I was just re-reading Kelly's letters here: http://www.casebook.org/official_doc...y_letters.html
I find some of them to be quite manipulative in their language, and it appears to me that some of the text is akin to what I would expect a sociopath to use to get what he wants. I have experience with only one diagnosed (and eventually imprisoned) sociopath who was in my life, and the charm he exuded to take everyone in his life for all the money and possessions they had, was immense, and especially with regards to several women who saw hope within his (what they thought) boyish selfishness. This man could go for a long time, months at least, pretending to really care about someone or some ideal, when what he wanted was just a thing he had set his eyes on and wouldn't be shaken from its trail. He did snap at times and became threatening and violent when he was met with absolute negatives with regards to his demands. I think he is sill in prison, but he is not important save as my personal connection to this kind of disorder.
Back to Kelly: His letters show a careful calculation in words that could make one forget his crimes and think of him as a victim of circumstance. In fact, he admits his faults, but holds others responsible for his actions. It's the mother's fault that he wasn't comfortable living with them. It's his wife's lack of trust that cause issues which put him in Clerkenwell. He writes to her telling her that she is too good a person for him to even mention her faults at his trial.
The most telling information is his complaint to the prison official in which he tells the man that he is good, but that he builds men up and then brings them down and how can he (Kelly) be comfortable in such an environment? Then he says how he has been made to beg for any comfort and he won't do that again just to get a violin that he would only be left in suspense about. When he gets his violin, of course, not long after, he uses his participation in the prison band to escape. It appears as if this were a calculated plan that he and perhaps his co-conspirator dreamed up a long time before.
Carefully read his letters and look at all the "poor me" stuff and the "You are wonderful human beings, but you treat me like shite" declarations, and see what you think.
Mike
I find some of them to be quite manipulative in their language, and it appears to me that some of the text is akin to what I would expect a sociopath to use to get what he wants. I have experience with only one diagnosed (and eventually imprisoned) sociopath who was in my life, and the charm he exuded to take everyone in his life for all the money and possessions they had, was immense, and especially with regards to several women who saw hope within his (what they thought) boyish selfishness. This man could go for a long time, months at least, pretending to really care about someone or some ideal, when what he wanted was just a thing he had set his eyes on and wouldn't be shaken from its trail. He did snap at times and became threatening and violent when he was met with absolute negatives with regards to his demands. I think he is sill in prison, but he is not important save as my personal connection to this kind of disorder.
Back to Kelly: His letters show a careful calculation in words that could make one forget his crimes and think of him as a victim of circumstance. In fact, he admits his faults, but holds others responsible for his actions. It's the mother's fault that he wasn't comfortable living with them. It's his wife's lack of trust that cause issues which put him in Clerkenwell. He writes to her telling her that she is too good a person for him to even mention her faults at his trial.
The most telling information is his complaint to the prison official in which he tells the man that he is good, but that he builds men up and then brings them down and how can he (Kelly) be comfortable in such an environment? Then he says how he has been made to beg for any comfort and he won't do that again just to get a violin that he would only be left in suspense about. When he gets his violin, of course, not long after, he uses his participation in the prison band to escape. It appears as if this were a calculated plan that he and perhaps his co-conspirator dreamed up a long time before.
Carefully read his letters and look at all the "poor me" stuff and the "You are wonderful human beings, but you treat me like shite" declarations, and see what you think.
Mike
Comment