all U.S. female serial killers murdered at least one woman and 31% murdered at least one child.[99] In other cases, women have been involved as an accomplice with a male serial killer as a part of a serial killing team.[98][90] A 2015 study published in The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology found that the most common motive for female serial killers was for financial gain and almost 40% of them had experienced some sort of mental illness.[100]

    Peter Vronsky in Female Serial Killers (2007) maintains that female serial killers today often kill for the same reason males do: as a means of expressing rage and control. He suggests that sometimes the theft of the victims’ property by the female «black widow» type serial killer appears to be for material gain, but really is akin to a male serial killer’s collecting of totems (souvenirs) from the victim as a way of exerting continued control over the victim and reliving it.[101] By contrast, Hickey states that although popular perception sees «black widow» female serial killers as something of the Victorian past, in his statistical study of female serial killer cases reported in the United States since 1826, approximately 75% occurred since 1950.[102]

    Elizabeth Báthory is sometimes cited as the most prolific female serial killer in all of history. Formally countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed (Báthory Erzsébet in Hungarian, August 7, 1560 – August 21, 1614), she was a countess from the renowned Báthory family. Before her husband’s death, Elizabeth took great pleasure in torturing the staff, by jamming pins under the servant’s fingernails or stripping servants and throwing them into the snow.[103] After her husband’s death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and young women, with one witness attributing to them over 600 victims, though the number for which they were convicted was 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted. In 1610, however, she was imprisoned in the Csejte Castle, where she remained bricked in a set of rooms until her death four years later.[104]

    A 2010 article by Perri and Lichtenwald addressed some of the misconceptions concerning female criminality.[105] In the article, Perri and Lichtenwald analyze the current research regarding female psychopathy, including case studies of female psychopathic killers featuring Münchausen syndrome by proxy, cesarean section homicide, fraud detection homicide, female kill teams, and a female serial killer.[105]

    Juvenile[edit]

    Juvenile serial killers are rare. There are three main categories that juvenile serial killers can fit into: primary, maturing, and secondary killers. There have been studies done to compare and contrast these three groups and to discover similarities and differences between them.[106] Although these types of serial killers are less common, oftentimes adult serial killers may make their debut at an early age and it can be an opportunity for researchers to study what factors brought about the behavior. While juvenile serial killers are rare, the youngest felon on death row is a juvenile serial killer named Harvey Miguel Robinson who was 17 at the time of his crimes and 18 at the time of his arrest.[107][108]

    Ethnicity and demographics in the United States[edit]

    The racial demographics regarding serial killers are often subject to debate. In the United States, the majority of reported and investigated serial killers are white males, from a lower-to-middle-class background, usually in their late 20s to early 30s.[6][18] However, there are African American, Asian, and Hispanic (of any race) serial killers as well, and, according to the FBI, based on percentages of the U.S. population, whites are not more likely than other races to be serial killers.[18] Criminal profiler Pat Brown says serial killers are usually reported as white because serial killers usually target victims of their own race, and argues the media typically focuses on «All-American» white and pretty female victims who were the targets of white male offenders; that crimes among minority offenders in urban communities, where crime rates are higher, are under-investigated; and that minority serial killers likely exist at the same ratios as white serial killers for the population. She believes that the myth that serial killers are always white might have become «truth» in some research fields due to the over-reporting of white serial killers in the media.[109]

    According to some sources, the percentage of serial killers who are African American is estimated to be between 13% and 22%.[110][111] Another study has shown that 16% of serial killers are African American, what author Maurice Godwin describes as a «sizeable portion».[112] A 2014 Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database annual statistics report indicated that for the decades 1900–2010, the percentage of white serial killers was 52.1% while the percentage of African American serial killers was 40.3%.[78]

    In a 2005 article Anthony Walsh, professor of criminal justice at Boise State University, argued a review of post-WWII serial killings in America finds that the prevalence of non-white serial killers has typically been drastically underestimated in both professional research literature and the mass media. As a paradigmatic case of this media double standard, Walsh cites news reporting on white killer Gary M. Heidnik and African-American killer Harrison Graham. Both men were residents of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; both imprisoned, tortured, and killed several women; and both were arrested only months apart in 1987. «Heidnik received widespread national attention, became the subject of books and television shows, and served as a model for the fictitious Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs«, writes Walsh, while «Graham received virtually no media attention outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, despite having been convicted of four more murders than Heidnik».[113]

    Outside the United States[edit]

    There is not much research about serial homicide in non-Western countries, or outside the U.S.

    In one study of serial homicide in South Africa, many patterns were similar to established patterns in the U.S., with some exceptions: no offenders were female, offenders were lower educated than in the U.S., and both victims and offenders were predominantly black.[114]

    There are many more serial killers outside of the United States. Most notably is Jack The Ripper, a serial killer from the United Kingdom who was active in the autumn of 1888. He killed 5 women but it is believed that he killed more than that.[115]

    Another notable non-American serial killer  is Pedro Lopez, a serial killer from South America. He killed a minimum of 110 young girls between 1969 and 1980. However, he claims that the number is over 300. He was released from a mental facility in 1998 and his whereabouts are still unknown. He is commonly nicknamed the Monster of the Andes.

    A final notable non-American serial is Luis Garavito who was a serial killer in Columbia. Garavito would kill and torture boys using various disguises. He murdered around 140 boys ranging in ages from 8 to 16. He would dump his victims’ bodies in mass graves.[116]

    Motives[edit]

    According to psychiatric reports, Jukka Lindholm, the so-called «serial strangler» reportedly admired the primordial, violent manhood of his teenage years.[117]

    The motives of serial killers are generally placed into four categories: visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control; however, the motives of any given killer may display considerable overlap among these categories.[118]

    Visionary[edit]

    Visionary serial killers suffer from psychotic breaks with reality,[119] sometimes believing they are another person or are compelled to murder by entities such as the Devil or God.[120] The two most common subgroups are «demon mandated» and «God mandated».[48]

    Herbert Mullin believed the American casualties in the Vietnam War were preventing California from experiencing the Big One. As the war wound down, Mullin claimed his father instructed him via telepathy to raise the number of «human sacrifices to nature» to delay a catastrophic earthquake that would plunge California into the ocean.[121] David Berkowitz («Son of Sam») may also be an example of a visionary serial killer, having claimed a demon transmitted orders through his neighbor’s dog and instructed him to commit murder.[122] Berkowitz later described those claims as a hoax, as originally concluded by psychiatrist David Abrahamsen.[123]

    Mission-oriented[edit]

    Mission-oriented killers typically justify their acts as «ridding the world» of certain types of people perceived as undesirable, such as the homeless, ex-cons, homosexuals, drug users, prostitutes, or people of different ethnicity or religion; however, they are generally not psychotic.[124] Some see themselves as attempting to change society, often to cure a societal ill.[125]

    An example of a mission-oriented killer would be Joseph Paul Franklin, an American white supremacist who exclusively targeted Jewish, biracial, and African-American individuals for the purpose of inciting a «race war».[126][127]

    Hedonistic[edit]

    This type of serial killer seeks thrills and derives pleasure and satisfaction from killing, seeing people as expendable means to this goal. Forensic psychologists have identified three subtypes of the hedonistic killer: «lust», «thrill», and «comfort».[128]

    Lust[edit]

    Sex is the primary motive of lust killers, whether or not the victims are dead, and fantasy plays a large role in their killings.[129] Their sexual gratification depends on the amount of torture and mutilation they perform on their victims. The sexual serial murderer has a psychological need to have absolute control, dominance, and power over their victims, and the infliction of torture, pain, and ultimately death is used in an attempt to fulfill their need.[130] They usually use weapons that require close contact with the victims, such as knives or hands. As lust killers continue with their murders, the time between killings decreases or the required level of stimulation increases, sometimes both.[131]

    Kenneth Bianchi, one of the «Hillside Stranglers», murdered women and girls of different ages, races, and appearance because his sexual urges required different types of stimulation and increasing intensity.[132] Jeffrey Dahmer searched for his perfect fantasy lover—beautiful, submissive and eternal. As his desire increased, he experimented with drugs, alcohol, and exotic sex. His increasing need for stimulation was demonstrated by the dismemberment of victims, whose heads and genitals he preserved, and by his attempts to create a «living zombie» under his control (by pouring acid into a hole drilled into the victim’s skull).[133]

    Dahmer once said, «Lust played a big part of it. Control and lust. Once it happened the first time, it just seemed like it had control of my life from there on in. The killing was just a means to an end. That was the least satisfactory part. I didn’t enjoy doing that. That’s why I tried to create living zombies with acid and the drill.» He further elaborated on this, also saying, «I wanted to see if it was possible to make—again, it sounds really gross—uh, zombies, people that would not have a will of their own, but would follow my instructions without resistance. So after that, I started using the drilling technique.»[134] He experimented with cannibalism to «ensure his victims would always be a part of him».[135]

    Thrill[edit]

    The primary motive of a thrill killer is to induce pain or terror in their victims, which provides stimulation and excitement for the killer.[129] They seek the adrenaline rush provided by hunting and killing victims. Thrill killers murder only for the kill; usually, the attack is not prolonged, and there is no sexual aspect. Usually, the victims are strangers, although the killer may have followed them for a period of time. Thrill killers can abstain from killing for long periods of time and become more successful at killing as they refine their murder methods. Many attempt to commit the perfect crime and believe they will not be caught.[136]

    Robert Hansen took his victims to a secluded area, where he would let them loose and then hunt and kill them.[137] In one of his letters to San Francisco Bay Area newspapers in San Francisco, California, the Zodiac Killer wrote «[killing] gives me the most thrilling experience it is even better than getting your rocks off with a girl».[138] Carl Watts was described by a surviving victim as «excited and hyper and clappin’ and just making noises like he was excited, that this was gonna be fun» during the 1982 attack.[139] Slashing, stabbing, hanging, drowning, asphyxiating, and strangling were among the ways Watts killed.[140]

    Comfort (profit)[edit]

    Material gain and a comfortable lifestyle are the primary motives of comfort killers.[141] Usually, the victims are family members and close acquaintances.[129] After a murder, a comfort killer will usually wait for a period of time before killing again to allow any suspicions by family or authorities to subside. They often use poison, most notably arsenic, to kill their victims. Female serial killers are often comfort killers, although not all comfort killers are female.[142]

    Dorothea Puente killed her tenants for their Social Security checks and buried them in the backyard of her home.[143] H. H. Holmes killed for insurance and business profits.[144] Puente and Holmes had previous records of crimes such as theft, fraud, non-payment of debts, embezzlement and others of a similar nature. Dorothea Puente was finally arrested on a parole violation, having been on parole for a previous fraud conviction.[145]

