Kapua
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- Feb 18, 2014
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Thanks Nikki, and appreciate much you sharing from your background. I definitely am not interested in sticking on labels that don't fit, simply because they are popular.
on a side note, given your background, I wonder if you are familiar with the work of my godfather, Dr. Peter H. Wolff. He is very old now, but still working and writing in the pediatric psychiatry field.
I do not have any medical background at all. None. My focus in graduate school was psychoanalysis. I spent five years while in a Ph.D. Program participating in an interdisciplinary "working group" with teaching and practicing psychoanalysts from the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute and Clinic and the Wright Institute in Berkeley doing cross-discipline work with U.C. Berkeley professors from various departments from sociol sciences and humanities. Our focus was object relations psychoanalytic theory (pioneered by Melanie Klein). My interest was very serious, but, as said, not a medical background.
I am seeking to understand Steven as he is, not to overlook behaviors in order to force a fit. That is a good point about his calmness. Scott Peterson's crime has many similarities. How did he behave? Kapua? You said you followed that one closely.
As far as not speculating on Steven's psyche and its twists, I don't see the harm in putting out thoughts on this any more than with speculating on what was meant by the skull painting. We do both spec and deduction here. Most importantly we are not influencing the jury. The jury should absolutely only hear from medical experts, if any. When we speculate and people rebut our ideas, that is part of how our perceptions evolve. To shut our thoughts down completely, as opposed to correcting and informing why, because we lack the proper degree so we should not have thoughts in that area, seems to me counter productive of learning, but that is MOO.
I have zero background in psychology, but I consider anyone capable of such a brutal, monstrous murder to be in the abnormal range, to say the least. SC pegs the meter, IMHO. The fact that these types of killers think that they can just bluff their way through a polygraph exam, and charm their way through a police interview and media appearances just fascinates me. Like RDS said, SC thinks he is smart and the rest of us are stupid. BTW, I did some research on "eraser killers". Marilee Strong started researching eraser killers starting with the Peterson case and she's now done years of research on the topic.
Yes, I followed the Peterson case very closely. I own 3 or 4 books about the case! Scott Peterson's behavior was very similar to SC's in that he was unemotional for the most part and wasn't able to convincingly act concerned for Laci. A Modesto Bee photographer captured him smiling and laughing with friends at the candlelight vigil that was held for Laci about 1-2 weeks after she went missing and some of the jurors mentioned that picture after the trial. It reminds me of what Kimberlyn Scott said, “His tone was out of context for being in a room full of people that were afraid for someone. He was being a smart *advertiser censored*.” They both had that lack of empathy. I also remember that SP went out to play golf instead of posting missing person flyers and that there were a pile of them in his car. Both SP and SC had that "they'll never catch me" mindset.