The Patterson book had a passage (no page number, sorry—I had to return the book to the library because there’s a long line of patrons eager to read it) that described how, in Ramsland’s class, one of the cases studied was Elliott Rodgers (incel loser who went on a rampage of violence against female college students in California). In this part of the book, Patterson pulls some quotes from Rodgers’ “manifesto”—including at least one that Patterson pointedly notes originally appeared on page 118. I may be misremembering so take this as IMO, but I thought it was where Rodgers talked about how he chose the date for his attack—it had to be a “regular” college party night, not a holiday (he considered Halloween but decided against it).On the Pennsylvania webpage, Commonwealth v. Kohberger 682 MD 2022, none of the links for the search warrant returns for the murderer’s family home, car, and person are correct (the home link is for the person, the person link is for the car, and the car link is for the home):
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One of the questions Fixler answered during today’s Idaho Statesman’s livestream event, “Covering the University of Idaho Murders,” (starting at 42:29) asked if we would find out more details about the items found in the LE search of the murderer’s family home in PA.
Fixler specifically addressed the book with underlining on page 118, the Glock, and the ID cards that were found in a glove in a box:
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Fixler said the Glock had nothing to do with the crime scene, but I’d like to know if the gun was registered to the murderer and if he brought it with him to Washington (and Idaho). If the murderer had been captured immediately after his rampage, “suicide by cop” might have been one of his ultimate escape plans (plus he liked to frequent wild places at night, when he might encounter large predators like bears or mountain lions, or other crazy men).
Fixler said he asked Bill Thompson about the book with underlining on page 118, which many people have asked about. Thompson didn’t know which book was underlined, but he said LE found a lot of academic books on forensic psychology, criminal justice, and criminology. Fixler promised to follow up with investigators to find out the identity of the underlined book, which I, for one, am eager to know.
Finally, Fixler said that none of the ID cards that were found in a glove in a box belonged to any of the victims. Instead, one of the cards belonged to a female security guard the murderer worked with at Pleasant Valley School District back in PA, and the other belonged to another woman whose identity was not revealed. Both women were surprised that the murderer had their ID cards.
How a murderer chose a date is related to Kohberger's capstone project. The page could have been marked since his master degree capstone project.The Patterson book had a passage (no page number, sorry—I had to return the book to the library because there’s a long line of patrons eager to read it) that described how, in Ramsland’s class, one of the cases studied was Elliott Rodgers (incel loser who went on a rampage of violence against female college students in California). In this part of the book, Patterson pulls some quotes from Rodgers’ “manifesto”—including at least one that Patterson pointedly notes originally appeared on page 118. I may be misremembering so take this as IMO, but I thought it was where Rodgers talked about how he chose the date for his attack—it had to be a “regular” college party night, not a holiday (he considered Halloween but decided against it).
This section of Patterson’s book naturally comes before Kohberger’s apartment/car/parents’ home are raided and evidence seized, and he mentions one of the seized items was a book with a passage on p. 118 underlined. I interpreted this as Patterson’s way of telling the reader what that book was, without having tocome right out and say that it was ER’s garbage…er, “manifesto.”
The Patterson book had a passage (no page number, sorry—I had to return the book to the library because there’s a long line of patrons eager to read it) that described how, in Ramsland’s class, one of the cases studied was Elliott Rodgers (incel loser who went on a rampage of violence against female college students in California). In this part of the book, Patterson pulls some quotes from Rodgers’ “manifesto”—including at least one that Patterson pointedly notes originally appeared on page 118. I may be misremembering so take this as IMO, but I thought it was where Rodgers talked about how he chose the date for his attack—it had to be a “regular” college party night, not a holiday (he considered Halloween but decided against it).
This section of Patterson’s book naturally comes before Kohberger’s apartment/car/parents’ home are raided and evidence seized, and he mentions one of the seized items was a book with a passage on p. 118 underlined. I interpreted this as Patterson’s way of telling the reader what that book was, without having tocome right out and say that it was ER’s garbage…er, “manifesto.”
Page 127 of the Patterson/Ward book may be what you remember:The Patterson book had a passage (no page number, sorry—I had to return the book to the library because there’s a long line of patrons eager to read it) that described how, in Ramsland’s class, one of the cases studied was Elliott Rodgers (incel loser who went on a rampage of violence against female college students in California). In this part of the book, Patterson pulls some quotes from Rodgers’ “manifesto”—including at least one that Patterson pointedly notes originally appeared on page 118. I may be misremembering so take this as IMO, but I thought it was where Rodgers talked about how he chose the date for his attack—it had to be a “regular” college party night, not a holiday (he considered Halloween but decided against it).
This section of Patterson’s book naturally comes before Kohberger’s apartment/car/parents’ home are raided and evidence seized, and he mentions one of the seized items was a book with a passage on p. 118 underlined. I interpreted this as Patterson’s way of telling the reader what that book was, without having to come right out and say that it was ER’s garbage…er, “manifesto.”
RBBB. Yeah, I've always thought this was pretty telling. Investigators did have access to all that historical data via AT&T warrant, so they were able to trace his post crime cell phone pings retrospectively. ImoDid the cell records show him going back near that tower after the murders? If he did not go back that's pretty telling. Or maybe they didn't continue to trace it? Sorry im trying to keep up.
