This article will be interesting to some, published in the 'Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling', July 2023
(PDF) The significance of unusual acts in sexual homicide (researchgate.net)
The authors reach conclusions (caveated by a need for further research) on the back of 762 cases of sexual murder they studied.
They define 'unusual acts' as follows:
Such as carving on the victim, evisceration (i.e., removal of internal organs), skinning the victim, cannibalism and vampirism.
The authors go on to say:
Our findings show a strong relationship between body dismemberment, FOI and unusual acts. These extreme crime scene behaviours may just share a common theme: sadism.
Despite a lack of research on unusual and extreme crime scene behaviours, the current study shows that these behaviours—although unusual—can be interpreted as a form of dismemberment.
The study appears to be concluding that in the event Alice, the C5 and the Pinchin Street murder were committed at the hands of three different people, then not only do you have three men running 'round killing women in the same location and at the same time; you also have three men with the same psychology and motivation, taking pleasure from acts that are all deemed to be forms of dismemberment. It would certainly be the only time in the modern history of England.
It's worth noting in relation to Annie, that 'carving on the victim' and evisceration are deemed to be borne of the same sadistic design.
(PDF) The significance of unusual acts in sexual homicide (researchgate.net)
The authors reach conclusions (caveated by a need for further research) on the back of 762 cases of sexual murder they studied.
They define 'unusual acts' as follows:
Such as carving on the victim, evisceration (i.e., removal of internal organs), skinning the victim, cannibalism and vampirism.
The authors go on to say:
Our findings show a strong relationship between body dismemberment, FOI and unusual acts. These extreme crime scene behaviours may just share a common theme: sadism.
Despite a lack of research on unusual and extreme crime scene behaviours, the current study shows that these behaviours—although unusual—can be interpreted as a form of dismemberment.
The study appears to be concluding that in the event Alice, the C5 and the Pinchin Street murder were committed at the hands of three different people, then not only do you have three men running 'round killing women in the same location and at the same time; you also have three men with the same psychology and motivation, taking pleasure from acts that are all deemed to be forms of dismemberment. It would certainly be the only time in the modern history of England.
It's worth noting in relation to Annie, that 'carving on the victim' and evisceration are deemed to be borne of the same sadistic design.
Comment