I have read an articles postulating that Ted Bundy had bipolar disorder, and his last stint during which he was caught was an episode of mania. Can’t positively comment, but it solidifies my feeling that keeping SKs alive and studying them makes more sense than DP. About Israel Keyes I am almost positive he had some bipolarity. No one pushed him to talk about all his “feats”. It is as if after arrest, he became so impulsively talkative that he simply couldn’t keep it inside, and it accelerated and then, culminated in suicide. A very disorganized episode in the life of a highly organized killer, what does it imply?
So I wonder whether SKs make mistakes not as they get older, nor “towards the end” of their careers, but whether they are cyclical in their behavioral patterns, and make mistakes during especially bad episodes. It makes sense to me as most SKs I read about are people of high control, and episodes of total dyscontrol intercalating in their behavior might indicate some emotional imbalance.
One article that I read, about the seasonality of human behaviors, when suicidal peak falls on spring and homicidal - on summer, points the need to study the “killing patterns” of SKs depending on the seasons, and whether the level of their organization changes with the seasons, too.
Ted Bundy is one of the most well-known serial killers in the history of America. Known as much for his horrific crimes — he killed more than 30 people that investigators know of — as his allegedly charming demeanor, Bundy remains an oft-examined figure in the world of true crime.
www.oxygen.com
This article raises more questions than answers but is also deeper
What kinds of factors make and break the serial killer? A look at Conduct Disorder, addiction, and the frontal lobes of psychopaths could hold some answers.
www.psychologytoday.com