- Page 4 and 5: DedicationEugene Revitch, M.D.(1909
- Page 6 and 7: sensibilities of most individuals
- Page 8 and 9: AcknowledgmentsI would like to expr
- Page 10 and 11: IntroductionDuring graduate school,
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- Page 14 and 15: 2.2.6 Intellectual, Cognitive, and
- Page 16 and 17: 8 Planned Compulsive Homicides8.1 S
- Page 18 and 19: “In the intercourse of the sexes,
- Page 20 and 21: Table 1.1Problems Encountered in th
- Page 22 and 23: Table 1.2Various Terms, Description
- Page 24 and 25: Other investigators have reached si
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- Page 30 and 31: statistical study still, neverthele
- Page 32 and 33: The clinical psychologist meets wit
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- Page 42 and 43: may encounter a patient whose behav
- Page 44 and 45: Forensic Assessment:Evaluation of t
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B was intimidated at the time of th
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Table 2.2Conventional Psychological
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courtroom and its scientific validi
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An individual’s ability to empath
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He sees things the way he sees it.
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2.2.3 Projective DrawingsProjective
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Drawings by a sexual murderer who w
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Figure 2.4Sketches by a man whose l
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Figure 2.7provocation.Sketch by an
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Figure 2.10 Drawings by a 9-year-ol
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Figure 2.12 Drawings by a 9-year-ol
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Figure 2.14 Drawings by an inmate w
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Figure 2.17Bender-Gestalt drawings
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his practical intelligence had help
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Revitch and Schlesinger (1981) cite
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that the more strangely he behaves,
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2.3.2 PseudomalingeringMalingering
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offenders will lie not only to expe
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2.4.3 False ConfessionsNot all conf
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person was able to do. Lombroso eve
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Table 3.1Various Views of Psychopat
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violence when frustrated or provoke
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Table 3.2AuthorSystems of Homicide
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poor prenatal and postnatal care, e
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3.3.3 Paranoid Disorders and Homici
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Case 3.2: Encapsulated Delusions an
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that’s evil. It’s the same as t
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“I didn’t care, I just wanted t
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depression (Gibbons, 1968), and als
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Extensive psychological evaluation
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continued to work as an administrat
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Figure 3.2 Drawings by an offender
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I let go. She was still breathing a
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Table 3.3Characteristics of Impulsi
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out because I remember some things
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Figure 3.3 Drawings by impulsive of
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ers have the best prognosis as most
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Figure 4.1 Hans Wolfgang Maier, M.D
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complexes, as in substance abuse, a
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Maier concluded his lengthy paper b
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4.2 Fredric Wertham and the Catathy
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of a mental disorder or a psychopat
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suitable for distribution only to p
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and understood that he was wrong wh
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in order to “bottle up sexual ene
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attempt, the impulse to destroy tra
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Acute CatathymicHomicides5Since Mai
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• Case D, Elliot: A 43-year-old m
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and intervention. In addition to th
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some subjects) do not always indica
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5.1.6 Overcontrolled PersonalitiesM
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almost all these cases, the underly
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Following the homicide (and vaginal
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CC had a long-standing obsessional
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Case 5.4: Feelings of Inadequacy Tr
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Case 5.5: Typical Displaced Matrici
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Figure 5.2Sketches by offender who
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epitomized the opposite of what (co
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Figure 5.3 Drawing done by a 16-yea
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to do this no more,’ and I pushed
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led to a single violent externally
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an acute catathymic process, can be
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Table 6.1StageIncubationViolent act
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6.1 Literary Illustrations of Catat
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In Yukio Mishima’s (1956) The Tem
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6.2 Meloy’s Psychodynamic Contrib
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parasympathetic return to baseline
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In fact, West cited Wertham (1937)
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going to kill myself. She promised
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y removing himself through suicide.
