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What is a Psychopath? - Dr Robert Hare tells us!
updated 1 year ago
The film tells the true story of a sadomasochistic cannibal, child molester, and serial killer, who lured children to their deaths in Depression-era New York City. Elderly but still deadly, Fish was inspired by biblical tales as he took the stories of pain, punishment, atonement, and suffering literally as he preyed on victims to torture and sacrifice.
CNN's award-winning documentary team Special Reports takes an in-depth look at the phenomenon of serial murder: interviewing killers, their relatives, criminologists, psychologists, victims' families, even survivors of serial killer attacks.
Who are these killers? Why do they kill? And how can we track and stop them before the first murder occurs?
True Crime Documentary
Richard Trenton Chase
Armin Meiwes
Andrei Chikatilo
Rod Ferrell
Jeffrey Dahmer
Was the real Lipstick Killer also The Black Dahlia Killer?
The Black Dahlia Murder
The Black Dahlia Killer
The Lipstick Killer
Or, was he a butcher? A barber? A Doctor? A mentally ill homeless vagrant?
Dr. Michael H. Stone, a psychiatrist and scholar who sought to define evil and to differentiate its manifestations from the typical behavior of people who are mentally ill, died on Dec. 6 2023 at his home in Manhattan. He was 90.
The cause was complications of a stroke he had in January 2023.
Crime Documentary
In the early 1980s, Ressler helped to organize the interviews of thirty-six incarcerated serial killers in order to find parallels between such criminals’ backgrounds and motives. He was also instrumental in setting up Vi-CAP (Violent Criminal Apprehension Program). This consists of a centralized computer database of information on unsolved homicides. Information is gathered from local police forces and cross-referenced with other unsolved killings across the United States. Working on the basis that most serial killers claim similar victims with a standard method (modus operandi) it hopes to spot early on when a killer is carrying out crimes in different jurisdictions. This was primarily a response to the appearance of nomadic killers who committed crimes in different areas. So long as the killer kept on the move, the police forces in each state would be unaware that there were multiple victims and would just be investigating a single homicide each, unaware that other police forces had similar crimes. Vi-CAP would help individual police forces determine if they were hunting for the same perpetrator so that they could share and correlate information with one another, increasing their chances of identifying a suspect.
Criminal Profiler Documentary
Robert Ressler Criminal Profiler
Criminal Profiling
Profiling Evil
Profiling Serial Killers
Serial Killer Documentary
Serial Killer
[MSNBC]
The Happy Face Killer
Son of Sam
The BTK Killer
Btk
Dennis Rader
Veronica Compton Kenneth Bianchi
Ted Bundy Carole Boone
Richard Ramirez
Serial Killer Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
Sexual Perversion Documentary
Gary Ridgway Documentary
Gary Ridgeway Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
True Crime Documentary
(Discovery Channel)
Serial Killer Interview
Jeffrey Dahmer Interview
MSNBC Reports: Chasing the Devil.
Gary Ridgway Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
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Arthur Shawcross Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
Discovery Channel
Luff never actually took part in the killings, but has never denied culpability, indeed he turned himself in months after them and cooperated with the authorities, realising too late how he had been brainwashed and manipulated. At one point, Lundgren told him that he was personally responsible for a famine in Africa; if a man will believe that, he will surely believe the slaughter of five innocents will save the world.
In spite of the enormity of his crime, it is difficult not to feel sorry for Luff, who realised too late he had thrown away his own life as well as those of the Avery family. It is clear that Berrill feels sorry for him too, although he cannot of course actually say so.
Cult Documentary
MSNBC
Early on the morning of Sept. 29, 1982, a tragic, medical mystery began with a sore throat and a runny nose. It was then that Mary Kellerman, a 12-year-old girl from Elk Grove Village, a suburb of Chicago, told her mother and father about her symptoms. They gave her one extra-strength Tylenol capsule that, unbeknownst to them, was laced with the highly poisonous potassium cyanide. Mary was dead by 7 a.m. Within a week, her death would panic the entire nation. And only months later, it changed the way we purchase and consume over-the-counter medications.