    Contract killers («hitmen») may exhibit serial killers traits, but are generally not classified as such because of third-party killing objectives and detached financial and emotional incentives.[146][147][148] Nevertheless, there are occasionally individuals that are labeled as both a hitman and a serial killer.[149]

    Power/control[edit]

    The main objective for this type of serial killer is to gain and exert power over their victim. Such killers are sometimes abused as children, leaving them with feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy as adults. Many power- or control-motivated killers sexually abuse their victims, but they differ from hedonistic killers in that rape is not motivated by lust (as it would be with a lust murder) but as simply another form of dominating the victim.[150] Ted Bundy is an example of a power/control-oriented serial killer. He traveled around the United States seeking women to control.[151]

    Media influences[edit]

    Many serial killers claim that a violent culture influenced them to commit murders. During his final interview, Ted Bundy stated that hardcore pornography was responsible for his actions. Others idolise figures for their deeds or perceived vigilante justice, such as Peter Kürten, who idolized Jack the Ripper, or John Wayne Gacy and Ed Kemper, who both idolized the actor John Wayne.[6]

    Killers who have a strong desire for fame or to be renowned for their actions desire media attention as a way of validating and spreading their crimes; fear is also a component here, as some serial killers enjoy causing fear. An example is Dennis Rader, who sought attention from the press during his murder spree.[152]

    In popular culture[edit]

    Many movies, books, and documentaries have been created, detailing serial killers’ lives and crimes. For example, the biographical films Ted Bundy (2002) and Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile focuses on serial killer Ted Bundy’s personal life in college, leading up to his execution, and Dahmer (2002) tells the story of Jeffrey Dahmer. A Netflix series on the life of Jeffrey Dahmer and his victims was released in 2022.

    Serial killers are also portrayed in fictional media, oftentimes as having substantial intelligence and looking for difficult targets, despite the contradiction with the psychological profile of serial killers.[153]

    Theories[edit]

    Biological and sociological[edit]

    Theories for why certain people commit serial murder have been advanced. Some theorists believe the reasons are biological, suggesting serial killers are born, not made, and that their violent behavior is a result of abnormal brain activity. Holmes believe that «until a reliable sample can be obtained and tested, there is no scientific statement that can be made concerning the exact role of biology as a determining factor of a serial killer personality.»[154]

    The «Fractured Identity Syndrome» (FIS) is a merging of Charles Cooley’s «looking glass self» and Erving Goffman’s «virtual» and «actual social identity» theories. The FIS suggests a social event, or series of events, during one’s childhood results in a fracturing of the personality of the serial killer. The term «fracture» is defined as a small breakage of the personality which is often not visible to the outside world and is only felt by the killer.[155]

    «Social Process Theory» has also been suggested as an explanation for serial murder. Social process theory states that offenders may turn to crime due to peer pressure, family and friends. Criminal behavior is a process of interaction with social institutions, in which everyone has the potential for criminal behavior.[156] A lack of family structure and identity could also be a cause leading to serial murder traits. A child used as a scapegoat will be deprived of their capacity to feel guilt. Displaced anger could result in animal torture, as identified in the Macdonald triad, and a further lack of basic identity.[157]

    Military[edit]

    A dishonorably discharged Marine, Charles Ng participated in the kidnapping, sadistic torture, rape, and murder of numerous victims

    The «military theory» has been proposed as an explanation for why serial murderers kill, as some serial murderers have served in the military or related fields. According to Castle and Hensley, 7% of the serial killers studied had military experience.[158] This figure may be a proportional under-representation when compared to the number of military veterans in a nation’s total population. For example, according to the United States census for the year 2000, military veterans comprised 12.7% of the U.S. population;[159] in England, it was estimated in 2007 that military veterans comprised 9.1% of the population.[160] Though by contrast, about 2.5% of the population of Canada in 2006 consisted of military veterans.[161][162]

    There are two theories that can be used to study the correlation between serial killing and military training: Applied learning theory states that serial killing can be learned. The military is training for higher kill rates from servicemen while training the soldiers to be desensitized to taking a human life.[163] Social learning theory can be used when soldiers get praised and accommodated for killing. They learn or believe that they learn, that it is acceptable to kill because they were praised for it in the military. Serial killers want accreditation for the work that they have done.[164]

    In both military and serial killing, the offender or the soldier may become desensitized to killing as well as compartmentalized; the soldiers do not see enemy personnel as «human» and neither do serial killers see their victims as humans.[165] The theories do not imply that military institutions make a deliberate effort to produce serial killers; to the contrary, all military personnel are trained to recognize when, where, and against whom it is appropriate to use deadly force, which starts with the basic Law of Land Warfare, taught during the initial training phase, and may include more stringent policies for military personnel in law enforcement or security.[166]

    Investigation[edit]

    FBI: Issues and practices[edit]

    In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published a handbook titled Serial Murder which was the product of a symposium held in 2005 to bring together the many issues surrounding serial murder, including its investigation.[167]

    Identification[edit]

    According to the FBI, identifying one, or multiple, murders as being the work of a serial killer is the first challenge an investigation faces, especially if the victim(s) come from a marginalized or high-risk population and is normally linked through forensic or behavioral evidence (FBI 2008).[167] Should the cases cross multiple jurisdictions, the law enforcement system in the United States is fragmented and thus not configured to detect multiple similar murders across a large geographic area (Egger 1998).[168] Ted Bundy was particularly famous for such geographic exploitations. He used his knowledge about the lack of communication between multiple jurisdictions to avoid arrest and detection.[169] The FBI suggests utilizing databases and increasing interdepartmental communication. Keppel (1989)[170] suggests holding multi-jurisdictional conferences regularly to compare cases giving departments a greater chance to detect linked cases and overcome linkage blindness.

    One such collaboration, the Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database Project[171] was proposed at the 2012 FDIAI Annual Conference.[172] Utilizing Radford’s Serial Killer Database as a starting point, the new collaboration,[173] hosted by FGCU Justice Studies, has invited and is working in conjunction with other universities to maintain and expand the scope of the database to also include spree and mass murders. Utilizing over 170 data points, multiple-murderer methodology and victimology; researchers and Law Enforcement Agencies can build case studies and statistical profiles to further research the Who, What, Why and How of these types of crimes.

    Leadership[edit]

    Leadership, or administration, should play a small or virtually non-existent role in the actual investigation past assigning knowledgeable or experienced homicide investigators to lead positions. The administration’s role is not to run the investigation but to establish and reaffirm the primary goal of catching the serial killer, as well as provide support for the investigators. The FBI (2008) suggests completing Memorandums of Understanding to facilitate support and commitment of resources from different jurisdictions to an investigation.[167] Egger (1998) takes this one step further and suggests completing mutual aid pacts, which are written agreements to provide support to each other in a time of need, with surrounding jurisdictions. Doing this in advance would save time and resources that could be used on the investigation.[168]

    Organization[edit]

    The structural organization of an investigation is key to its success, as demonstrated by the investigation of Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Once a serial murder case was established, a task force was created to track down and arrest the offender. Over the course of the investigation, for various reasons, the task force’s organization was radically changed and reorganized multiple times – at one point including more than 50 full-time personnel, and at another, only a single investigator. Eventually, what led to the end of the investigation was a conference of 25 detectives organized to share ideas to solve the case.[174]

    The FBI handbook provides a description of how a task force should be organized but offers no additional options on how to structure the investigation. While it appears advantageous to have a full-time staff assigned to a serial murder investigation, it can become prohibitively expensive. For example, the Green River Task Force cost upwards of $2 million per year,[174] and as was witnessed with the Green River Killer investigation, other strategies can prevail where a task force fails.

    A common strategy, already employed by many departments for other reasons, is the conference, in which departments get together and focus on a specific set of topics.[175] With serial murders, the focus is typically on unsolved cases, with evidence thought to be related to the case at hand.

    Similar to a conference is an information clearing-house in which a jurisdiction with a suspected serial murder case collects all of its evidence and actively seeks data that may be related from other jurisdictions.[175] By collecting all of the related information into one place, they provide a central point in which it can be organized and easily accessed by other jurisdictions working toward the goal of arresting an offender and ending the murders.

    Already mentioned was the task force,[175] FBI 2008,[167] Keppel 1989[170] which provides for a flexible, organized, framework for jurisdictions depending on the needs of the investigation. Unfortunately due to the need to commit resources (manpower, money, equipment, etc.) for long periods of time it can be an unsustainable option.

    In the case of the investigation of Aileen Wournos, the Marion County Sheriff coordinated multiple agencies without any written or formal agreement.[168] While not a specific strategy for a serial murder investigation, this is certainly a best practice in so far as the agencies were able to work easily together toward a common goal.

    Finally, once a serial murder investigation has been identified, the use of an FBI Rapid Response Team can assist both experienced and inexperienced jurisdictions in setting up a task force. This is completed by organizing and delegating jobs, by compiling and analyzing clues, and by establishing communication between the parties involved.[168]

    Resource augmentation[edit]

    During the course of a serial murder investigation, it may become necessary to call in additional resources; the FBI defines this as Resource Augmentation. Within the structure of a task force, the addition of a resource should be thought of as either long-term or short-term. If the task force’s framework is expanded to include the new resource, then it should be permanent and not removed. For short-term needs, such as setting up roadblocks or canvassing a neighborhood, additional resources should be called in on a short-term basis. The decision of whether resources are needed short or long term should be left to the lead investigator and facilitated by the administration (FBI 2008).[167]

    The confusion and counter productiveness created by changing the structure of a task force mid investigation is illustrated by the way the Green River Task Force’s staffing and structure was changed multiple times throughout the investigation. This made an already complicated situation more difficult, resulting in the delay or loss of information, which allowed Ridgway to continue killing (Guillen 2007).[174] The FBI model does not take into account that permanently expanding a task force, or investigative structure, may not be possible due to cost or personnel availability. Egger (1998) offers several alternative strategies including; using investigative consultants, or experienced staff to augment an investigative team. Not all departments have investigators experienced in serial murder and by temporarily bringing in consultants, they can educate a department to a level of competence then step out. This would reduce the initially established framework of the investigation team and save the department the cost of retaining the consultants until the conclusion of the investigation.[168]

    Communication[edit]

    The FBI handbook (2008)[167] and Keppel (1989)[170] both stress communication as paramount. The difference is that the FBI handbook (2008)[167] concentrates primarily on communication within a task force while Keppel (1989)[170] makes getting information out to and allowing information to be passed back from patrol officers a priority. The FBI handbook (2008)[167] suggests having daily e-mail or in-person briefings for all staff involved in the investigation and providing periodic summary briefings to patrol officers and managers. Looking back on a majority of serial murderer arrests, most are exercised by patrol officers in the course of their everyday duties and unrelated to the ongoing serial murder investigation (Egger 1998,[168] Keppel 1989).[170]

    Keppel (1989)[170] provides examples of Larry Eyler, who was arrested during a traffic stop for a parking violation, and Ted Bundy, who was arrested during a traffic stop for operating a stolen vehicle. In each case, it was uniformed officers, not directly involved in the investigation, who knew what to look for and took the direct action that stopped the killer. By providing up-to-date (as opposed to periodic) briefings and information to officers on the street the chances of catching a serial killer, or finding solid leads, are increased.

