Many detectives firmly believe that serial killers can't stop, not sure why that is, because Dennis Rader aka BTK stoppe
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manram24 — 11 years ago(April 11, 2014 11:06 AM)
Well going by the Night Stalker's MO, which was breaking into ppl's houses and raping women, the bindings, diamond knots etc, it's a very distinct MO and recognizable unless he changed it which is not likely. It's just my guess that he just stopped b/c perhaps the police got too close and he saw DNA becoming more prevalent.
Y'know, I could eat a peach for hours -
duckking2001 — 11 years ago(April 12, 2014 09:47 PM)
I think this is just a badly worded or poorly explained idea. There really is no basis to assume that they CAN'T stop, I mean how many 80 year old serial killers have there been?
I think it's more a matter of saying that the psychological motivations of murderers, if left untreated, will always be there. So if they want to commit murder and nothing is stopping them from doing so, then they will. Simple as that.
It should be said that the ones who get away with it most likely do so precisely because they have the ability to control themselves. Most psychotic killers who go on a rampage don't get very far before they are caught. Ted Bundy committed murders for years and many of them went unnoticed for years and some are still thought to be unknown. Then after he escaped prison he went on a wild killing spree and was quickly recaptured because he did not carefully plan out his crimes to ensure he got away with them, as he had previously done. -
originaltbyrd — 11 years ago(April 12, 2014 10:31 PM)
"the psychological motivations of murderers, if left untreated, will always be there"
that is close to the truth (IMHO). it's way too broad to say serial killers can't stop - serial killers are just as individual and varied as any fraction of the human population. zodiac was/is, as far as i can see, nothing at all like bundy or gacy. he is just a little like "son of sam" - some of the same inadaquecies (i don't know how to spell that word) are at work.
but the thing about Z. that makes him different from pretty much any other SK, is that i think he actually "grew out of it". (i've banged on this on other posts, sorry! but it's my Grand Thesis on zodiac) i think that is unique among known SK's.
as i've said before, the kathleen johns incident speaks loud about our boy. if that truly was Z., we are seeing a pilgrim at a turning point here. he drives around for 2 hours trying to decide what to do,(a baby???)then allows her to escape. and as far as we know, he does not commit another murder.
if my little theory is correct, Z is a very unusual SK. BUT WE'LL NEVER KNOW! -
The-Demon — 11 years ago(April 14, 2014 07:21 PM)
I guess we can compare serial killers to sex. For example, most guys from teen until late 40s early 50s are sexually active until they start to lose that desire. Maybe killing to serial killers is similar. It's exciting in their early 20s but after many years they lose that thrill. Majority will keep articles of them and remember the good ol times.
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duckking2001 — 11 years ago(April 14, 2014 09:06 PM)
That's probably correct. I don't ascribe to Freudian interpretation of everything, but most serial killers have a sexualised aspect. Zodiac is pretty atypical in that the only sexual element of his is his awkward ramblings about "getting your rocks off with a girl" that reads like a dorky teen.
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SwanKong — 11 years ago(May 06, 2014 11:33 AM)
There are many many serial killers who were never caughtones who became famous and then there are ones who operated with no traceable MO, stopped and were never caught. Look at how many people go missing daily in the US alonethey all end up somewhere.
"That's a hell of a Caucasian Jackie" -The Dude
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I_Guard_Tanelorn — 11 years ago(July 06, 2014 10:56 AM)
Of course they can stop. They want the notion that you can kill a bunch of people and go on with your life squashed. They want to instill fear of losing control in the murder curious. They want to assure the public cause a fiend that cant stop will be caught eventually. Its all propaganda and mind control for a healthy society.
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duckking2001 — 11 years ago(July 08, 2014 04:39 PM)
I don't prescribe to the notion that social conditioning and control are by definition manipulative or dehumanizing, as they are necessary for function. A society that produces serial murderers and more importantly does nothing to curtail them cannot be described as healthy, so doesn't a real health require those mediated effects?
I think that you are promoting the ClockWork Orangelike idea that dehumanising people in the name of stopping violence only propagates violence, and I agree with that, as well as that social control plays a part in the way that violence is exercised.
I also agree that media and culture have created a mythological view of serial killer behavior, but to prescribe to the idea that it is completely baseless is unfounded. -
The_Mob_Has_Spoken — 11 years ago(July 17, 2014 09:48 PM)
I would say it all depends on the individual killer in question. Zodiac wasn't some crazy loner anonymously murdering hookers all over the country. He did it for the attention and was driven primarily by narcissism and anger at society, not bona fide sexual sadism. Hence the silly codes to prove what a genius he was. He even took credit for crimes he didn't commit, which any respectable serial killer will tell you is against "the serial killer code." I don't even get the impression that the Zodiac killer(s) particularly enjoyed the act of murder and in fact had a distaste for it. For one thing, the attacks were mostly hands-off and too many of their victims survived. They were merely amateurs who lucked out and never got caught after doing everything to get caught because the cops screwed up at every step of the investigation.
