Friday, December 15, 2006

The Psychology of The Suffolk Serial Killer (Latest Update)

As the hunt for the Suffolk serial killer continues and as the case unfolds I will be posting regular updates, particularly in relation to any psychological information or theories. I will also be including links to the latest police briefings and any other credible information sources.

If you would like to be alerted as soon as a new psychology of a serial killer post appears, you can do so by clicking on the orange RSS button (bottom left hand side of the page) to receive automatic content updates in My Yahoo!, Newsgator, Bloglines, and other news readers. Alternatively you can get instant updates via e-mail (see subscribe link, also bottom left hand side of page). You can also bookmark each update by clicking on the social bookmark this link that appears after each post.

Media Watch



Headline

Forensic Psychologists Tackle UK Serial Killer

Published

13th December

Psychology aspect

Contributions from forensic psychologist Keith Ashcroft, Joseph Diaz, a criminologist at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina, David Canter, director of the Centre for Investigative Psychology at the University of Liverpool, and Glenn Wilson, an expert in deviant personalities at the Institute of Psychiatry in London.

Key points

Police say that the spate of serial murders in such a short time period is extremely unusual and may be unprecedented.

Keith Ashcroft, a forensic psychologist and expert in sex crimes, based in Edinburgh, UK, speculates that the murderer is deliberately “taunting” police and that the person probably has some massive grudge against the police force, probably even in Suffolk and wants to make the police look inadequate.

Joseph Diaz, a criminologist at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina, US, says that the fact the bodies were dumped in water suggests that the killer is of above average intelligence, because he knows physical evidence will be washed away.

David Canter, director of the Centre for Investigative Psychology at the University of Liverpool, says: "His first murder was likely to be a carefully considered attempt to hide some other crime: killing the victim because she was a crucial witness."

Glenn Wilson an expert in deviant personalities at the Institute of Psychiatry in London states that Psychologists can paint a picture of a typical serial killer based on profiles of the limited number of serial killers available, but this will not necessarily be accurate, or help police, It may even lead detectives down a blind alley. In supporting his contention Wilson argues that the police may not even consider a female suspect or be alert for a female accomplice. Wilson cites the infamous murder of model Rachel Nickell in Wimbledon, London, in 1992, where he says police adhered so closely to the psychological profile provided that they became blind to other possibilities and wasted valuable time prosecuting Colin Stagg. He was later acquitted of the murder, which has never been solved.

Wilson claims that geographical profiling would be much more useful than psychological profiling, particularly as in this case the bodies were all found close to the A14, a major road that runs from Felixstowe to the Midlands, skirting Ipswich. The killer probably knows the route well and may live somewhere along its path.


Links



Click Here For The Latest Police Briefing



For a free and comprehensive guide to the world of forensic psychology, including several pages dedicated to criminal profiling don't forget to visit the main forensic psychology website.

http://www.all-about-forensic-psychology.com/






1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Wilson claims that geographical profiling would be much more useful than psychological profiling, particularly as in this case the bodies were all found close to the A14, a major road that runs from Felixstowe to the Midlands, skirting Ipswich. The killer probably knows the route well and may live somewhere along its path."

I agree, have the police thought about the possibility of a husband and wife team that work in the medical profession ? - they could see these kind of girls as wrecked and vunerable and in need of putting out of their misery - without the religious element involved. Medical teams often work in pairs, and in hospitals, dead people are a regular part of the job (like they refer to organ donation as harvesting - medics are desensitized and used to handling dead bodies), drugs are readily available to dope up (morphine/heroin)a professional is also trained in how to deal calmly with people could convice a depressed person that they are actually doing them a favour.

My theory is its a psychotic medic with a major problem with women, he gets them alone, speaks nicily to them, maybe offers them help, missus in the car, friendly helpful, professinal, offering hope. A14 a main road Cambridge, Bury St Edmunds, Stow Market, Ipswich- how far away do killers normally dump the body away from there home ? - if they get a kick out of it (domination of female/trophy) they might like to know that the body is reasonably nearby - within reach of the minds eye, like a dog burries a bone. but far enough away to not draw attention to the doorstep.