Originally posted by Natalie Severn
View Post
Well.....he was able to function in his every day life. His killings occupied a minute proportion of his existence. That is a fact. He was able to function so well that he wasn't caught. That is a fact unless you want to speculate that there was a cover up. So these facts suggest that the man would not have been evidently a dangerous person unless you happened to bump into him at 2 in the morning. Surely an evidently dangerous person and someone who exercises sufficient control to get himself into the required the situation is a contradiction in terms.
I'd suggest were the person committed to an asylum it is more likely than not that he would not have been viewed as dangerous. Though it's more likey still that he was never committed to an asylum. Based on the fact that he went about his daily life for those months without arousing sufficient suspicion to be arrested and charged. Serial killers get caught not because they're viewed as dangerous by the wider public - but because the evidence stacks up against them.
Comment