The Serial Killer: Nature Vs. Nurture

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Serial Killer: Nature vs. Nurture Pedro Alonso Lopez, “The Monster of the Andes,” is a serial killer accused of raping and killing over 300 girls. His technique was to lure susceptible young girls into isolated areas or buildings where he would then rape each of them before killing them. Using a variety of cruel and ruthless methods, he killed the girls, strangulation being most popular. Serial murders have become a fascination of the public due to the unimaginable bizarreness that is reality. “Normal” people question how and why a human being could be so brutally vicious toward another human; psychologists have been researching that exact question for years. There is much speculation about how serial killers come to be serial killers. What …show more content…

Most serial murderers have been deprived of any control over their home, their body, and their entire life. “Psychokillers take their fantasies and make them a reality living their dreams” (Serial Killers: Nature vs. Nurture 2). Both physical and especially emotional abuse is the consistent, reoccurring factor among a majority of serial killers. Traumatic abuse in childhood has long been viewed as a primary cause of violent behavior in adulthood (Dolan 24). Abusive parents do not generally vent their anger equally on all their children. Such parents tend to unleash the anger and negative emotions on their more difficult children; this potential aggression and physical and emotional abuse of the child shapes the future criminal. “Most serial murders are not classified as psychotics, but rather as psychopaths- their perception of reality is clear except that they feel no social or moral obligations” () Killers are taking control of their own lives through their fantasies in the only way they know fit, through …show more content…

John Wayne Gacy’s father, for example, was an alcoholic. Alcoholism is such a powerful disease that consumes not only oneself, but also those surrounding one. Anyone who dared to disturb Gacy’s father while he was drinking, was chased away by terrifying threats and disturbing verbal abuse. After his drink he would then berate and beat his wife and children (Dolan 24). Such horrific trauma at such a young age is the reason many believe led John Wayne Gacy to become the brutal serial murderer he is known to be. Had Gacy been raised in a safe and loving family, maybe the world would not know him to be one of the most horrific criminals the public has seen. Research has also shown that a child deprived of love and affection from his mother is more likely to become a criminal than by a child with a caring and nurturing mother (Barbour 87). Ed Kemper, for example, was isolated in the basement as a child by his mother who was afraid he would molest his sister. Kemper’s father would commit those horrendous acts on his daughters and because Ed resembled his father’s looks, his mother neglected him. She blamed him for her problems, depriving him of the basic need of tender, love, and care. Criminal Personality Research Project showed 70 percent of serial murderers had a familial history of drug or alcohol abuse. Four in ten reported being physically abused or beaten during childhood. However, emotional

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