    Data management[edit]

    A serial murder investigation generates staggering amounts of data, all of which needs to be reviewed and analyzed. A standardized method of documenting and distributing information must be established and investigators must be allowed time to complete reports while investigating leads and at the end of a shift (FBI 2008).[167] When the mechanism for data management is insufficient, leads are not only lost or buried but the investigation can be hindered and new information can become difficult to obtain or become corrupted.[174]

    During the Green River Killer investigation, reporters would often find and interview possible victims or witnesses ahead of investigators. The understaffed investigation was unable to keep up the information flow, which prevented them from promptly responding to leads. To make matters worse, investigators believed that the journalists, untrained in interviewing victims or witnesses of crimes, would corrupt the information and result in unreliable leads (Guillen 2007).[174]

    Memorabilia[edit]

    Notorious and infamous serial killers number in the thousands[176] and a subculture revolves around their legacies. That subculture includes the collection, sale, and display of serial killer memorabilia, dubbed «murderabilia» by Andrew Kahan, one of the best-known opponents of collectors of serial killer remnants. Kahan is the director of the Mayor’s Crime Victims Office in Houston. He is backed by the families of murder victims and «Son of Sam laws» existing in some states that prevent murderers from profiting from the publicity generated by their crimes.[177]

    Such memorabilia includes the paintings, writings, and poems of these killers.[178] Recently, marketing has capitalized even more upon interest in serial killers with the rise of various merchandise such as trading cards, action figures, and books such as The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers by Harold Schechter, and The A-Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers by Schecter and David Everitt. Some serial killers attain celebrity status in the way they acquire fans and may have previous personal possessions auctioned off on websites like eBay. A few examples of this are Ed Gein’s 150-pound stolen gravestone and Bobby Joe Long’s sunglasses.[179]

    See also[edit]

    • List of serial killers before 1900
    • List of serial killers by country
    • List of serial killers by number of victims
    • List of songs about or referencing serial killers
    • Offender profiling
    • Serial crime
    • Serial rapist
    • Son of Sam law

    Footnotes[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d
      • Holmes & Holmes 1998, Serial murder is the killing of three or more people over a period of more than 30 days, with a significant cooling-off period between the murders The baseline number of three victims appears to be most common among those who are the academic authorities in the field. The time frame also appears to be an agreed-upon component of the definition.
      • Petherick 2005, p. 190 Three killings seem to be required in the most popular definition of serial killing since they are enough to provide a pattern within the killings without being overly restrictive.
      • Flowers 2012, p. 195 in general, most experts on serial murder require that a minimum of three murders be committed at different times and usually different places for a person to qualify as a serial killer.
      • Schechter 2012, p. 73 Most experts seem to agree, however, that to qualify as a serial killer, an individual has to slay a minimum of three unrelated victims.

    2. ^ Burkhalter Chmelir 2003, p. 1.
    3. ^ Hough & McCorkle 2016, p. […] Serial killing has been defined by different researchers or groups as either two or more, three or more or even four or more people killed over at least one month with a cooling off period between each of the murders.
    4. ^ Geberth 1995, p. ? «The base population was 387 serial murderers, who killed (under various motivations), three or more persons over a period of time with cooling-off periods between the events. The author identified 232 male serial murderers who violated their victims sexually».
    5. ^ Morton 2005, p. 4, 9.
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      • Wayne Petherick (2009). Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling. Academic Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-08-096175-0. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
      • Jennifer M. Brown; Elizabeth A. Campbell (2010). The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology. Cambridge University Press. p. 532. ISBN 978-1-139-48945-4. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
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    • Hickey, Eric W. (2010). Serial murderers and their victims. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Holmes, Stephen T. (2010). Serial murder (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, Sage, California. ISBN 978-1-4129-7442-4.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Holmes, Stephen T. (1998). Serial Murder (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-1367-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
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    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Holmes, Stephen T. (2002). Profiling Violent Crimes: An Investigative Tool. Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-2594-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
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    • Kelleher, Michael D.; Kelleher, C.L. (1998). Murder Most Rare: The Female Serial Killer. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-96003-2. Archived from the original on April 20, 2010. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
    • Keppel, Robert D. (2000). Serial Murder: Future Implications for Police Investigations (first ed.). Authorlink Pr. ISBN 9781928704188.
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    • MacCormick, Alex (2003). The Mammoth Book of Maneaters: Over 250 Terrifying True Accounts of Predators from Pre-history to the Present. Running Press. ISBN 9780786711703. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
    • Mellor, Lee (2012). Cold North Killers: Canadian Serial Murder. Dundurn. ISBN 9781459701243. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved November 21, 2020.
    • Mitchell, Corey (2006). Evil Eyes. Pinnacle Books. ISBN 9780786016761.
    • Morton, RJ (2005). «Serial murder multi-disciplinary perspectives for investigators» (PDF). Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on June 15, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
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    • Myers, Wade C.; McElroy, Ross; Burton, Karen; Recoppa, Lawrence (1993). «Malignant Sex and Aggression: An Overview of Serial Sexual Homicide». Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law. 21 (4): 435–451. PMID 8054674.
    • Newton, Michael (2006). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9780816069873. Archived from the original on June 1, 2020. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Norder, Dan; Vanderlinden, Wolf; Begg, Paul (2004). Ripper Notes: Madmen, Myths and Magic. Inklings Press. ISBN 9780975912911.
    • Peck, Dennis L.; Dolche, Norman Allan (2000). Extraordinary Behavior: A Case Study Approach to Understanding Social Problems. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-275-97057-4. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Perri, Frank S.; Lichtenwald, Terrance G. (2010). «The Last Frontier: Myths & The Female Psychopathic Killer» (PDF). Forensic Examiner. 19 (2). Archived (PDF) from the original on July 7, 2011. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
    • Petherick, Wayne (2005). Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling. Elsevier. ISBN 9780080468549. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
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    • Ressler, Robert K.; Schachtman, Thomas (1993). Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI. New York: Macmillan/St. Martin’s. ISBN 978-0-312-95044-6.
    • Rubinstein, W. D. (2004). Genocide: A History. Pearson Longman. ISBN 9780582506015. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rule, Ann (2004). Kiss Me, Kill Me: Ann Rule’s Crime Files. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416500032.
    • Schechter, Harold (2003). The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers. Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-47200-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Schechter, Harold (2012). The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781439138854. Archived from the original on September 1, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
    • Schlesinger, Louis B. (2000). Serial Offenders: Current Thought, Recent Findings. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-2236-5.
    • Schmid, David (2005). Natural Born Celebrities: Serial Killers in American Culture. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-73867-3. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Sitpond, M. (2000). Addicted to murder: The true story of Dr Harold Shipman. Virgin Books. ISBN 978-0-7535-0445-1.
    • Silva, J. Arturo; Leong, Gregory B.; Ferrari, Michelle M. (2004). «A neuropsychiatric developmental model of serial homicidal behavior». Behavioral Sciences & the Law. 22 (6): 787–799. doi:10.1002/bsl.620. PMID 15568202.
    • Singer, S.D; Hensley, C (2004). «Learning theory to childhood and adolescent fire-setting: Can it lead to serial murder». International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology. 48 (4): 461–476. doi:10.1177/0306624X04265087. PMID 15245657. S2CID 5991918.
    • Skeem, J. L.; Polaschek, D. L. L.; Patrick, C. J.; Lilienfeld, S. O. (2011). «Psychopathic Personality: Bridging the Gap Between Scientific Evidence and Public Policy». Psychological Science in the Public Interest. 12 (3): 95–162. doi:10.1177/1529100611426706. PMID 26167886. S2CID 8521465. Archived from the original on February 22, 2016. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
    • Tithecott, R (1997). Of Men and Monsters: Jeffrey Dahmer and the Construction of the Serial Killer. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-15680-0. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2007). Female Serial Killers: How and Why Women Become Monsters. New York: Berkley Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-425-21390-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2013). «Serial Killer Zombie Apocalypse and the Dawn of the Less Dead: An Introduction to Sexual Serial Murder Today», in Serial Killers: True Crime Anthology 2014. RJ Parker Publishing. ISBN 978-1494325893.
    • Walsh, Anthony (November 2005). «African Americans and Serial Killing in the Media». Homicide Studies. 9 (4): 271–291. doi:10.1177/1088767905280080. ISSN 1088-7679. S2CID 143399844. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
    • Whittle, Brian; Ritchie, Jean (2000). Prescription for Murder: The True Story of Mass Murderer Dr Harold Frederick Shipman. Warner. ISBN 9780751529982.
    • Wilson, W.; Hilton, T. (1998). «Modus operandi of female serial killers». Psychological Reports. 82 (2): 495–498. doi:10.2466/PR0.82.2.495-498. PMID 9621726.
    • Wilson, Colin; Seaman, Donald (1992). The Serial Killers: A Study in the Psychology of Violence. True Crime. ISBN 9780863696152. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
    • Woodhead, Charlotte; Sloggett; Bray, Issy; Bradbury, Jason; McManus, Sally; Meltzer, Howard; Brugha, Terry; Jenkins, Rachel; Greenberg, Neil; Wessely, Simon; Fear, Nicola (2009). «An Estimate of the Veteran Population in England: Based on data from the 2007 Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey». Population Trends. 138 (1): 50–54. doi:10.1057/pt.2009.47. PMID 20120251. S2CID 8483631.
    • Woods, Paul; Baddeley, Gavin (2009). Saucy Jack: The Elusive Ripper. Ian Allan. ISBN 9780711034105. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.
    • Yardley, Elizabeth; Wilson, David (2015). Female Serial Killers in Social Context: Criminological Institutionalism and the Case of Mary Ann Cotton. Policy Press. ISBN 9781447327639. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved September 9, 2020.