"Ass to ass. Ha ha ha ha. ASS TO ASS!"; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oa5z77EI8y0 -
duckking2001 — 11 years ago(July 18, 2014 03:32 AM)
I agree of with your assessment of the killer, but not the investigation. What exactly would you say they did wrong or could have done differently? Other than the incorrect NMA/BMA APB, and that was just a simple, although very costly, communication error.
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The_Mob_Has_Spoken — 11 years ago(July 18, 2014 04:17 AM)
The police agencies of the various jurisdictions were all competing with each other and not sharing information. Nobody reached out to the feds for help (using the mail to terrorize and facilitate crimes is a federal beef btw). Nobody reached out to behavioral psychologists for insights into the killer's mindset and motivations (it was a few years before "profilers" became a thing, but still it seems like common sense to me; then again I'm a bit sharper than any cops or feds I've ever met or read about). Nobody thought to chase down the manufacturer or seller of the rope or where the ammo might have been purchased, etc. They did nothing with the unusual boots lead (again, the feds would have come in handy here to check the military base stores). The killer kept taunting the police. That's how they finally caught BTK; he kept taunting them and they finally tracked him down. So they didn't even open up lines of communication to get the killer comfortable talking to them. None or obvious surveillance of suspects/persons of interest. True story: I once planned on becoming a professional assassin (big money in whacking organized crime figures and crooked cops and politicians), and as I looked into it one of the very first things that struck me was how easy it was to get away with murdering somebody in the United States if you didn't have any connections with them/apparent reason to kill them. Because cops are lazy and dumb and unimaginative and accustomed to sweating confessions out of people who knew the deceased instead of following the evidence and using deductive reasoning. Investigative methods and procedures might have improved in the 45 years since the Zodiac, but not much else.
"Ass to ass. Ha ha ha ha. ASS TO ASS!"; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oa5z77EI8y0 -
originaltbyrd — 11 years ago(July 18, 2014 08:53 PM)
MHS, no disrespect intended, i certainly don't want the Mob after me, and i don't doubt you are sharper than me, i'm basically a mental butterknife, but i think the cops did about as much as they could, in that era. if he had kept on attacking couples the way he started out, yes, he would have been caught. but the guy faded into the woodwork. police stuff was primitive then.
what you said about getting away with murder was true then and somewhat true now - but i'll tell you what: SK's in the future will have have a much harder time sustaining long careers. not just DNA, but also the electronic surveillance culture. i have no love for the damn american police state we are now living in. but one positive effect is that it will be more and more difficult for serial criminals - at least on a "street level", to get away with crap for long.
of course, the problem with that is that the more crime they stop, the more it legitimizes the whole stinking system. welcome to the true life science fiction american dystopia. -
duckking2001 — 11 years ago(July 18, 2014 10:19 PM)
That's not entirely accurate.
You are correct that the agencies did not directly work together in a task force, as they would now, but they did share information.
They did work with the FBI who examined the letters under their mail fraud jurisdiction exactly as you suggested, and they ran their own additional fingerprints and handwriting analysis. The case was eventually all put together under the jurisdiction of the CA DOJ after it went cold and they reinvestigated it from scratch, but didn't have much to add.
They did check into the boots and the rope and found that they were very common items with no singular point of origin to investigate. I don't know about the ammo, that would be a good idea if they didn't check into that.
They also were very proactive in trying to communicate with the killer. After his first letter they asked for more information and the Zodiac responded. After that they mainly made antagonistic statements calling him out for incorrect facts in his letters, and having the chronicle write an article that criticized him as "the clumsy killer" and "latent homosexual". That tactic didn't really work so well as it did in the first place, but he did keep writing.
They didn't really employ profilers until later since they weren't in common use, but they did employ psychics who pretty much told them the same thing.
Oh yeah and they wasted a lot of time tailing Arthur Allen, and not really looking into anyone else. An idea that it seems a lot of IMDB posters would employ today if they had the chance. -
bababooyeebijan — 11 years ago(July 21, 2014 02:35 PM)
Oh yeah and they wasted a lot of time tailing Arthur Allen, and not really looking into anyone else. An idea that it seems a lot of IMDB posters would employ today if they had the chance.
Did they "tail" him while he was driving his dirty old 1952
Kaiser
with 58" front wheel track and which happens to resemble the body of a Studebaker of similar vintage?
I guess law enforcement (and the Fincher crew) knew nothing about
that
particular car of Allen's out of the many he had access too, did they, Westcott?
You appear to be absolutely mute about this revelation on your favorite Zodiac case "facts" sites. -
longcandle — 11 years ago(July 22, 2014 12:22 PM)
Babu wrote:
Did they "tail" him while he was driving his dirty old 1952 Kaiser with 58" front wheel track and which happens to resemble the body of a Studebaker of similar vintage?
Wait! You mean there is new, additional circumstantial vehicle evidenceon top of everything else to datepointing to prime suspect, Arthur Leigh Allen?!
I think this deserves its own topic thread, please provide more info!