Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac
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Ted Bundy abducted 2 women, in broad daylight, from a crowded beach, and his last victim, he abducted from her school (also daytime).
Dennis Radar committed his first murders (the Otero Family), in the morning, around breakfast time.
Ed Kemper abducted women on the university campus, and drove them out past security guards (explaining they were asleep).
Richard Chase committed a few of his crimes in the day time, and after he left the crimes scenes was spotted in bloody clothing and such, yet wasn't arrested etc. His case isn't exactly a highlight in effective policing. As an aside, in at least one case he removed a woman's kidneys, cut them in half, then placed them back in the body - he was psychotic, so don't ask why, his general explanation for his crimes had to do with his blood turning to dust, or something like that, and he needed to replace it - oh, and no, he had no medical training by the way, yet he used to cut up animals, so had "anatomical knowledge" but not "medical knowledge".
Carl Watts, who committed a number of murders, but this one seems most relevant to the current point: "Jeanne Clyne, a 44-year-old reporter for Detroit News, walked home after a doctor's appointment, and was attacked. She was approached in broad daylight next to her Grosse Point Farms home on a major suburban road. Eleven stab wounds resulted in her death. Insufficient evidence was discovered by the police to identify a suspect. Detectives initially suspected Jeanne's husband, but once Coral admitted to her murder, they ruled him out." ; Again, daylight, and murdered right out in the open. ...
I'm sure we could find more cases, where a serial killer committed a crime (or initiated it), during daylight hours, in a location where we, as sensible people, will go "well, that doesn't make sense, nobody would do that". They do, they have, they will do again. Serial killers, while sometimes completely bat **** crazy (i.e. see Chase), can in many ways be almost normal in their thinking but when it comes to the decisions around committing their crimes - they do make weird choices (but then, the very fact they chose to kill some random stranger is, after all, well along the road of weird choices).
Basically, I'm not saying I disagree that a dawn murder in the backyard of #29 is unwise - what I'm saying is that when it comes to serial murderers, when it comes to evaluating their choices about when, where, and who, it is best to set aside our ideas of what makes sense and try and figure out what apparently made sense to them. If JtR thought killing at dawn in the backyard of #29 was ok, even though Cadosche had just recently gone to the loo next door, then that tells us about JtR. We can't use our sense of improbability to assess the probability of the events. If it appears they happened at dawn, then we need to take that into account - is JtR the "Richard Chase" of London, is he the "Ted Bundy", etc. (and, as I've said before, I'm not a fan of Behavioural Profiling of that sort, and I've illustrated two contrasting examples to make a point, though I could be called on it as such arguments are admittedly weak; i.e. if 99.9% are of type A, but I fortunately have that 0.1% case to present as B, I make it look more like 50/50 - it's a bit of sophistry on my part, so I should own up to that).
- Jeff
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