That same day, a 27-year-old postal worker named Adam Janus of Arlington Heights, Illinois, died of what was initially thought to be a massive heart attack but turned out to be cyanide poisoning as well. His brother and sister-in-law, Stanley, 25, and Theresa, 19, of Lisle, Illinois, rushed to his home to console their loved ones. Both experienced throbbing headaches, a not uncommon response to a death in the family and each took a Tylenol extra-strength capsule or two from the same bottle Adam had used earlier in the day. Stanley died that very day and Theresa died two days later.
Over the next few days, three more strange deaths occurred: 35-year-old Mary McFarland of Elmhurst, Illinois, 35-year-old Paula Prince of Chicago, and 27-year-old Mary Weiner of Winfield, Illinois. All of them, it turned out, took Tylenol shortly before they died.
It was at this point, early October of 1982, that investigators made the connection between the poisoning deaths and Tylenol, the best-selling, non-prescription pain reliever sold in the United States at that time. The gelatin-based capsules were especially popular because they were slick and easy to swallow. Unfortunately, each victim swallowed a Tylenol capsule laced with A lethal dose of cyanide.
McNeil Consumer Products, a subsidiary of the health care giant, Johnson & Johnson, manufactured Tylenol. To its credit, the company took an active role with the media in issuing mass warning communications and immediately called for a massive recall of the more than 31 million bottles of Tylenol in circulation. Tainted capsules were discovered in early October in a few other grocery stores and drug stores in the Chicago area, but, fortunately, they had not yet been sold or consumed. McNeill and Johnson & Johnson offered replacement capsules to those who turned in pills already purchased and a reward for anyone with information leading to the apprehension of the individual or people involved in these random murders.
The case continued to be confusing to the police, the drug maker and the public at large. For example, Johnson & Johnson quickly established that the cyanide lacing occurred after cases of Tylenol left the factory. Someone, police hypothesized, must have taken bottles off the shelves of local grocers and drug stores in the Chicago area, laced the capsules with poison, and then returned the restored packages to the shelves to be purchased by the unknowing victims.
To this day, however, the perpetrators of these murders have never been found.
Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Does social rejection contribute to the development of Antisocial Personality Disorder?
Spree Shooter Documentary
Serial Killer Interview
Ed Gein Interview
Cult Leader Documentary
Charles Manson Documentary
MSNBC
The film was not well received by some critics. Sam Wollaston from The Guardian referred to it as "an excuse to show some really nasty people and their behaviour on the television". Though he does feel the documentary improves towards the end: "When a contributor who has featured throughout, Sam Vaknin, reveals that he is a sufferer. And then we get to see him in action, the out-takes of the making of the film ... swaggers around Camden Market in London, shouting at people, demanding money, as if he owns the place. Well, he does, so maybe it's OK." However, Wollaston notes: "And anyway, Frank only displays three of the nine symptoms of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), so he's not even a proper egomaniac.
Narcissism Documentary
Narcissist Documentary
Narcissistic Psychopath Documentary
Psychology Documentary
Serial Offender Documentary
Serial Rapist Documentary
MSNBC
CRIME STORIES
Episode: By Reason Of Insanity
Jack the Ripper Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
Ted Bundy Documentary
CRIME STORIES
Episode: Beneath the Mask
Ted Bundy
Harvey Glatman
Serial Killer Documentary
Aileen Wuornos
John Wayne Gacy
Ed Gein
Ted Bundy
Jack the Ripper
Jeffrey Dahmer
Serial Killer Documentary
The Beltway sniper attacks, shooting spree in the Washington, D.C. area that killed 10 people and injured 3 over a three-week period in October 2002. The shooters, John Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, chose targets seemingly at random and brought daily life in the area to a virtual standstill.
The attacks began on October 2, 2002, when a bullet shattered the window of a craft store in Aspen Hill, Maryland, narrowly missing a cashier. Less than an hour after that incident, a 55-year-old man was shot and killed while walking across a parking lot in Wheaton, Maryland. Although the shootings were not initially recognized as being connected, law-enforcement authorities soon realized that those two acts of violence were just the first of what would be more than a dozen linked shootings over the next 23 days.
