Originally posted by John G
View Post
I was re-considering the psychological profiling of Wallace which both Murphy and Gannon spoke about. Obviously the 2 authors came to differing conclusions, although both ultimately felt Wallace was guilty---Murphy believing he committed the actual crime and Gannon suggesting he was the mastermind who was responsible for its commission.
Murphy builds up an image of a long suffering man filled with minor disappointments and feeling trapped with an elderly wife for whom he cared little. There is some dispute on whether Wallace would have known his wife's true age before marrying her, but if not this could have added to his resentment of her which compounded what was probably a largely ungratifying life. Gannon's chapter of "Family Wipe Out' is pretty well done IMO, he contrasts Wallace with John Emil List who also was said to have suffered from "minor disappointments" and could be seen as a repressed personality in the same way. List thought his wife tricked him into marriage by pretending to be pregnant.
Like Wallace, List was a mild mannered, stoic type who was a professional failure and kept his private resentments bottled up. List would fake going to work everyday, take the train, and then come back after losing his job as an accountant. Wallace worked a thankless job as a door to door agent--as Murphy notes, a job he believed to beneath him and more befitting a younger man who could better bare going out in any weather to collect premiums from belligerent customers. Both men showed no signs before the crime of any sort of criminal behavior whatsoever. I would say one could argue both demonstrated traits and behaviors that could be seen as somewhat lightly on the autistic spectrum, like Asperger's or the like.
Of course, we know that John Emil List was guilty and we do not know whether WHW was or not.
Also, there is a danger in psychological profiling. It doesn't prove anything at all if Wallace was "odd" and often innocuous things can be looked at in a certain light if one is trying to prove a point or cast suspicion on somebody.
I still find it interesting though that Wallace does seem to have the personality that strongly fits a "Family Wipe Out" scenario. Combine this with the actual physical crime having the typical elements of a domestic homicide. and I would say he fits to a tee modern profiling of these sorts of crimes.
Does that prove he did it? Not at all, I would still vote to acquit. Especially with all this suspicious stuff regarding Parry muddying the picture.
But perhaps you can understand the reasons why I feel it was "more likely than not" that Wallace was guilty (whether he committed the actual crime or simply masterminded it.)
Comment