    Further reading[edit]

    • Borgeson; Kristen Kuehnle (2010). Serial Offenders: Theory and Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-7730-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Brady, Ian; Colin Wilson (Introduction); Peter Sotos (Afterword) (2001). The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and Its Analysis. Feral House. ISBN 978-0922915736.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Journey into Darkness. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-00394-4. Archived from the original on August 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Mind Hunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-01375-2. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Douglas, John E.; Allen G. Burgess; Robert K. Ressler; Ann W. Burgess (2006). Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crimes (Second ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7879-8501-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Haggerty, Kevin D. (2009). «Crime, Media, Culture: Modern Serial Killer». Crime, Media, Culture. 5 (2): 1–21. doi:10.1177/1741659009335714. S2CID 11395289. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (1998). Contemporary Perspectives on Serial Murder. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-1421-1. Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (2000). Murder in America (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-2092-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Jensen, Sybil (2014). Top 10 American Serial Killers:Inside The Minds of Psychopaths. Haselton Media Group. ASIN B00KGDUJ2U.
    • Kiam, O.M. (2013). The Second One: A Serial Killer’s Account of His First Two Kills. Milford Press. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
    • Lane, Brian (2006). The New Encyclopedia of Serial Killers (2nd ed.). Facts on File. ISBN 978-0816061952. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Leyton, Elliott (1986). Hunting Humans: The Rise of the Modern Multiple Murderer. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-0-7710-5025-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Lukin, Grigory (2013). Madmen’s Manifestos: Chris Dorner, Charles Manson, Timothy McVeigh and others. ASIN B00BM5L2HW.
    • MacDonald, J. M (1963). «The threat to kill». American Journal of Psychiatry. American Psychiatric Association. 120 (2): 125–130. doi:10.1176/ajp.120.2.125. Archived from the original on March 3, 2014. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
    • Newitz, Annalee (2006). Pretend We’re Dead: Capitalist Monsters in American Pop Culture. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-3745-4. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Norris, Joel (1990). Serial Killers: The Growing Menace. Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0-09-971750-8.
    • Panzram, Carl (2002) [1970]. Gaddis, Thomas E.; Long, James O. (eds.). Killer: A Journal of Murder. Amok Books.
    • Ramsland, Katherine (2007). Inside the Minds of Healthcare Serial Killers: Why They Kill. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-99422-8. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 16, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Ramsland, Katherine; Karen Pepper. «Serial Killer Culture». Tru.tv Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 10, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
    • Reavill, Gil (2007). Aftermath, Inc.: Cleaning Up After CSI Goes Home. Gotham. ISBN 978-1-59240-296-0.
    • Robinson, Bryan (January 7, 2006). «Serial Killer Action Figures For Sale». ABC News. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
    • Rosner, Lisa (2010). The Anatomy Murders. Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4191-4.
    • Roy, Jody M. (2002). Love to Hate: America’s Obsession with Hatred and Violence. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12569-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rushby, Kevin (2003). Children of Kali: Through India in Search of Bandits, the Thug Cult, and the British Raj. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1418-3.
    • Seltzer, Mark (1998). Serial Killers: Death and Life in America’s Wound Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91481-9. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Wilson, Colin (1995). A Plague of Murder. Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-85487-249-4.
    • Yudofsky, Stuart C. (2005). Fatal Flaws: Navigating Destructive Relationships with People with Disorders of Personality and Character. American Psychiatric Publishing. ISBN 9781585626588. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.

    External links[edit]

    • Crime Library’s Serial Killer page
    • Serial Murder: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives for Investigators Official FBI publication
    • Dr. James Fallon: The Brains of Serial Killers (Talk)
    • Unknown Serial Killings

    An 1829 illustration of British serial killer William Burke murdering Margery Campbell.

    A serial killer is typically a person who murders three or more persons,[1] with the murders taking place over more than a month and including a significant period of time between them.[1][2] While most authorities set a threshold of three murders,[1] others extend it to four or lessen it to two.[3]

    Psychological gratification is the usual motive for serial killing, and many serial murders involve sexual contact with the victim. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) states that the motives of serial killers can include anger, thrill-seeking, financial gain, and attention seeking, and killings may be executed as such.[5] The victims may have something in common; for example, demographic profile, appearance, gender or race.[6] Often the FBI will focus on a particular pattern serial killers follow.[7] Based on this pattern, this will give key clues into finding the killer along with their motives.[8]

    Although a serial killer is a distinct classification that differs from that of a mass murderer, spree killer, or contract killer, there exist conceptual overlaps between them. Some debate exists on the specific criteria for each category, especially with regard to the distinction between spree killers and serial killers.[9]

    Etymology and definition[edit]

    The English term and concept of serial killer are commonly attributed to former FBI Special agent Robert Ressler, who used the term serial homicide in 1974 in a lecture at Police Staff Academy in Bramshill, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom.[10] Author Ann Rule postulates in her 2004 book Kiss Me, Kill Me, that the English-language credit for coining the term goes to LAPD detective Pierce Brooks, who created the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) system in 1985.[11]

    The German term and concept were coined by criminologist Ernst Gennat, who described Peter Kürten as a Serienmörder (‘serial-murderer’) in his article «Die Düsseldorfer Sexualverbrechen» (1930).[12] In his book, Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters (2004), criminal justice historian Peter Vronsky notes that while Ressler might have coined the English term «serial homicide» within the law in 1974, the terms serial murder and serial murderer appear in John Brophy’s book The Meaning of Murder (1966).[13] The Washington, D.C., newspaper Evening Star, in a 1967 review of the book:[14]

    There is the mass murderer, or what he [Brophy] calls the «serial» killer, who may be actuated by greed, such as insurance, or retention or growth of power, like the Medicis of Renaissance Italy, or Landru, the «bluebeard» of the World War I period, who murdered numerous wives after taking their money.

    Vronsky states that the term serial killing first entered into broader American popular usage when published in The New York Times in the spring of 1981, to describe Atlanta serial killer Wayne Williams. Subsequently, throughout the 1980s, the term was used again in the pages of The New York Times, one of the major national news publications of the United States, on 233 occasions. By the end of the 1990s, the use of the term had increased to 2,514 instances in the paper.[15]

    When defining serial killers, researchers generally use «three or more murders» as the baseline,[1] considering it sufficient to provide a pattern without being overly restrictive.[16] Independent of the number of murders, they need to have been committed at different times, and are usually committed in different places.[17] The lack of a cooling-off period (a significant break between the murders) marks the difference between a spree killer and a serial killer. The category has, however, been found to be of no real value to law enforcement, because of definitional problems relating to the concept of a «cooling-off period».[18] Cases of extended bouts of sequential killings over periods of weeks or months with no apparent «cooling off period» or «return to normality» have caused some experts to suggest a hybrid category of «spree-serial killer».[13]

    In Controversial Issues in Criminology, Fuller and Hickey write that «[t]he element of time involved between murderous acts is primary in the differentiation of serial, mass, and spree murderers», later elaborating that spree killers «will engage in the killing acts for days or weeks» while the «methods of murder and types of victims vary». Andrew Cunanan is given as an example of spree killing, while Charles Whitman is mentioned in connection with mass murder, and Jeffrey Dahmer with serial killing.[19]

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) defines serial killing as «a series of two or more murders, committed as separate events, usually, but not always, by one offender acting alone».[20] In 2005, the FBI hosted a multi-disciplinary symposium in San Antonio, Texas, which brought together 135 experts on serial murder from a variety of fields and specialties with the goal of identifying the commonalities of knowledge regarding serial murder. The group also settled on a definition of serial murder which FBI investigators widely accept as their standard: «The unlawful killing of two or more victims by the same offender(s) in separate events».[18] The definition does not consider the motivation for killing nor define a cooling-off period.

    History[edit]

    Juhani Aataminpoika, a Finnish serial killer also known as «Kerpeikkari» (which means ‘executioner’), was one of the most active serial killers of the 19th century, killing as many as 12 people in 1849 within five weeks before being caught.[21]

    A phantom brandishing a knife floats through a slum street

    The ‘Nemesis of Neglect’: Jack the Ripper depicted as a phantom stalking Whitechapel, and as an embodiment of social neglect, in a Punch cartoon of 1888.

    Historical criminologists suggest that there have been serial killers throughout history.[22] Some sources suggest that legends such as werewolves and vampires were inspired by medieval serial killers.[23] In Africa, there have been periodic outbreaks of murder by Lion and Leopard men.[24]

    Liu Pengli of China, nephew of the Han Emperor Jing, was made Prince of Jidong in the sixth year of the middle period of Jing’s reign (144 BC). According to the Chinese historian Sima Qian, he would «go out on marauding expeditions with 20 or 30 slaves or with young men who were in hiding from the law, murdering people and seizing their belongings for sheer sport». Although many of his subjects knew about these murders, it was not until the 29th year of his reign that the son of one of his victims finally sent a report to the emperor. Eventually, it was discovered that he had murdered at least 100 people. The officials of the court requested that Liu Pengli be executed; however, the emperor could not bear to have his own nephew killed, so Liu Pengli was made a commoner and banished.[25]

    In the 9th century (year 257 of the Islamic Calendar), «a strangler from Baghdad was apprehended. He had murdered a number of women and buried them in the house where he was living.»[26]

    In the 15th century, one of the wealthiest men in Europe and a former companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc, Gilles de Rais, was alleged to have sexually assaulted and killed peasant children, mainly boys, whom he had abducted from the surrounding villages and had taken to his castle.[27] It is estimated that his victims numbered between 140 and 800.[28]

    The Hungarian aristocrat Elizabeth Báthory, born into one of the wealthiest families in Transylvania, allegedly tortured and killed as many as 650 girls and young women before her arrest in 1610.[29]

    Members of the Thuggee cult in India may have murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840.[30] Thug Behram, a member of the cult, may have murdered as many as 931 victims.[31]

    In his 1886 book, Psychopathia Sexualis, psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing noted a case of a serial murderer in the 1870s, a Frenchman named Eusebius Pieydagnelle who had a sexual obsession with blood and confessed to murdering six people.[32]

    The unidentified killer Jack the Ripper, who has been called the first modern serial killer,[33] killed at least five women, and possibly more, in London in 1888. He was the subject of a massive manhunt and investigation by the Metropolitan Police, during which many modern criminal investigation techniques were pioneered. A large team of policemen conducted house-to-house inquiries, forensic material was collected and suspects were identified and traced.[34] Police surgeon Thomas Bond assembled one of the earliest character profiles of the offender.[35]

    The Ripper murders also marked an important watershed in the treatment of crime by journalists.[36] While not the first serial killer in history, Jack the Ripper’s case was the first to create a worldwide media frenzy.[36] The dramatic murders of financially destitute women in the midst of the wealth of London focused the media’s attention on the plight of the urban poor and gained coverage worldwide. Jack the Ripper has also been called the most infamous serial killer of all time, and his legend has spawned hundreds of theories on his real identity and many works of fiction.[37]

    H. H. Holmes was one of the first documented modern serial killers in the United States, responsible for the death of at least nine victims in the early 1890s. The case gained notoriety and wide publicity through possibly sensationalized accounts in William Randolph Hearst’s newspapers. At the same time in France, Joseph Vacher became known as «The French Ripper» after killing and mutilating 11 women and children. He was executed in 1898 after confessing to his crimes.[38][39]

    The majority of documented serial killers in the 20th century are from the United States.[40][41]

    Late 20th century[edit]

    The serial killing phenomenon in the United States was especially prominent from 1970 to 2000, which has been described as the «golden age of serial murder.»[42] The cause of the spike in serial killings has been attributed to urbanization, which put people in close proximity and offered anonymity.