By the end of the day on October 3, five more victims had been shot and killed in the Washington metropolitan area. Investigators determined that bullets from several of the first seven shootings were fired from the same weapon—a high-powered .223-calibre rifle. On the morning of October 7, a 13-year-old boy was shot and injured in front of his middle school in Bowie, Maryland. Muhammad and Malvo left a tarot card with a note to law enforcement written on it, but it contained no specific demands. More than 30 different law-enforcement agencies at the local, state, and federal levels would ultimately work together to track, identify, and capture the parties responsible for the attacks.
Other than conflicting reports of a white van, a white box truck, and a dark Chevrolet Caprice near the scenes of the incidents, police had no clear leads. Criminal profilers predicted that the sniper was most likely a white male, but that assumption was based largely on the characteristics of past serial killers and not the sniper case itself. From October 9 to October 14, two men and a woman were killed in separate incidents in northern Virginia. On October 19 a 13th shooting occurred at a restaurant in Ashland, Virginia. Law-enforcement officials found a second note at the crime scene, demanding money and instructing the police to call at a certain time and place. The phone number provided in the note was not valid, but technicians at the U.S. Secret Service crime lab were able to match the handwriting to the tarot card left at the scene of an earlier shooting.
Police received additional information in the form of phone calls to local police stations and a Federal Bureau of Investigation hotline. The most important tip, however, came from the shooters themselves, in a call to a Roman Catholic priest in Ashland, Virginia. For reasons unknown to investigators, the shooters detailed their crimes to the priest and asked him to advise the police to look into a September 2002 robbery-homicide at a liquor store in Montgomery, Alabama. Evidence recovered from the Montgomery crime scene was linked to Lee Boyd Malvo, a 17-year-old from Jamaica who had been fingerprinted in December 2001 by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. Further investigation found that Malvo had been seen traveling with a man named John Muhammad, a Persian Gulf War veteran who had qualified as an expert marksman. Additionally, Muhammad and Malvo had been observed target shooting at a residence in Tacoma, Washington, further linking them to the sniper case. The predictions of criminal profilers were shown to be wildly incorrect, as the suspected snipers were an African American man and a Caribbean teenager.
A warrant was issued for Muhammad on a federal firearms violation, and the police identified the make, model, and license plate number of the Chevrolet Caprice he was driving. The police released the description of the car to the media on October 23, and later that evening a motorist reported that the vehicle was at a rest stop off Interstate 70 near Frederick, Maryland. Within hours, law-enforcement personnel descended upon the car, found Muhammad and Malvo sleeping inside, and took them into custody. A search of the car uncovered a Bushmaster XM-15 assault rifle—a semiautomatic version of the M4 carbine used by the U.S. Army—as well as a concealed firing port cut into the car’s trunk. Modifications had been made to the car’s back seat so that a shooter could lie prone and fire, undetected, from inside the car.
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Ted Bundy Documentary
MSNBC
Reginald McFadden (February 23, 1953 – March 6, 2023) was an American serial killer who committed a series of rapes and two murders in Rockland and Nassau counties, New York in 1994, which started only 92 days after his parole from a rape-murder committed as a juvenile in Pennsylvania. Sentenced to life imprisonment for the latter crimes, his case brought on changes to the parole system and clemency applications for juvenile offenders in the state of Pennsylvania, as well as similar reforms in New York.
Serial Killer Documentary
Reginald McFadden Serial Killer
MSNBC
During the two-hour “Dateline,” Magnus chronicles Rader’s killings, his subsequent obsession with the media, his arrest — which he refers to as “Black Friday” because he claims he didn’t see it coming — and ultimately, his willing confession. Also included in the broadcast are never heard before details about how and why he chose his victims.