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inside. I keep thinking about sex o
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Cases of filicide (the murder of on
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Lane, 1993). Some develop delusiona
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On another occasion, he was in the
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edroom. DD then waited for his new
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TAT stories were quite illuminating
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The following case of familicide, d
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prided himself on being able to han
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CompulsiveHomicides inHistorical Co
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fusion of sex and aggression, quite
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minor infractions or sometimes for
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etween the feet of this poor victim
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escalated the severity of their sad
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Table 7.2 (continued)Noted by Kraff
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In 1925, and for the next 5 years,
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knew if I did not, I would get her
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7.5 Examples from the Latter Half o
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and knotted it and I think it caugh
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his youth, Kemper killed cats with
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7.6 The Study of Compulsive Homicid
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cases of sexual homicide and sexual
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mocked by his acquaintances, partic
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Table 7.5 Frequency (in Percent) of
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7.7 Influence of Investigative Prof
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unknown offenders in serial crimes,
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Table 7.6Characteristics of Organiz
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Interest in the compulsive, repetit
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Table 8.1Components of Sexual Homic
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develops in several stages: (1) the
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ing mental pleasure and sexual arou
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cuts (to cause bleeding and pain) a
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Figure 8.1 Drawings by compulsive m
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cated a high degree of planning, an
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The offender was raised in a lower-
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Figure 8.2Drawings by offender deta
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“it was the same person.” The f
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Henning (1995) note that sexual fan
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coming from behind, under armpits,
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harm a child because “a child was
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plate on his car upside down so it
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were dominated by his perceived rel
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Figure 8.4 Sketches by man who deni
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individual said, “After I kill, I
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drove the victim around, torturing
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dominant partner, perhaps the only
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fathers. Married young, their first
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ut because they have more overt psy
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AntisocialPsychopathicNarcissisticP
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Table 9.1 Profile Characteristics o
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These crimes often involve a great
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failure to give a good account, dam
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— the homicide would not have occ
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him to commit the act. His affect w
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fighting with people who would hurt
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is evident in his actions; he did n
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I couldn’t do it unless I was fee
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his otherwise intact defenses. Not
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Table 9.3 Differentiating Character
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Figure 9.2 Drawings by a compulsive
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deep-rooted feelings of helplessnes
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Figure 9.3homicide.Figure drawings
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However, Meloy (2000) offers two co
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In contrast to these overly simplis
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doesn’t want to, because nothing
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Prediction andDisposition10The abil
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to be superior to clinical assessme
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tendency (propensity, proclivity) d
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a catathymic homicide are not resol
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capacity and therefore accrues litt
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a sample of compulsive murderers wo
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elationship with his mother who tre
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order to abduct victims, as well as
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nature that end in killing, should
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(1886) and MacCulloch, Snowden, Woo
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power over living things. … These
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Table 10.2BurglariesDifferentiating
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choked, pushed, or knifed (Revitch,
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them go. A week earlier, he had bro
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cats, firesetting, unprovoked assau
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not involve psychological treatment
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Such an approach to the evaluation,
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Arrigo, B.A. and Purcell, C.E. (200
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Briere, J. and Runtz, M. (1989). Un
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De Bousingin, R. (1971). Essai de c
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Fingerhut, L.A. and Kleinman, J.L.
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Garrison, A. (1996). The catathymic
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Hagan, F.E. (1994). Introduction to
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Holinger, P.C. (1987). Violent deat
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Klepfisz, A. and Racy, J. (1973). H
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Loftus, E.F. and Doyle, J.M. (1976)
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McGrath, R.J. (1991). Sex offender
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Monroe, R.R. (1974). Episodic behav
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Pandina, R. (1996). Idiosyncratic a
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Rappeport, J.R. (Ed.) (1967). The c
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Rorschach, H. (1947). Psychodiagnos
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Schlesinger, L.B. (in press). A cas
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Swigert, V.L., Farrell, R.A., and Y
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Weston, W.A. (1996). Pseudologia fa