TraneWreck
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2008
- Messages
- 7,929
Recently, I was fortunate to observe a presentation given by two of the investigators involved in the BTK case.
Let me preface my actual question for the august forum crowd with an editorial: people, including myself, often complain about the way television and other media sensationalize normal human activity. Everyone is more attractive, smarter, funnier, stronger, faster and generally better than real life. We live in a comic book culture to some degree.
Let me say without equivocation that nothing ever produced remotely approaches the level of twisted perversion that was BTK. I don't care what stories or accounts of his crimes you've read, reality was a 1000x sicker. The presentation included crime scene photos and items collected from BTK that were not released to the public, and there is no way to ever creatively develop that level of demented cruelty and outright disgusting nature. It's just beyond normal human conceptions.
Moving back to the meat of the topic, one of the issues discussed by the detectives was the role FBI profilers played in the case. A wikipedia search of BTK can give you more detail, but essentially he murdered a number of people in Wichita, KS, between 1974 and 1991, then he just stopped. The case went completely cold. Beginning in 2004, he started sending bizarre letters and packages to the police and media, and the contents of those communications eventually led to his arrest.
Because of the long pause in BTK's activity, they tried to use profilers to pick up the frozen trail. The detectives offered a number of examples of what the profilers came up with. Hundreds of profiles were generated, and not a single one was remotely close to representing Dennis Rader.
They reminded me of psychic "readings" in the sense that out of, say, 50 details, two or three would be correct.
The detectives were completely skeptical of such profiling techniques. They said they were only marginally useful for interogations. So a profiler would give them something like, "subject was likely abandoned by father at an early age." That would allow the questioners to prod that topic, hoping to get a rise out of their target.
As far as describing an unknown suspect, it was 100% useless.
Profiling is now a popular subject for television dramas, so I'm curious what other people know about the process. Is this just another hopeless enterprise like phrenology, or is it a science in its infancy?
Let me preface my actual question for the august forum crowd with an editorial: people, including myself, often complain about the way television and other media sensationalize normal human activity. Everyone is more attractive, smarter, funnier, stronger, faster and generally better than real life. We live in a comic book culture to some degree.
Let me say without equivocation that nothing ever produced remotely approaches the level of twisted perversion that was BTK. I don't care what stories or accounts of his crimes you've read, reality was a 1000x sicker. The presentation included crime scene photos and items collected from BTK that were not released to the public, and there is no way to ever creatively develop that level of demented cruelty and outright disgusting nature. It's just beyond normal human conceptions.
Moving back to the meat of the topic, one of the issues discussed by the detectives was the role FBI profilers played in the case. A wikipedia search of BTK can give you more detail, but essentially he murdered a number of people in Wichita, KS, between 1974 and 1991, then he just stopped. The case went completely cold. Beginning in 2004, he started sending bizarre letters and packages to the police and media, and the contents of those communications eventually led to his arrest.
Because of the long pause in BTK's activity, they tried to use profilers to pick up the frozen trail. The detectives offered a number of examples of what the profilers came up with. Hundreds of profiles were generated, and not a single one was remotely close to representing Dennis Rader.
They reminded me of psychic "readings" in the sense that out of, say, 50 details, two or three would be correct.
The detectives were completely skeptical of such profiling techniques. They said they were only marginally useful for interogations. So a profiler would give them something like, "subject was likely abandoned by father at an early age." That would allow the questioners to prod that topic, hoping to get a rise out of their target.
As far as describing an unknown suspect, it was 100% useless.
Profiling is now a popular subject for television dramas, so I'm curious what other people know about the process. Is this just another hopeless enterprise like phrenology, or is it a science in its infancy?
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