By Claire Booth
Last week, I
wrote about the Golden State Killer, a serial murderer believed responsible for
a dozen slayings and more than 50 rapes throughout California in the 1970s and ’80s.
Authorities recently arrested a suspect in the case – 32 years after the last
homicide.
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Sketches of what the suspect looked like at the time of the crimes. This poster was released as part of a huge push by law enforcement in 2016 to bring more publicity to the decades-old case. |
Joseph James
DeAngelo was taken into custody at his nondescript suburban home in Citrus
Heights, California, a suburb of Sacramento. The 72-year-old has been charged with
the 12 murders and is currently being held without bail. He hasn’t yet entered
a plea to the charges.
Even before
the arrest of a suspect, this case prompted an extremely intriguing question. Why did he stop? Why was the 1986 killing
of Janelle Cruz the last one? The killer had an MO (premeditatedly casing and
then breaking into homes, binding victims, raping them, and then killing them)
that indicated he was motivated by serial desires. He perfectly fit the “classic”
definition of a serial killer.
Strong
theories at that point included that he was dead or that he was in prison for
other, possibly unrelated crimes. He also could have moved, out of state or
even out of the country. Any of those reasons would explain why the killings
stopped in California.
DeAngelo
fits none of these explanations. He’s not dead, he was not in jail or prison during this time period, and he worked for almost 30 years at a
grocery distribution center that was mere miles from where the first East Area rapes
occurred in the ’70s.
So what
happened? If DeAngelo is indeed the Golden State Killer, why did he stop? It’s
a bigger issue that experts have given a great deal of thought.
“It has been widely believed that once serial killers start
killing, they cannot stop. There are, however, some serial killers who stop
murdering altogether before being caught. In these instances, there are events
or circumstances in offenders’ lives that inhibit them from pursuing more
victims. These can include increased participation in family activities, sexual
substitution, and other diversions.”
This comes from an FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit report
that is based on a symposium with investigators, mental health professionals
and forensic specialists. Other experts interviewed in response to DeAngelo’s
arrest agree.
“These are
not acts that a person is compelled to do,” University of California, San Diego,
forensic psychologist and psychiatry professor J. Reid Meloy told the New York Times. “They are intentional and predatory. There is choice, capacity and
opportunity that is exercised.”
There are a
few examples to point to:
• Dennis
Rader, the BTK killer, murdered ten people from 1974
to 1991 in and around Wichita, Kansas. He wasn’t caught until 2005. During police
interviews, he admitted to engaging in auto-erotic activities as a substitute
for killing.
• Gary
Ridgeway, the Green River Killer, killed 48 women in the Seattle area during
the 1980s and 1990s, leaving their bodies near the Green River south of the
city. He had been married three times. During the first two marriages, he
killed regularly. During the third, which was a happier union, the killings
dwindled. One pause between murders lasted eight years. He was arrested in 2001
and later confessed.
DeAngelo’s
first daughter was born just after the 1981 killings of Cheri Domingo and
Gregory Sanchez in Goleta. The next Golden State Killer-linked slaying didn’t
happen until five years later. If DeAngelo is guilty, would that life event
have played into the gap between murders?
Of course
there is another, darker, question hovering over all this. What if he didn’t stop? What if he just changed his MO enough to
make connections to past crimes more difficult? Now that they have a suspect
whose history and whereabouts they can comb through, authorities assuredly are looking
into that very carefully.
Great post, Claire. One article I read about the subject also said serial killers who seemingly stop might "age out," as in their testosterone lowers as they age so their need for killing/rape as an outlet dwindles, or they're not physically able to commit the crimes w/out an increased risk of getting caught. In De Angelo's case, this *might've* been part of it (if he actually stopped) because his crimes had a physical component (climbing fences to escape, for example) that might've been hard for him to continue as he aged.
ReplyDeleteI will not be surprised if they find he didn't actually stop, that he just slowed down and changed his MO drastically.
A natural thing affects most criminals that also affects alcoholics and drug users that's kind of what Holly mentioned. As you age, often a criminal and alcoholic reach a kind of menopause. I've seen this happen again and again with acquaintances of mine who I was in the "life" with. Check with AA folks, who report the same thing. I kind of went through the same thing with my own criminal and drinking "careers." Didn't have a "come to Jesus" moment; just outgrew the lifestyle...
ReplyDeleteThanks, Claire. I wondered about this. You (and Holly and Les) have given me a good explanation.
ReplyDeleteHolly, that's a good point about the physical component. And I'm with you in thinking that there's the possibility he might not have stopped at all, just changed his patterns.
ReplyDeleteLes, that is a really important perspective and has given me a lot to think about. Thanks for commenting.
ReplyDeleteDana, let us know if you have more questions!
ReplyDelete