Jeffrey Dahmer
While the crimes that are committed by serial killers are beyond reproach, the atrocities committed continuously capture the attention of the public, sometimes fulfilling a morbid fascination with the perpetrators. The reasons and motivations that drive a serial killer to commit these crimes are for the most part unknown, however extensive studies have been conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigations and psychologists to try and pinpoint the factors that may influence an individual. Jeffrey Dahmer is one of the most infamous serial killers in American history. Not only did Dahmer kill a series of men, he also horribly mutilated them and cannibalized several of his victims.
In many serial murders, sexual desire and gratification, as well as domination and manipulation, are motivating factors. Douglas and Olshaker (1999) contend that serial murderers commit homicidal acts because they find fulfillment in the acts themselves and they will continue to kill for as long as they are able to. Serial murders experience a sexual thrill and pleasure through the homicide itself and he, or she, will continue to kill, maintaining the belief that law enforcement officials will not catch him or her. While law enforcement officials and behavioral scientists investigate the factors and behaviors of serial murders, analyzing their crimes and attempting to understand why they have committed their crimes, they rarely have insight into the serial killer's predatory world at the time that the killer is active (Arrigo, 2006).
Despite having little to no insight into the predatory world of a serial killer at the time that the killer is active, behavioral scientists have been able to establish that many serial killers develop a modus operandi (MO), a criminal's signature, that helps law enforcement officials tie crimes to their perpetrators. More specifically, a modus operandi is defined as "repeated patterns of behaviors which are unnecessary to the commission of the crime; provide psychosexual arousal and gratification; and compliment the motive" (Arrigo, 2006, p. 232). In the case of Jeffrey Dahmer, his MO included picking up men at gay bars and having sex with them before drugging, strangling, and dismembering his victims with an electric saw (Bardsley, n.d.).
In addition to these behaviors, Jeffrey Dahmer also cannibalized several of his victims. Cannibalism is, for the most part, is seen as a human taboo and is not considered to be acceptable behavior; cannibalism that occurs as a means of survival is generally the only accepted method of the practice (Bell, 2011). It has been theorized that an underlying neurochemical cause may contribute to cannibalism and cannibalistic tendencies. Additionally, a contributing factor to cannibalism is believed to be schizophrenia as has been observed in historical accounts of tribal cannibalism (Bell, 2011). While cannibalism is not considered to be a crime in many countries, the acts that facilitate the taboo practice, including grave robbing and necrophilia, are punishable by law. Criminal cannibalization is categorized into four distinct groups: sexual cannibalism, aggression cannibalism, spiritual and/or ritual cannibalism, and epicurean/nutritional cannibalism (Bell, 2011). There are times where overlapping of the cannibalistic groups may occur.
Given the sexual gratification that Dahmer experienced through the murders that he committed, it can be argued that he engaged in sexual and aggression cannibalism. Sexual cannibalism is a psychosexual disorder where eating a person's flesh is sexualized. This type of cannibalism is frequently associated with necrophilia, which Dahmer is suspected of having engaged in. It can be deduced that Dahmer engaged in this type of cannibalism from the evidence that was found and collected from his apartment after he was apprehended. Among the items that were seized from Dahmer's apartment were photographs of his mangled victims, four severed heads, severed hands, and severed penises; furthermore, the police found human remains in the refrigerator, a human heart in the freezer, seven skulls, and corpses dissolving...
Jeffrey Dahmer On July 22nd 1991, police in Milwaukee Wisconsin came across a young man named Tracy Edwards running down he street with a pair of handcuffs attached to one wrist. Edwards told the police that he had been held captive in the apartment of Jeffrey Dahmer, who had threatened to kill Edwards. When the police interviewed Dahmer, he tried to pass off the incident as a simple misunderstanding, but when
All of this evidence has resulted in kryptopyrrole being used as a reliable biochemical marker of psychiatric dysfunction and violent potential in individuals (Giannangelo 25). With these indicators, it seems highly likely that Jeffrey Dahmer may have indeed had this mauve factor. Even Jeffrey himself admitted to knowing these violent acts were dysfunctional and wrong, but there seemed to be very little he could do to control his own actions.
Jeffrey Dahmer- The Criminal Delinquency Jeffrey Dahmer was born on 21st May 1960. He was a known serial killer, rapist and engaged in a myriad of other crimes. Dahmer killed 17 males between 1978 and 1991. He also meted out a range of heinous acts on his victims, including dismembering, raping, cannibalizing and necrophilia. Dahmer was beaten and killed by an inmate in a correctional institution at Colombia. This paper
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It was also at this period in his life that the alleged acts of molestation which may have occurred during his childhood began to manifest in psychosexual dysfunction. According to Odom, "in an interview Jeffrey once stated, 'it started at the age of 14 or 15. I started having excessive fantasies of violence intermingled with sex and it just got worse and worse. I didn't know how to tell anyone, so I didn't. I just kept
Criminology What was the "rational choice theory" of crime causation? The "rational choice theory" of crime causation holds that crime is consciously committed out of an intellectual desire to improve one's situation. Accordingly, the theory does not believe that delinquents are motivated through unconscious urges, but instead contends that people are goal-oriented. Another implication of the theory is that everyone, regardless of their neurological profile, has the ability to act in a
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