The startling arrest of the elusive Golden State Killer, aka the East Area Rapist/Original Night Stalker/Diamond Knot Killer/Visalia Ransacker in what was arguably the most vexing and disturbing constellation of interlinked cold cases in American history, has raised more questions than answers.
One question is how a serial burglar, rapist and
murderer could operate in so many jurisdictions simultaneously and, much
like the case of Paul Bernardo in Canada, have law enforcement
officials so myopically overlook the connections among his crimes in several
different cities.
Another question is, of course, how a police officer
like Joseph DeAngelo, the accused Golden State Killer, could be capable of
such sadistic brutality throughout a large portion of his brief and troubled
law enforcement career.
Similar questions have been raised in the past about
other serial offenders, killers whose innocuous and even virtuous jobs seemed
to belie the horrors they committed while hiding behind a veneer of
respectability. That includes the infamous Canadian Col. Russell
Williams (who once piloted a VIP aircraft whose passengers included Queen
Elizabeth) to lesser-known computer store owner and prominent Nashville
businessman Tom Steeples, who killed three people for thrills before
committing suicide while in police custody.
But in fact, occupations and serial murders are often linked, and some specific full-time and part-time jobs are strangely over-represented among serial killers. So much so, in fact, that over the last 50 years, some dominant patterns have emerged.
Serial killer job breakdown
·
Top 3 Skilled
Serial-Killer Occupations: 1. Aircraft machinist/assembler; 2. Shoemaker/repair
person; 3. Automobile upholsterer
·
Top 3
Semi-Skilled Serial Killer Occupations: 1. Forestry worker/arborist; 2. Truck
driver; 3. Warehouse manager
·
Top 3 Unskilled
Serial Killer Occupations: 1. General
laborer (mover, landscaper, et. al.); 2. Hotel porter; 3. Gas station attendant
·
Top 3
Professional/Government Serial Killer Occupations: 1. Police/security official;
2. Military personnel; 3. Religious
official
Obviously, not everyone occupying these jobs is a
serial killer, nor are they likely to become one.
But there’s something about these jobs that is
inherently appealing to offenders, or that otherwise cultivates the impulses of
serial killers-in-waiting and causes them to be curiously over-represented
among this rare breed of murderer.
DeAngelo, the alleged Golden State Killer, for instance, actually held down three of these jobs over the course of his lifetime: Police officer, military personnel (he was previously in the U.S. navy), and, peripherally, truck driver, although his post-police career (he was fired in 1979 for shoplifting) was spent mostly as a mechanic for a fleet of grocery store freezer trucks.
Bygone era
A closer look at the these occupations reveals a
bygone era in terms of available jobs — occupations that, while once common and
accessible to killers in the ‘60s, ’70s and ’80s —are now largely obsolete. The
job market is changing; with that, so is the disturbing but legitimate nexus
between murder and labour.
The shift toward a service-based, tech-driven and typically contractual
economy, what is often called precarious
work, along with the
disappearance of once traditional career paths will obviously have profound
effects not only on the jobs held by offenders but also how they acquire their
victims.
Serial killers once used the guise of their employment to stalk and acquire
specific victims or types of victims (Dennis Rader, Roger
Kibbe and Bruce Mendenhall all immediately come to mind).
But new
research suggests that leisure
activities like music, including online interactions, may be the new avenue
through which serial killers troll for their victims.
It’s also where they mentally rehearse their crimes
amid a shrinking offline public sphere and work world.
The result is that we are likely to see, returning
once again to alleged Toronto serial killer Bruce McArthur, blurred
occupational-recreational categories involving both online and offline
dimensions — a new paradigm that will force us to adjust the list of the most
common jobs among serial killers.
The caveat, of course, is that a single defining occupation is in continuous flux. Could “occupation,” for instance, denote a primary vocation, a part-time avocation or even just a paid hobby or pastime?
Pastimes as well as professions?
Might it also include an unpaid pastime by which a person defines himself
or herself?
In McArthur’s case, we see that while he conforms to the “general laborer”
category, as a landscaper and not just a grass-cutter, as well as the owner of
his own company, he also fits no clear vocational definition.
And yet, as we already know from the morbid mass grave
recovered from a client’s home on Mallory Crescent in Toronto, the occupation
of the accused was central to his alleged offences and how he reportedly
disposed of victims — it was integral to his apparent modus operandi.
So while many killers use their employment as a pretext to acquire vulnerable victims, obtain information or cultivate violent fantasies for reasons we still don’t fully understand (“Milwaukee Cannibal” Jeffrey Dahmer once admitted that his work as a chocolate factory machinist awakened homicidal and necrophilic urges he had otherwise suppressed), in McArthur’s case, occupation was the back-end to his alleged crimes, not the inspiration for them.
What about the psychopaths?
As we begin to redraw the map of serial murder and career
paths, it might also be useful to look at the otherwise better-known index of
occupations over-represented among psychopaths.
While not all psychopaths are serial killers,
psychopathy — or at the very least, the possession of psychopathic traits — is a
common denominator among serial killers, sex offenders and most violent
criminals. Have a look at the Top 10 occupations according to an Oxford
University psychologist:
1. CEO or business executive
2. Lawyer
3. Media personality
4. Salesperson
5. Surgeon
6. Journalist or news anchor
7. Police officer
8. Religious official
9. Chef
10. Miscellaneous civil servant (military, city council, corrections, etc.)
In overlaying the two lists, we can see that even amid
a perpetually changing economy, certain jobs are always likely to appeal to those
people we will later be stunned to learn managed to carry on that type of work
while also being monsters in our midst.
Article: https://theconversation.com/the-preferred-jobs-of-serial-killers-and-psychopaths-96173
Source: The
Preferred Jobs of Serial Killers and Psychopaths – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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