Dennis Lynn Rader (born March 9, 1945), also known as BTK (an abbreviation he gave himself, for "bind, torture, kill"), is an American serial killer who murdered at least ten people in Wichita and Park City, Kansas, between 1974 and 1991. Although Rader occasionally killed or attempted to kill men and children, he typically targeted women. His victims were often bound, sometimes with objects from their homes, and either suffocated with a plastic bag or manually strangled with a ligature.
In addition, Rader stole keepsakes from his female victims, including underwear, licenses, and personal items. He often sent taunting letters to police and media outlets describing the details of his crimes. After a thirteen-year hiatus, Rader resumed sending letters in 2004, leading to his 2005 arrest and subsequent guilty plea. He is currently serving ten consecutive life sentences at the El Dorado Correctional Facility.
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BTK Killer Documentary
Dennis Rader Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
“I Married The Beltway Sniper” features in-depth interviews with individuals close to the case, including Jim Cavanaugh, the ATF’s lead investigator on the D.C. Sniper Task Force and Sari Horwitz, a Washington Post reporter who covered the attacks and co-authored the book, “Sniper: Inside the Hunt for the Killers Who Terrorized the Nation.” Other interviews include a shooting victim, eye-witnesses to the crimes, criminal profilers, and Malvo’s social worker, who claims that the boy’s troubled childhood made him turn to a dangerous man like Muhammad.
Spree Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Joseph Paul Franklin was an American neo-Nazi terrorist and serial killer who engaged in a murder spree spanning the late 1970s and early 1980s. Franklin was convicted of several murders and received four life sentences, as well as two death sentences.
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Spree Killer Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Roderrick Justin "Rod" Ferrell is an American murderer and cult leader. He was a member of a loose-knit gang of teenagers from Murray, Kentucky, known as the "Vampire Clan".
MSNBC Investigates
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Serial Killer Documentary
It was initially believed that only one person was responsible for the killings. The police, however, determined from the positions of the bodies that two criminals were working together, but withheld that information from the press. The perpetrators were eventually discovered to be cousins Kenneth Bianchi and Angelo Buono Jr., who were later convicted of kidnapping, raping, torturing and murdering 10 women and girls ranging in age from 12 to 28.
The Hillside Strangler murders began with the deaths of two prostitutes who were found strangled and dumped naked on hillsides northeast of Los Angeles in October and early November 1977. It was not until the deaths of five young women who were not prostitutes, but girls who had been abducted from middle-class neighborhoods, that the media attention and subsequent "Hillside Strangler" moniker came to prominence.
There were two more deaths in December and February before the murders abruptly stopped. An extensive investigation proved fruitless until the arrest of Bianchi in January 1979 for the murder of two more young women in Washington and the subsequent linking of his past to the Strangler case.
The most expensive trial in the history of the California legal system at that time followed, with Bianchi and Buono eventually being found guilty of those crimes and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Ray was born on November 6, 1939 in Belen, New Mexico. He was raised by his grandfather, though his father maintained an abusive relationship with him (and even exposed him to pornography). He had a younger sister, but they were split up when their grandmother died. In school, Ray did poorly and was teased for being unusually shy around girls. As a teenager, he abused alcohol and drugs. When he was an adult, he served in the U.S. Army and later became a mechanic. He also married four times, each of them ending in divorce. He had two daughters, one of whom he lived with for some time. At some point, he started abducting, raping and torturing women, presumably killing them as well. Exactly how many victims he claimed over the years is uncertain, though he may have started as early as in 1950 when he was still a kid. He spent $100 000 on a trailer, fitting it with sex toys and torture devices. He nicknamed it "the Toy Box".
Serial Killer Documentary
MSNBC
Wayne Bertram Williams (born May 27, 1958) is an American convicted murderer and suspected serial killer who is serving life imprisonment for the 1981 killings of two men in Atlanta, Georgia. Although never tried for the additional murders, he is also believed to be responsible for at least 24 of the 30 Atlanta murders of 1979–1981, also known as the Atlanta Child Murders.
Serial Killer Documentary
City in Fear [MSNBC]
Serial Killer Documentary
Serial Killer Documentary
BTK Killer Documentary
Dennis Rader
MSNBC