    The number of active serial killers in the country peaked in 1989 and has been steadily trending downward since, coinciding with an overall decrease in crime in the United States since that time. The decline in serial killers has no known single cause but is attributed to a number of factors. Mike Aamodt, emeritus professor at Radford University in Virginia, attributes the decline in number of serial killings to less frequent use of parole, improved forensic technology, and people behaving more cautiously.[43] Causes for the general reduction in violent crime following the 1990s include increased incarceration in the United States, the end of the crack epidemic in the United States, and decreased lead exposure in early childhood.[44][45][46]

    Characteristics[edit]

    Some commonly found characteristics of serial killers include the following:

    • They may exhibit varying degrees of mental illness or psychopathy, which may contribute to their homicidal behavior.[47]
      • For example, someone who is mentally ill may have psychotic breaks that cause them to believe they are another person or are compelled to murder by other entities.[48]
      • Psychopathic behavior that is consistent with traits common to some serial killers include sensation seeking, a lack of remorse or guilt, impulsivity, the need for control, and predatory behavior.[18] Psychopaths can seem ‘normal’ and often quite charming, a state of adaptation that psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley called the «mask of sanity».[citation needed]
    • They were often abused—emotionally, physically, or sexually—by a family member.[6]
    • Serial killers may be more likely to engage in fetishism, partialism or necrophilia, which are paraphilias that involve a strong tendency to experience the object of erotic interest almost as if it were a physical representation of the symbolized body. Individuals engage in paraphilias which are organized along a continuum; participating in varying levels of fantasy perhaps by focusing on body parts (partialism), symbolic objects which serve as physical extensions of the body (fetishism), or the anatomical physicality of the human body; specifically regarding its inner parts and sexual organs (one example being necrophilia).[49]
    • A disproportionate number exhibit one, two, or all three of the Macdonald triad[dubious – discuss] of predictors of future violent behavior:
      • Many are fascinated with fire setting.[6]
      • They are involved in sadistic activity; especially in children who have not reached sexual maturity, this activity may take the form of torturing animals.[6]
      • More than 60 percent, or simply a large proportion, wet their beds beyond the age of 12.[6][50]
    • They were frequently bullied or socially isolated as children.[6] For example, Henry Lee Lucas was ridiculed as a child and later cited the mass rejection by his peers as a cause for his hatred of everyone. Kenneth Bianchi was teased as a child because he urinated in his pants, suffered twitching, and as a teenager was ignored by his peers.[6]
    • Some were involved in petty crimes, such as fraud, theft, vandalism, or similar offenses.[51]
    • Often, they have trouble staying employed and tend to work in menial jobs. The FBI, however, states, «Serial murderers often seem normal; have families and/or a steady job.»[18] Other sources state they often come from unstable families.[6]
    • Studies have suggested that serial killers generally have an average or low-average IQ, although they are often described, and perceived, as possessing IQs in the above-average range.[6][18][52] A sample of 202 IQs of serial killers had a median IQ of 89.[53] Some organized serial killers have a slightly higher IQ score averaging a little bit over 99, to where disorganized killers average just under 93 in theirs. The average IQ of serial killers is 94.7.[54]

    There are exceptions to these criteria, however. For example, Harold Shipman was a successful professional (a General Practitioner working for the NHS). He was considered a pillar of the local community; he even won a professional award for a children’s asthma clinic and was interviewed by Granada Television’s World in Action on ITV.[55] Dennis Nilsen was an ex-soldier turned civil servant and trade unionist who had no previous criminal record when arrested. Neither was known to have exhibited many of the tell-tale signs.[56] Vlado Taneski, a crime reporter, was a career journalist who was caught after a series of articles he wrote gave clues that he had murdered people.[57] Russell Williams was a successful and respected career Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel who was convicted of murdering two women, along with fetish burglaries and rapes.[58]

    Juana Barraza, also known as the Old Lady Killer, was a professional wrestler. From the years of 1998-2006 she committed over 12 murders, all of which were of older women. She would rob them after knocking on their door pretending to be a government worker. This stems from hatred and resentment from her mother. [59]

    Development[edit]

    Many serial killers have faced similar problems in their childhood development.[60] Hickey’s Trauma Control Model explains how early childhood trauma can set the child up for deviant behavior in adulthood; the child’s environment (either their parents or society) is the dominant factor determining whether or not the child’s behavior escalates into homicidal activity.[61]

    Family, or lack thereof, is the most prominent part of a child’s development because it is what the child can identify with on a regular basis.[62] «The serial killer is no different from any other individual who is instigated to seek approval from parents, sexual partners, or others.»[63] This need for approval is what influences children to attempt to develop social relationships with their family and peers. «The quality of their attachments to parents and other members of the family is critical to how these children relate to and value other members of society.»[64]

    Wilson and Seaman (1990) conducted a study on incarcerated serial killers, and what they concluded was the most influential factor that contributed to their homicidal activity.[65] Almost all of the serial killers in the study had experienced some sort of environmental problems during their childhood, such as a broken home caused by divorce, or a lack of a parental figure to discipline the child. Nearly half of the serial killers had experienced some type of physical or sexual abuse, and more of them had experienced emotional neglect.[64]

    German serial killer Fritz Haarmann with police detectives, November 1924

    When a parent has a drug or alcohol problem, the attention in the household is on the parents rather than the child. This neglect of the child leads to the lowering of their self-esteem and helps develop a fantasy world in which they are in control. Hickey’s Trauma Control Model supports how parental neglect can facilitate deviant behavior, especially if the child sees substance abuse in action.[66] This then leads to disposition (the inability to attach), which can further lead to homicidal behavior, unless the child finds a way to develop substantial relationships and fight the label they receive. If a child receives no support from anyone, then they are unlikely to recover from the traumatic event in a positive way. As stated by E. E. Maccoby, «the family has continued to be seen as a major—perhaps the major—arena for socialization».[67]

    Chromosomal makeup[edit]

    There have been studies looking into the possibility that an abnormality with one’s chromosomes could be the trigger for serial killers.[68] Two serial killers, Bobby Joe Long and Richard Speck, came to attention for reported chromosomal abnormalities. Long had an extra X chromosome.[69] Speck was erroneously reported to have an extra Y chromosome; in fact, his karyotype was performed twice and was normal each time.[70] While attempts have been made to link the XYY karyotype to violence, including serial murder, research has consistently found little or no association between violent criminal behaviour and an extra Y chromosome.[71]

    Fantasy[edit]

    Children who do not have the power to control the mistreatment they suffer sometimes create a new reality to which they can escape. This new reality becomes their fantasy that they have total control of and becomes part of their daily existence. In this fantasy world, their emotional development is guided and maintained. According to Garrison (1996), «the child becomes sociopathic because the normal development of the concepts of right and wrong and empathy towards others is retarded because the child’s emotional and social development occurs within his self-centered fantasies. A person can do no wrong in his own world and the pain of others is of no consequence when the purpose of the fantasy world is to satisfy the needs of one person» (Garrison, 1996). Boundaries between fantasy and reality are lost and fantasies turn to dominance, control, sexual conquest, and violence, eventually leading to murder. Fantasy can lead to the first step in the process of a dissociative state, which, in the words of Stephen Giannangelo, «allows the serial killer to leave the stream of consciousness for what is, to him, a better place».[72]

    Criminologist Jose Sanchez reports, «the young criminal you see today is more detached from his victim, more ready to hurt or kill. The lack of empathy for their victims among young criminals is just one symptom of a problem that afflicts the whole society.»[62] Lorenzo Carcaterra, author of Gangster (2001), explains how potential criminals are labeled by society, which can then lead to their offspring also developing in the same way through the cycle of violence. The ability for serial killers to appreciate the mental life of others is severely compromised, presumably leading to their dehumanization of others.[73]

    This process may be considered an expression of the intersubjectivity associated with a cognitive deficit regarding the capability to make sharp distinctions between other people and inanimate objects. For these individuals, objects can appear to possess animistic or humanistic power while people are perceived as objects.[73] Before he was executed, serial killer Ted Bundy stated media violence and pornography had stimulated and increased his need to commit homicide, although this statement was made during last-ditch efforts to appeal his death sentence.[64] There are exceptions to the typical fantasy patterns of serial killers, as in the case of Dennis Rader, who was a loving family man and the leader of his church.[citation needed]

    Organized, disorganized, and mixed[edit]

    Ted Bundy in custody, Florida, United States, July 1978 (State Archives of Florida)

    The FBI’s Crime Classification Manual places serial killers into three categories: organized, disorganized, and mixed (i.e., offenders who exhibit organized and disorganized characteristics).[74][75] Some killers descend from being organized into disorganized as their killings continue,[76] as in the case of psychological decompensation or overconfidence due to having evaded capture, or vice versa, as when a previously disorganized killer identifies one or more specific aspects of the act of killing as their source of gratification and develops a modus operandi that focuses on them.[citation needed]

    Organized serial killers often plan their crimes methodically, usually abducting victims, killing them in one place and disposing of them in another. They often lure the victims with ploys appealing to their sense of sympathy. Others specifically target prostitutes, who are likely to go voluntarily with a stranger. These killers maintain a high degree of control over the crime scene and usually have a solid knowledge of forensic science that enables them to cover their tracks, such as burying the body or weighing it down and sinking it in a river. They follow their crimes in the news media carefully and often take pride in their actions as if it were all a grand project.[77]

    Often, organized killers have social and other interpersonal skills sufficient to enable them to develop both personal and romantic relationships, friends and lovers and sometimes even attract and maintain a spouse and sustain a family including children. Among serial killers, those of this type are in the event of their capture most likely to be described by acquaintances as kind and unlikely to hurt anyone. Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy are examples of organized serial killers.[77] In general, the IQs of organized serial killers tend to be normal range, with a mean of 98.7.[78]

    Disorganized serial killers are usually far more impulsive, often committing their murders with a random weapon available at the time, and usually do not attempt to hide the body. They are likely to be unemployed, a loner, or both, with very few friends. They often turn out to have a history of mental illness, and their modus operandi (M.O.) or lack thereof is often marked by excessive violence and sometimes necrophilia or sexual violence.[79] Disorganized serial killers have been found to have a lower mean IQ than organized serial killers, at 89.4. Mixed serial killers, with both organized and disorganized traits, have an average IQ of 100.9, but a low sample size.[78]

    Medical professionals[edit]

    Some people with a pathological interest in the power of life and death tend to be attracted to medical professions or acquiring such a job.[80] These kinds of killers are sometimes referred to as «angels of death»[81] or angels of mercy. Medical professionals will kill their patients for money, for a sense of sadistic pleasure, for a belief that they are «easing» the patient’s pain, or simply «because they can».[82] Perhaps the most prolific of these was the British doctor Harold Shipman. Another such killer was nurse Jane Toppan, who admitted during her murder trial that she was sexually aroused by death.[83] She would administer a drug mixture to patients she chose as her victims, lie in bed with them and hold them close to her body as they died.[83]

    Another medical professional serial killer is Genene Jones. It is believed she killed 11 to 46 infants and children while working at Bexar County Medical Center Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, United States.[84] She is currently serving a 99-year sentence for the murder of Chelsea McClellan and the attempted murder of Rolando Santos,[84] and became eligible for parole in 2017 due to a law in Texas at the time of her sentencing to reduce prison overcrowding.[84] A similar case occurred in Britain in 1991, where nurse Beverley Allitt killed four children at the hospital where she worked, attempted to kill three more, and injured a further six over the course of two months.

