Below I've quoted excerpts from SuperDave's (SU-per DAVE!!) summary of what FBI profilers have said about the RN. Then I offer my comments.
First, I want to explain further what I said above about "profilers": indeed I think "profiling" (as practiced by the FBI) is unscientific and historically unsuccessful; however, there are subparts of the process, such as linguistic analysis, that I think, used properly by experts in the field, have the potential for revealing information useful in a criminal investigation.
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Roger DePue is the former head of the FBI Behavioral Science Unit. In 2006, he went public with what he had told Alex Hunter in private:
--"The delivery will be exhausting so I advise you to be rested," the note says. Depue called that an unusual instruction. "The statement sounds caring, motherly,"
tapu: I get no such feel from this statement. (What mother says such a thing using "delivery, exhausting, advise, and rested"?) It makes me think of when the guy with the bomb collar in Erie PA was given directions to go all over the place for further instructions. This kind of statement would make sense to me if that kind of plan is what the writer had in mind.
--The note warns that if the instructions are not carried out precisely, "You will also be denied her remains for proper burial." Depue said. "In my opinion, proper burial is of more concern to a female than to a male," Depue said.
"Oh, really? Are you basing that opinion on how different you and your wife feel about it?" WSers, does anyone else here think, as I do, that if we asked bereaved mothers and fathers how they feel about having a proper burial for their child, not many more daddies would say "whatever" than would mommies.
--"The two gentlemen watching over your daughter do not particularly like you so I advise you not to provoke them," the note says. The idea of "gentlemen watching over" has a feminine tone, Depue said. "Watching over" is also a caring concept," he said. That one makes a lot of sense.
"two gentlemen," "watching over," do not particularly like," and "provoke" are all figurative language. Specifically it's the device of understatement and is meant to imply exactly the opposite--potential brutality. I don't think it has anything to do with the user's gender. Incidentally, does "watching over" in that sentence make any of you feel like it's a caring concept?
--In Depue's opinion, "The writer is a well-educated, middle-aged female."
Agree with age and gender; as for well-educated, seems more like high school plus "some college," although I tend to be shocked regularly at the low literacy of college grads.
Former FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt said that he and several other profilers had studied the note and concluded that "despite threats of violence throughout the note, Van Zandt says, it has a 'softness' suggesting its author was a woman or perhaps a 'genteel man."
Seriously, besides looking at the note after you heard that these charlatans thought it sounded "soft," did YOU think it sounded soft? I sure don't.
What I am saying above is not that a woman didn't write it. I just think their reasoning is questionable--not based on a shred of evidence other than their opinions. Conversely, I base my determination of female writer on features like pronoun use--which have been shown to hold true in established research.
I put forth the suggestion that much of what the profilers have to say about the RN can be traced back to their gender and their own preconceived notions of the opposite sex. To me, I can see this note being written by a woman--but not because it sounds "motherly." I think it was written by an aggressive, "alpha-male" type female, who is psychologically powerful and controlling.
Oo, didn't notice this earlier; will have a look.
http://alinguistic.blogspot.com/2007...barbara-j.html