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@10ofRods, I haven’t been able to go back and read the threads, but I’m interested in whether you believe this crime was committed by a serial killer or someone very close who truly had a score to settle?
I believe there was a score to settle, of those two choices. Today, I'm looking at serial killers a bit, but hardly any of their murders resemble this one. And serial killers come in so many varieties, it's literally crazy.
This, to me, is more like a family annihilation situation (think Chris Watts). The victims were like a little family to each other, all except Ethan having roots in Couer D'Alene and long friendships. Two of the girls were "sisters" in an organization (with each other) and the third is said to have considered another victim as her "chosen sister." This is more like those crimes when a vengeful person decides to kill a group of related people, jointly the object or rage, anger - or panic. I never rule out fear and panic as motivation for murder, as it happens all the time. We see kids killing parents because "I didn't want them to find out about...this or that."
Yet, it has an element of planning and stealth that speaks to a personality type - probably shared with one of the serial killer types (again, they can be schizophrenic like Berkowitz or Jared Loughner or James Holmes; but equally likely to have one or more personality disorder, such as Antisocial - like Ted Bundy). There are other diagnoses and of course, many serial killers never get a formal diagnosis. These are all just currently useful labels in American culture - they simply give us a handle on what another person's mind and behavior might be.
Sadly, most of these killers have unique characteristics and almost all have an incredible ability to blend in well enough, or at least, for a while.
The "score to settle" theory makes sense to me because I believe this particular killer spied on the house, was likely in the house before, knew all of the victims in one way or another, and, perhaps, was motivated by bizarre beliefs such as "these kids have it too good" or "I can't stand people like this." If one of them had actually made an enemy out of this person (narcissistic slight? rejection? mockery? disrespect? gossip? pranking? something more antisocial?), it somehow makes more sense to me. The person chose a quiet night and I believe they knew the weekend behavior of the house's occupants. I believe they were able to get back to their own place/safe space quickly.
I'm willing to consider sociopathic serial killer/random killer on the loose in Moscow, Idaho. Would have left by now, of course. But they were around for a while, they knew the situation.
Of the "score to settle" group, my lunch money bet goes to a student who either missed out on graduating for the past couple of years and is marginally living the university life (increasingly excluded from the doings of younger people as he ages) and someone who is interpersonally aggressive, likely arrogant, into weaponry and the gym, and has thought about or committed crimes such as breaking and entering, stalking, peeping through windows, petty theft, cheating on coursework, etc. Many campus murders are "score to settle," as when grad students kill their dissertation advisors for refusing to accept a dissertation as it stands and requiring more work, etc. We could say that sometimes people have a sense of entitlement?