    A 21st-century example is Canadian nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer, who murdered elderly patients in the nursing homes where she worked. William George Davis is another hospital nurse who was sentenced to death in Texas for the murdering of four patients.[85]

    Female[edit]

    Highway prostitute Aileen Wuornos killed seven men in Florida between 1989 and 1990

    Female serial killers are rare compared to their male counterparts.[86] Sources suggest that female serial killers represented less than one in every six known serial murderers in the United States between 1800 and 2004 (64 females from a total of 416 known offenders), or that around 15% of U.S. serial killers have been women, with a collective number of victims between 427 and 612.[87] The authors of Lethal Ladies, Amanda L. Farrell, Robert D. Keppel, and Victoria B. Titterington, state that «the Justice Department indicated 36 female serial killers have been active over the course of the last century.»[88] According to The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, there is evidence that 16% of all serial killers are women.[89]

    Kelleher and Kelleher (1998) created several categories to describe female serial killers. They used the classifications of black widow, angel of death, sexual predator, revenge, profit or crime, team killer, question of sanity, unexplained, and unsolved. In using these categories, they observed that most women fell into the categories of the black widow or team killer.[90] Although motivations for female serial killers can include attention seeking, addiction, or the result of psychopathological behavioral factors,[91] female serial killers are commonly categorized as murdering men for material gain, usually being emotionally close to their victims,[86] and generally needing to have a relationship with the victim,[90] hence the traditional cultural image of the «black widow».

    The methods that female serial killers use for murder are frequently covert or low-profile, such as murder by poison (the preferred choice for killing).[92] Other methods used by female serial killers include shootings (used by 20%), suffocation (16%), stabbing (11%), and drowning (5%).[91] They commit killings in specific places, such as their home or a health-care facility, or at different locations within the same city or state.[93] A notable exception to the typical characteristics of female serial killers is Aileen Wuornos,[94] who killed outdoors instead of at home, used a gun instead of poison, and killed strangers instead of friends or family.[95] One «analysis of 86 female serial killers from the United States found that the victims tended to be spouses, children or the elderly».[90] Other studies indicate that since 1975, increasingly strangers are marginally the most preferred victim of female serial killers,[96] or that only 26% of female serial killers kill for material gain only.[97] Sources state that each killer will have her own proclivities, needs and triggers.[98][90] A review of the published literature on female serial murder stated that «sexual or sadistic motives are believed to be extremely rare in female serial murderers, and psychopathic traits and histories of childhood abuse have been consistently reported in these women.»[90]

    A study by Eric W. Hickey (2010) of 64 female serial killers in the United States indicated that sexual activity was one of several motives in 10% of the cases, enjoyment in 11% and control in 14% and that 51% of all U.S. female serial killers murdered at least one woman and 31% murdered at least one child.[99] In other cases, women have been involved as an accomplice with a male serial killer as a part of a serial killing team.[98][90] A 2015 study published in The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology found that the most common motive for female serial killers was for financial gain and almost 40% of them had experienced some sort of mental illness.[100]

    Peter Vronsky in Female Serial Killers (2007) maintains that female serial killers today often kill for the same reason males do: as a means of expressing rage and control. He suggests that sometimes the theft of the victims’ property by the female «black widow» type serial killer appears to be for material gain, but really is akin to a male serial killer’s collecting of totems (souvenirs) from the victim as a way of exerting continued control over the victim and reliving it.[101] By contrast, Hickey states that although popular perception sees «black widow» female serial killers as something of the Victorian past, in his statistical study of female serial killer cases reported in the United States since 1826, approximately 75% occurred since 1950.[102]

    Elizabeth Báthory is sometimes cited as the most prolific female serial killer in all of history. Formally countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed (Báthory Erzsébet in Hungarian, August 7, 1560 – August 21, 1614), she was a countess from the renowned Báthory family. Before her husband’s death, Elizabeth took great pleasure in torturing the staff, by jamming pins under the servant’s fingernails or stripping servants and throwing them into the snow.[103] After her husband’s death, she and four collaborators were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and young women, with one witness attributing to them over 600 victims, though the number for which they were convicted was 80. Elizabeth herself was neither tried nor convicted. In 1610, however, she was imprisoned in the Csejte Castle, where she remained bricked in a set of rooms until her death four years later.[104]

    A 2010 article by Perri and Lichtenwald addressed some of the misconceptions concerning female criminality.[105] In the article, Perri and Lichtenwald analyze the current research regarding female psychopathy, including case studies of female psychopathic killers featuring Münchausen syndrome by proxy, cesarean section homicide, fraud detection homicide, female kill teams, and a female serial killer.[105]

    Juvenile[edit]

    Juvenile serial killers are rare. There are three main categories that juvenile serial killers can fit into: primary, maturing, and secondary killers. There have been studies done to compare and contrast these three groups and to discover similarities and differences between them.[106] Although these types of serial killers are less common, oftentimes adult serial killers may make their debut at an early age and it can be an opportunity for researchers to study what factors brought about the behavior. While juvenile serial killers are rare, the youngest felon on death row is a juvenile serial killer named Harvey Miguel Robinson who was 17 at the time of his crimes and 18 at the time of his arrest.[107][108]

    Ethnicity and demographics in the United States[edit]

    The racial demographics regarding serial killers are often subject to debate. In the United States, the majority of reported and investigated serial killers are white males, from a lower-to-middle-class background, usually in their late 20s to early 30s.[6][18] However, there are African American, Asian, and Hispanic (of any race) serial killers as well, and, according to the FBI, based on percentages of the U.S. population, whites are not more likely than other races to be serial killers.[18] Criminal profiler Pat Brown says serial killers are usually reported as white because serial killers usually target victims of their own race, and argues the media typically focuses on «All-American» white and pretty female victims who were the targets of white male offenders; that crimes among minority offenders in urban communities, where crime rates are higher, are under-investigated; and that minority serial killers likely exist at the same ratios as white serial killers for the population. She believes that the myth that serial killers are always white might have become «truth» in some research fields due to the over-reporting of white serial killers in the media.[109]

    According to some sources, the percentage of serial killers who are African American is estimated to be between 13% and 22%.[110][111] Another study has shown that 16% of serial killers are African American, what author Maurice Godwin describes as a «sizeable portion».[112] A 2014 Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database annual statistics report indicated that for the decades 1900–2010, the percentage of white serial killers was 52.1% while the percentage of African American serial killers was 40.3%.[78]

    In a 2005 article Anthony Walsh, professor of criminal justice at Boise State University, argued a review of post-WWII serial killings in America finds that the prevalence of non-white serial killers has typically been drastically underestimated in both professional research literature and the mass media. As a paradigmatic case of this media double standard, Walsh cites news reporting on white killer Gary M. Heidnik and African-American killer Harrison Graham. Both men were residents of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; both imprisoned, tortured, and killed several women; and both were arrested only months apart in 1987. «Heidnik received widespread national attention, became the subject of books and television shows, and served as a model for the fictitious Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs«, writes Walsh, while «Graham received virtually no media attention outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, despite having been convicted of four more murders than Heidnik».[113]

    Outside the United States[edit]

    There is not much research about serial homicide in non-Western countries, or outside the U.S.

    In one study of serial homicide in South Africa, many patterns were similar to established patterns in the U.S., with some exceptions: no offenders were female, offenders were lower educated than in the U.S., and both victims and offenders were predominantly black.[114]

    There are many more serial killers outside of the United States. Most notably is Jack The Ripper, a serial killer from the United Kingdom who was active in the autumn of 1888. He killed 5 women but it is believed that he killed more than that.[115]

    Another notable non-American serial killer  is Pedro Lopez, a serial killer from South America. He killed a minimum of 110 young girls between 1969 and 1980. However, he claims that the number is over 300. He was released from a mental facility in 1998 and his whereabouts are still unknown. He is commonly nicknamed the Monster of the Andes.

