Varelse wrote:
While I agree with the reasoning applied by the court, I personally find this chilling. Terrifying, in fact.
Yep. Had this been some random guy on the streets fantasizing about cannibalizing women, that's one thing. But Valle was a cop with access to the police database, which would have let him find women who were especially vulnerable -- either due to past or ongoing criminal charges (and would hence felt compelled to "cooperate" on whatever a cop asked of them) or were women who had already been victims of a crime, in the past, and hence would trust a cop, never suspecting that he was / is a sick man.
I do understand that sick fantasizing, however revolting it is, does not constitute a crime. However, I can't kept but wonder if and when this guy would have crossed that line between fantasy and criminal action, had he not been apprehended on time ? (One of the women he fantasized eating was his own wife. Hopefully, his ex-wife with a permanent restraining order in place, by now).
If you can't trust a police officer, then who do you trust ?
_________________
O villain, villain, smiling, damnèd villain!
My tables—meet it is I set it down
That one may smile, and smile, and be a villain.
At least I'm sure it may be so in "Denmark".
-- Hamlet, 1.5.113-116
Last edited by HisMom on 08 Dec 2015, 5:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.