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beneficii
Veteran
Veteran

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Joined: 10 May 2005
Age: 40
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,245

07 Jul 2015, 10:22 am

From an FBI symposium on serial murder:

Quote:
The majority of serial killers are not reclusive, social misfits who live alone. They are not monsters and may not appear strange. Many serial killers hide in plain sight within their communities. Serial murderers often have families and homes, are gainfully employed, and appear to be normal members of the community. Because many serial murderers can blend in so effortlessly, they are oftentimes overlooked by law enforcement and the public.

• Robert Yates killed seventeen prostitutes in the Spokane, Washington area, during the 1990s. He was married with five children, lived in a middle class neighborhood, and was a decorated U.S. Army National Guard helicopter pilot. During the time period of the murders, Yates routinely patronized prostitutes, and several of his victims knew each other. Yates buried one of his victims in his yard, beneath his bedroom window. Yates was eventually arrested and pled guilty to thirteen of the murders.

• The Green River Killer, Gary Ridgeway, confessed to killing 48 women over a twenty-year time period in the Seattle, Washington area. He had been married three times and was still married at the time of his arrest. He was employed as a truck painter for thirty-two years. He attended church regularly, read the Bible at home and at work, and talked about religion with co-workers. Ridgeway also frequently picked up prostitutes and had sex with them throughout the time period in which he was killing.

• The BTK killer, Dennis Rader, killed ten victims in and around Wichita, Kansas. He sent sixteen written communications to the news media over a thirty-year period, taunting the police and the public. He was married with two children, was a Boy Scout leader, served honorably in the U.S. Air Force, was employed as a local government official, and was president of his church.


https://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publ ... ial-murder


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MoonAndStars
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

Joined: 4 Jul 2015
Posts: 48
Location: UK

09 Jul 2015, 6:24 am

Crumbs. This will be the fourth or fifth time I've tried to reply to this now...
In a nutshell no, I would imagine actually very few are dysfunctional loners. Most of them, that I've read about at least, are upstanding members of society, have been or are married and have had kids. They could be anyone from your neighbour to your college lecturer to your relative. They don't have any stereotypical look, and would be impossible to distinguish between anyone else. Their behaviour may not be seen as human, but that's what they are - human beings.