Well Sam, we seem to have some form of agreeable dialogue here... but I don't know.
For it is seems obvious to me that what you call a 'commuting' serial killer becomes just that when his familiar territory becomes squeezed tight by the forces of law and order, forcing him to expand his activities into what we might view as unfamiliar territory, but I think I'd be right in saying that this type of serial killer then falls back on his previous knowledge of particular areas.
When you look at how Pitchfork operated, he was over a wide area like a rash, but every single site he employed for flashing, or murder, were extremely familiar to him from his previous years... point being that there was no expansion of his killing territory, merely a reversal to his old haunts. This is perhaps more common than we think.
I'm more than happy with the formula of a local killer, with deep roots planted in the Whitechapel locale, but I do think we should extend the indulgence that the boy may have tubed himself in, as he didn't like the Lambeth Walk.
For it is seems obvious to me that what you call a 'commuting' serial killer becomes just that when his familiar territory becomes squeezed tight by the forces of law and order, forcing him to expand his activities into what we might view as unfamiliar territory, but I think I'd be right in saying that this type of serial killer then falls back on his previous knowledge of particular areas.
When you look at how Pitchfork operated, he was over a wide area like a rash, but every single site he employed for flashing, or murder, were extremely familiar to him from his previous years... point being that there was no expansion of his killing territory, merely a reversal to his old haunts. This is perhaps more common than we think.
I'm more than happy with the formula of a local killer, with deep roots planted in the Whitechapel locale, but I do think we should extend the indulgence that the boy may have tubed himself in, as he didn't like the Lambeth Walk.
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