Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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That would be laughable! Not least since different people read in different personality types in selected murders. For example, I read in a calculating man, working to a fixed scheme in Mary Kellys murder, whereas someone else may read in a frenzied acquaintance, "revelling in blood" it the exact same murder. How useful is it to conclude from a personality perspective in such a case?
In essence, suggestions of personality types based on interpretations of crime scene evidence may end up in anything from disaster to success, for the simple reason that it will all build on guesswork. Suggestions of a single killer based on factual evidence of a rare and odd nature are not based on guesswork but instead on facts, and are therefore infinitely less at risk to be wrong. The one thing that can get in the way of getting in right in those cases is sheer fluke, and that fluke becomes less likely with every piece of evidence that speaks the same language. Meaning that the odds for two killers will be low with serial murder in the same town and time, very low indeed with two mutilating serial killers in the same town and time, ridiculously low with two eviscerating serial killers in the same town and time, and practically non-existant with two eviscerating serial killers who DO THE SAME THINGS, in the same town and time.
Once we have these self-corroborating inclusions, speaking about how useful we believe our personal takes on differing personalities are to tell the killers apart becomes something Monty Python would find too much over the top to joke about.
Which is why I sincerely hope nobody would even hint at prioritizing in that way! Maybe such a suggestion could come from a frustrated poster who would even go as far as to claim that there were no similarities inbetween the Ripper and Torso cases, I donīt know. Frustration does funny things to people.
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