    A final notable non-American serial is Luis Garavito who was a serial killer in Columbia. Garavito would kill and torture boys using various disguises. He murdered around 140 boys ranging in ages from 8 to 16. He would dump his victims’ bodies in mass graves.[116]

    Motives[edit]

    According to psychiatric reports, Jukka Lindholm, the so-called «serial strangler» reportedly admired the primordial, violent manhood of his teenage years.[117]

    The motives of serial killers are generally placed into four categories: visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control; however, the motives of any given killer may display considerable overlap among these categories.[118]

    Visionary[edit]

    Visionary serial killers suffer from psychotic breaks with reality,[119] sometimes believing they are another person or are compelled to murder by entities such as the Devil or God.[120] The two most common subgroups are «demon mandated» and «God mandated».[48]

    Herbert Mullin believed the American casualties in the Vietnam War were preventing California from experiencing the Big One. As the war wound down, Mullin claimed his father instructed him via telepathy to raise the number of «human sacrifices to nature» to delay a catastrophic earthquake that would plunge California into the ocean.[121] David Berkowitz («Son of Sam») may also be an example of a visionary serial killer, having claimed a demon transmitted orders through his neighbor’s dog and instructed him to commit murder.[122] Berkowitz later described those claims as a hoax, as originally concluded by psychiatrist David Abrahamsen.[123]

    Mission-oriented[edit]

    Mission-oriented killers typically justify their acts as «ridding the world» of certain types of people perceived as undesirable, such as the homeless, ex-cons, homosexuals, drug users, prostitutes, or people of different ethnicity or religion; however, they are generally not psychotic.[124] Some see themselves as attempting to change society, often to cure a societal ill.[125]

    An example of a mission-oriented killer would be Joseph Paul Franklin, an American white supremacist who exclusively targeted Jewish, biracial, and African-American individuals for the purpose of inciting a «race war».[126][127]

    Hedonistic[edit]

    This type of serial killer seeks thrills and derives pleasure and satisfaction from killing, seeing people as expendable means to this goal. Forensic psychologists have identified three subtypes of the hedonistic killer: «lust», «thrill», and «comfort».[128]

    Lust[edit]

    Sex is the primary motive of lust killers, whether or not the victims are dead, and fantasy plays a large role in their killings.[129] Their sexual gratification depends on the amount of torture and mutilation they perform on their victims. The sexual serial murderer has a psychological need to have absolute control, dominance, and power over their victims, and the infliction of torture, pain, and ultimately death is used in an attempt to fulfill their need.[130] They usually use weapons that require close contact with the victims, such as knives or hands. As lust killers continue with their murders, the time between killings decreases or the required level of stimulation increases, sometimes both.[131]

    Kenneth Bianchi, one of the «Hillside Stranglers», murdered women and girls of different ages, races, and appearance because his sexual urges required different types of stimulation and increasing intensity.[132] Jeffrey Dahmer searched for his perfect fantasy lover—beautiful, submissive and eternal. As his desire increased, he experimented with drugs, alcohol, and exotic sex. His increasing need for stimulation was demonstrated by the dismemberment of victims, whose heads and genitals he preserved, and by his attempts to create a «living zombie» under his control (by pouring acid into a hole drilled into the victim’s skull).[133]

    Dahmer once said, «Lust played a big part of it. Control and lust. Once it happened the first time, it just seemed like it had control of my life from there on in. The killing was just a means to an end. That was the least satisfactory part. I didn’t enjoy doing that. That’s why I tried to create living zombies with acid and the drill.» He further elaborated on this, also saying, «I wanted to see if it was possible to make—again, it sounds really gross—uh, zombies, people that would not have a will of their own, but would follow my instructions without resistance. So after that, I started using the drilling technique.»[134] He experimented with cannibalism to «ensure his victims would always be a part of him».[135]

    Thrill[edit]

    The primary motive of a thrill killer is to induce pain or terror in their victims, which provides stimulation and excitement for the killer.[129] They seek the adrenaline rush provided by hunting and killing victims. Thrill killers murder only for the kill; usually, the attack is not prolonged, and there is no sexual aspect. Usually, the victims are strangers, although the killer may have followed them for a period of time. Thrill killers can abstain from killing for long periods of time and become more successful at killing as they refine their murder methods. Many attempt to commit the perfect crime and believe they will not be caught.[136]

    Robert Hansen took his victims to a secluded area, where he would let them loose and then hunt and kill them.[137] In one of his letters to San Francisco Bay Area newspapers in San Francisco, California, the Zodiac Killer wrote «[killing] gives me the most thrilling experience it is even better than getting your rocks off with a girl».[138] Carl Watts was described by a surviving victim as «excited and hyper and clappin’ and just making noises like he was excited, that this was gonna be fun» during the 1982 attack.[139] Slashing, stabbing, hanging, drowning, asphyxiating, and strangling were among the ways Watts killed.[140]

    Comfort (profit)[edit]

    Material gain and a comfortable lifestyle are the primary motives of comfort killers.[141] Usually, the victims are family members and close acquaintances.[129] After a murder, a comfort killer will usually wait for a period of time before killing again to allow any suspicions by family or authorities to subside. They often use poison, most notably arsenic, to kill their victims. Female serial killers are often comfort killers, although not all comfort killers are female.[142]

    Dorothea Puente killed her tenants for their Social Security checks and buried them in the backyard of her home.[143] H. H. Holmes killed for insurance and business profits.[144] Puente and Holmes had previous records of crimes such as theft, fraud, non-payment of debts, embezzlement and others of a similar nature. Dorothea Puente was finally arrested on a parole violation, having been on parole for a previous fraud conviction.[145]

    Contract killers («hitmen») may exhibit serial killers traits, but are generally not classified as such because of third-party killing objectives and detached financial and emotional incentives.[146][147][148] Nevertheless, there are occasionally individuals that are labeled as both a hitman and a serial killer.[149]

    Power/control[edit]

    The main objective for this type of serial killer is to gain and exert power over their victim. Such killers are sometimes abused as children, leaving them with feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy as adults. Many power- or control-motivated killers sexually abuse their victims, but they differ from hedonistic killers in that rape is not motivated by lust (as it would be with a lust murder) but as simply another form of dominating the victim.[150] Ted Bundy is an example of a power/control-oriented serial killer. He traveled around the United States seeking women to control.[151]

    Media influences[edit]

    Many serial killers claim that a violent culture influenced them to commit murders. During his final interview, Ted Bundy stated that hardcore pornography was responsible for his actions. Others idolise figures for their deeds or perceived vigilante justice, such as Peter Kürten, who idolized Jack the Ripper, or John Wayne Gacy and Ed Kemper, who both idolized the actor John Wayne.[6]

    Killers who have a strong desire for fame or to be renowned for their actions desire media attention as a way of validating and spreading their crimes; fear is also a component here, as some serial killers enjoy causing fear. An example is Dennis Rader, who sought attention from the press during his murder spree.[152]

    In popular culture[edit]

    Many movies, books, and documentaries have been created, detailing serial killers’ lives and crimes. For example, the biographical films Ted Bundy (2002) and Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile focuses on serial killer Ted Bundy’s personal life in college, leading up to his execution, and Dahmer (2002) tells the story of Jeffrey Dahmer. A Netflix series on the life of Jeffrey Dahmer and his victims was released in 2022.

    Serial killers are also portrayed in fictional media, oftentimes as having substantial intelligence and looking for difficult targets, despite the contradiction with the psychological profile of serial killers.[153]

    Theories[edit]

    Biological and sociological[edit]

    Theories for why certain people commit serial murder have been advanced. Some theorists believe the reasons are biological, suggesting serial killers are born, not made, and that their violent behavior is a result of abnormal brain activity. Holmes believe that «until a reliable sample can be obtained and tested, there is no scientific statement that can be made concerning the exact role of biology as a determining factor of a serial killer personality.»[154]

    The «Fractured Identity Syndrome» (FIS) is a merging of Charles Cooley’s «looking glass self» and Erving Goffman’s «virtual» and «actual social identity» theories. The FIS suggests a social event, or series of events, during one’s childhood results in a fracturing of the personality of the serial killer. The term «fracture» is defined as a small breakage of the personality which is often not visible to the outside world and is only felt by the killer.[155]

    «Social Process Theory» has also been suggested as an explanation for serial murder. Social process theory states that offenders may turn to crime due to peer pressure, family and friends. Criminal behavior is a process of interaction with social institutions, in which everyone has the potential for criminal behavior.[156] A lack of family structure and identity could also be a cause leading to serial murder traits. A child used as a scapegoat will be deprived of their capacity to feel guilt. Displaced anger could result in animal torture, as identified in the Macdonald triad, and a further lack of basic identity.[157]

    Military[edit]

    A dishonorably discharged Marine, Charles Ng participated in the kidnapping, sadistic torture, rape, and murder of numerous victims

    The «military theory» has been proposed as an explanation for why serial murderers kill, as some serial murderers have served in the military or related fields. According to Castle and Hensley, 7% of the serial killers studied had military experience.[158] This figure may be a proportional under-representation when compared to the number of military veterans in a nation’s total population. For example, according to the United States census for the year 2000, military veterans comprised 12.7% of the U.S. population;[159] in England, it was estimated in 2007 that military veterans comprised 9.1% of the population.[160] Though by contrast, about 2.5% of the population of Canada in 2006 consisted of military veterans.[161][162]

    There are two theories that can be used to study the correlation between serial killing and military training: Applied learning theory states that serial killing can be learned. The military is training for higher kill rates from servicemen while training the soldiers to be desensitized to taking a human life.[163] Social learning theory can be used when soldiers get praised and accommodated for killing. They learn or believe that they learn, that it is acceptable to kill because they were praised for it in the military. Serial killers want accreditation for the work that they have done.[164]

    In both military and serial killing, the offender or the soldier may become desensitized to killing as well as compartmentalized; the soldiers do not see enemy personnel as «human» and neither do serial killers see their victims as humans.[165] The theories do not imply that military institutions make a deliberate effort to produce serial killers; to the contrary, all military personnel are trained to recognize when, where, and against whom it is appropriate to use deadly force, which starts with the basic Law of Land Warfare, taught during the initial training phase, and may include more stringent policies for military personnel in law enforcement or security.[166]

    Investigation[edit]

    FBI: Issues and practices[edit]

    In 2008, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published a handbook titled Serial Murder which was the product of a symposium held in 2005 to bring together the many issues surrounding serial murder, including its investigation.[167]

    Identification[edit]

    According to the FBI, identifying one, or multiple, murders as being the work of a serial killer is the first challenge an investigation faces, especially if the victim(s) come from a marginalized or high-risk population and is normally linked through forensic or behavioral evidence (FBI 2008).[167] Should the cases cross multiple jurisdictions, the law enforcement system in the United States is fragmented and thus not configured to detect multiple similar murders across a large geographic area (Egger 1998).[168] Ted Bundy was particularly famous for such geographic exploitations. He used his knowledge about the lack of communication between multiple jurisdictions to avoid arrest and detection.[169] The FBI suggests utilizing databases and increasing interdepartmental communication. Keppel (1989)[170] suggests holding multi-jurisdictional conferences regularly to compare cases giving departments a greater chance to detect linked cases and overcome linkage blindness.

    One such collaboration, the Radford/FGCU Serial Killer Database Project[171] was proposed at the 2012 FDIAI Annual Conference.[172] Utilizing Radford’s Serial Killer Database as a starting point, the new collaboration,[173] hosted by FGCU Justice Studies, has invited and is working in conjunction with other universities to maintain and expand the scope of the database to also include spree and mass murders. Utilizing over 170 data points, multiple-murderer methodology and victimology; researchers and Law Enforcement Agencies can build case studies and statistical profiles to further research the Who, What, Why and How of these types of crimes.

    Leadership[edit]

    Leadership, or administration, should play a small or virtually non-existent role in the actual investigation past assigning knowledgeable or experienced homicide investigators to lead positions. The administration’s role is not to run the investigation but to establish and reaffirm the primary goal of catching the serial killer, as well as provide support for the investigators. The FBI (2008) suggests completing Memorandums of Understanding to facilitate support and commitment of resources from different jurisdictions to an investigation.[167] Egger (1998) takes this one step further and suggests completing mutual aid pacts, which are written agreements to provide support to each other in a time of need, with surrounding jurisdictions. Doing this in advance would save time and resources that could be used on the investigation.[168]

    Organization[edit]

    The structural organization of an investigation is key to its success, as demonstrated by the investigation of Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Once a serial murder case was established, a task force was created to track down and arrest the offender. Over the course of the investigation, for various reasons, the task force’s organization was radically changed and reorganized multiple times – at one point including more than 50 full-time personnel, and at another, only a single investigator. Eventually, what led to the end of the investigation was a conference of 25 detectives organized to share ideas to solve the case.[174]

    The FBI handbook provides a description of how a task force should be organized but offers no additional options on how to structure the investigation. While it appears advantageous to have a full-time staff assigned to a serial murder investigation, it can become prohibitively expensive. For example, the Green River Task Force cost upwards of $2 million per year,[174] and as was witnessed with the Green River Killer investigation, other strategies can prevail where a task force fails.

    A common strategy, already employed by many departments for other reasons, is the conference, in which departments get together and focus on a specific set of topics.[175] With serial murders, the focus is typically on unsolved cases, with evidence thought to be related to the case at hand.

    Similar to a conference is an information clearing-house in which a jurisdiction with a suspected serial murder case collects all of its evidence and actively seeks data that may be related from other jurisdictions.[175] By collecting all of the related information into one place, they provide a central point in which it can be organized and easily accessed by other jurisdictions working toward the goal of arresting an offender and ending the murders.

    Already mentioned was the task force,[175] FBI 2008,[167] Keppel 1989[170] which provides for a flexible, organized, framework for jurisdictions depending on the needs of the investigation. Unfortunately due to the need to commit resources (manpower, money, equipment, etc.) for long periods of time it can be an unsustainable option.

    In the case of the investigation of Aileen Wournos, the Marion County Sheriff coordinated multiple agencies without any written or formal agreement.[168] While not a specific strategy for a serial murder investigation, this is certainly a best practice in so far as the agencies were able to work easily together toward a common goal.

    Finally, once a serial murder investigation has been identified, the use of an FBI Rapid Response Team can assist both experienced and inexperienced jurisdictions in setting up a task force. This is completed by organizing and delegating jobs, by compiling and analyzing clues, and by establishing communication between the parties involved.[168]

    Resource augmentation[edit]

    During the course of a serial murder investigation, it may become necessary to call in additional resources; the FBI defines this as Resource Augmentation. Within the structure of a task force, the addition of a resource should be thought of as either long-term or short-term. If the task force’s framework is expanded to include the new resource, then it should be permanent and not removed. For short-term needs, such as setting up roadblocks or canvassing a neighborhood, additional resources should be called in on a short-term basis. The decision of whether resources are needed short or long term should be left to the lead investigator and facilitated by the administration (FBI 2008).[167]

    The confusion and counter productiveness created by changing the structure of a task force mid investigation is illustrated by the way the Green River Task Force’s staffing and structure was changed multiple times throughout the investigation. This made an already complicated situation more difficult, resulting in the delay or loss of information, which allowed Ridgway to continue killing (Guillen 2007).[174] The FBI model does not take into account that permanently expanding a task force, or investigative structure, may not be possible due to cost or personnel availability. Egger (1998) offers several alternative strategies including; using investigative consultants, or experienced staff to augment an investigative team. Not all departments have investigators experienced in serial murder and by temporarily bringing in consultants, they can educate a department to a level of competence then step out. This would reduce the initially established framework of the investigation team and save the department the cost of retaining the consultants until the conclusion of the investigation.[168]

    Communication[edit]

    The FBI handbook (2008)[167] and Keppel (1989)[170] both stress communication as paramount. The difference is that the FBI handbook (2008)[167] concentrates primarily on communication within a task force while Keppel (1989)[170] makes getting information out to and allowing information to be passed back from patrol officers a priority. The FBI handbook (2008)[167] suggests having daily e-mail or in-person briefings for all staff involved in the investigation and providing periodic summary briefings to patrol officers and managers. Looking back on a majority of serial murderer arrests, most are exercised by patrol officers in the course of their everyday duties and unrelated to the ongoing serial murder investigation (Egger 1998,[168] Keppel 1989).[170]

    Keppel (1989)[170] provides examples of Larry Eyler, who was arrested during a traffic stop for a parking violation, and Ted Bundy, who was arrested during a traffic stop for operating a stolen vehicle. In each case, it was uniformed officers, not directly involved in the investigation, who knew what to look for and took the direct action that stopped the killer. By providing up-to-date (as opposed to periodic) briefings and information to officers on the street the chances of catching a serial killer, or finding solid leads, are increased.

    Data management[edit]

    A serial murder investigation generates staggering amounts of data, all of which needs to be reviewed and analyzed. A standardized method of documenting and distributing information must be established and investigators must be allowed time to complete reports while investigating leads and at the end of a shift (FBI 2008).[167] When the mechanism for data management is insufficient, leads are not only lost or buried but the investigation can be hindered and new information can become difficult to obtain or become corrupted.[174]

    During the Green River Killer investigation, reporters would often find and interview possible victims or witnesses ahead of investigators. The understaffed investigation was unable to keep up the information flow, which prevented them from promptly responding to leads. To make matters worse, investigators believed that the journalists, untrained in interviewing victims or witnesses of crimes, would corrupt the information and result in unreliable leads (Guillen 2007).[174]

    Memorabilia[edit]

    Notorious and infamous serial killers number in the thousands[176] and a subculture revolves around their legacies. That subculture includes the collection, sale, and display of serial killer memorabilia, dubbed «murderabilia» by Andrew Kahan, one of the best-known opponents of collectors of serial killer remnants. Kahan is the director of the Mayor’s Crime Victims Office in Houston. He is backed by the families of murder victims and «Son of Sam laws» existing in some states that prevent murderers from profiting from the publicity generated by their crimes.[177]

    Such memorabilia includes the paintings, writings, and poems of these killers.[178] Recently, marketing has capitalized even more upon interest in serial killers with the rise of various merchandise such as trading cards, action figures, and books such as The Serial Killer Files: The Who, What, Where, How, and Why of the World’s Most Terrifying Murderers by Harold Schechter, and The A-Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers by Schecter and David Everitt. Some serial killers attain celebrity status in the way they acquire fans and may have previous personal possessions auctioned off on websites like eBay. A few examples of this are Ed Gein’s 150-pound stolen gravestone and Bobby Joe Long’s sunglasses.[179]

    See also[edit]

    • List of serial killers before 1900
    • List of serial killers by country
    • List of serial killers by number of victims
    • List of songs about or referencing serial killers
    • Offender profiling
    • Serial crime
    • Serial rapist
    • Son of Sam law

    Footnotes[edit]

    1. ^ a b c d
      • Holmes & Holmes 1998, Serial murder is the killing of three or more people over a period of more than 30 days, with a significant cooling-off period between the murders The baseline number of three victims appears to be most common among those who are the academic authorities in the field. The time frame also appears to be an agreed-upon component of the definition.
      • Petherick 2005, p. 190 Three killings seem to be required in the most popular definition of serial killing since they are enough to provide a pattern within the killings without being overly restrictive.
      • Flowers 2012, p. 195 in general, most experts on serial murder require that a minimum of three murders be committed at different times and usually different places for a person to qualify as a serial killer.
      • Schechter 2012, p. 73 Most experts seem to agree, however, that to qualify as a serial killer, an individual has to slay a minimum of three unrelated victims.

    2. ^ Burkhalter Chmelir 2003, p. 1.
    3. ^ Hough & McCorkle 2016, p. […] Serial killing has been defined by different researchers or groups as either two or more, three or more or even four or more people killed over at least one month with a cooling off period between each of the murders.
    4. ^ Geberth 1995, p. ? «The base population was 387 serial murderers, who killed (under various motivations), three or more persons over a period of time with cooling-off periods between the events. The author identified 232 male serial murderers who violated their victims sexually».
    5. ^ Morton 2005, p. 4, 9.
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    Further reading[edit]

    • Borgeson; Kristen Kuehnle (2010). Serial Offenders: Theory and Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-7730-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Brady, Ian; Colin Wilson (Introduction); Peter Sotos (Afterword) (2001). The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and Its Analysis. Feral House. ISBN 978-0922915736.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Journey into Darkness. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-00394-4. Archived from the original on August 19, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Douglas, John; Mark Olshaker (1997). Mind Hunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-01375-2. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Douglas, John E.; Allen G. Burgess; Robert K. Ressler; Ann W. Burgess (2006). Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crimes (Second ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7879-8501-1. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Haggerty, Kevin D. (2009). «Crime, Media, Culture: Modern Serial Killer». Crime, Media, Culture. 5 (2): 1–21. doi:10.1177/1741659009335714. S2CID 11395289. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (1998). Contemporary Perspectives on Serial Murder. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-1421-1. Archived from the original on August 18, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Stephen T. Holmes (2000). Murder in America (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-2092-2. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Jensen, Sybil (2014). Top 10 American Serial Killers:Inside The Minds of Psychopaths. Haselton Media Group. ASIN B00KGDUJ2U.
    • Kiam, O.M. (2013). The Second One: A Serial Killer’s Account of His First Two Kills. Milford Press. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
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    • Rosner, Lisa (2010). The Anatomy Murders. Being the True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare and of the Man of Science Who Abetted Them in the Commission of Their Most Heinous Crimes. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4191-4.
    • Roy, Jody M. (2002). Love to Hate: America’s Obsession with Hatred and Violence. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12569-7. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
    • Rushby, Kevin (2003). Children of Kali: Through India in Search of Bandits, the Thug Cult, and the British Raj. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1418-3.
    • Seltzer, Mark (1998). Serial Killers: Death and Life in America’s Wound Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91481-9. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
    • Vronsky, Peter (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. Penguin Group/Berkley. ISBN 978-0-425-19640-3.
    • Wilson, Colin (1995). A Plague of Murder. Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-85487-249-4.
    • Yudofsky, Stuart C. (2005). Fatal Flaws: Navigating Destructive Relationships with People with Disorders of Personality and Character. American Psychiatric Publishing. ISBN 9781585626588. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2016.

    External links[edit]

    • Crime Library’s Serial Killer page
    • Serial Murder: Multi-Disciplinary Perspectives for Investigators Official FBI publication
    • Dr. James Fallon: The Brains of Serial Killers (Talk)
    • Unknown Serial Killings

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