They're hell to heat and air condition. My friend from high school lives in one that was built in the sixties or seventies. All the levels open to each other and it has a cathedral ceiling to top it off. And you have to go up or down steps to get to everything, which is an accessibility nightmare. It was built into a slope, too, like the Moscow house was.All split level homes are really weird, but I kinda love them. My childhood best friend lived in a split level that was so jealous of. The kitchen was like three steps up from the living room and almost overlooked it in a way, and then her parents bedroom was up a flight of stairs behind the only real wall in the living room. The dining room was behind the kitchen and then you had to walk up three more stairs to get to the foyer and the hallway that led to bedrooms. Then the hallway wrapped around to another flight of stairs that led to a few more bedrooms (she had like six siblings, ha!) It was truly like a maze in there.
Great to see a house scaled to the size of Monsterberger's conscience.Patio door (slider) entering kitchen.
Red is point of entry
Yellow is Maddie bedroom
Green is Xana bedroom
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Agreed, that is why I stated the murderer did better in his Undergrad classes and struggled at WSU. His Bachelors was in Psychology and his Masters in Criminal Justice from DeSales.He was in person during undergrad studies, 2018-2020.
I'm guessing here but with some level of experience behind the guesses: Undergrad classes tend to be lecture, lecture mixed with discussion, or lecture, discussion and "hands on" because they are content oriented. Grad classes at major universities tend to research-based or seminars.
I'm attaching a list of the WSU doctoral program requirements so you can see that in whatever format WSU courses took, the preliminary exams after PhD coursework involve developing questions in a "substantive areas" of specialization and QUESTIONS on the "methodology/statistics" aspects and then writing a synthesis paper in response to faculty questions. This is in format much like the program that I did, although I'm in a field that is more qualitative, theoretical, and historical than quantitative, analytics and statistical. This work requires understanding of the FIELD and its issues and methods of inquiry rather than the recollection of facts and procedures. It doesn't allow much leeway for new students to show off prior knowledge or opinions but rather developing the ability to analyze and synthesize within the field and subfield.
(snipped by me)PS Both Angenette Levy & Dr Brucato have the book which they believe to be the one which Loser underlined on pg 118.
Neither of them want to identify it just yet, they're waiting for it to be revealed in a document dump but....from their heavy hints it sounds like TB.
They don't want to give book title. It's a book which they both already owned.What is the book? Doesn’t TB mean Ted Bundy?
OK, but we can guess. Here are some Ted Bundy books that are supposedly popular in criminology programs:They don't want to give book title. It's a book which they both already owned.
Levy said that she didn't want to potentially be a cause of misinformation online in case she was later proved wrong.
There is no expectation of privacy when receiving calls on a recorded prison/jail line as plainly stated by a recording before the call is accepted. We've heard some from Alex Murdaugh, Richard Allen, and Lori and Chad Vallow recently. Wasn't some of the Casey Anthony calls published way back when?I hope those conversations would be private, other than for the appropriate prison and LE officials. The parents deserve their privacy, IMO.
It was the same with Murdaugh, Vallow and Allen/Delphi trial in the aftermath. Now you hear an occasional peep in MSM. On to the next new horror story.The media sure is getting a lot of mileage out of the murder victims! Panel of experts talking about prison, and what that is for convicted murderers in the USA. Are they hoping that people will gloat about Kohberger's future? Strange idea about entertainment today!
Kohberger's capstone project focused on script theory, which was developed in 1994. It does not currently have value in criminology. Kohberger based his work on posting questions online.
Criminology: Script Theory (Kohberger's capstone project for Master degree)
"In 1994, Derek Cornish introduced the concept of crime scripts to the field of environmental criminology with a paper entitled ‘The procedural analysis of offending and its relevance for situational prevention’ (Cornish, 1994a).
This work had one clear objective: to provide academics and practitioners working in the field of crime prevention with a clear, innovative and applicable theoretical framework to the study of crime-commission processes. Drawing from cognitive psychology, Cornish retraced the origins of scripts and outlined its potential for better understanding crime-commission processes.
By applying scripts to crime, Cornish developed a procedural framework to identify the complete sequence of actions adopted prior to, during and following the commission of a particular crime and thereby to offer a fuller range of intervention points to disrupt crime commission. Because offenders can learn from their mistakes when committing crimes, Cornish also discussed how crime scripts can evolve when disrupted by obstacles that prevent their completion
...
Despite a recent increase of interest in the application of script analysis to various forms of crime, the full value of scripts has not been realized."
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New developments in script analysis for situational crime prevention |
In 1994, Derek Cornish introduced the concept of crime scripts to the field of environmental criminology with a paper entitled ‘The procedural analysis ofwww.taylorfrancis.com
Yikes.(Snipped by me)
Masking in social situations is a common human behavior, including among autistic individuals.
Contrary to stereotype, autistic individuals can lie (masking, after all, involves some deception):
Deceptive behaviour in autism: A scoping review
Also contrary to stereotype, most autistic individuals have plenty of affective/emotional empathy, though some may struggle with cognitive empathy. It is psychopaths who have no affective empathy.
Though rare, an individual can be both autistic and psychopathic:
The relationship between psychopathy and autism: a systematic review and narrative synthesis
IMO, incels who murder are likely to be both autistic and psychopathic. Such an individual might join an online forum with other individuals who hate women and are envious of romantically successful men, then their lack of affective empathy leads them to use violence to get even.
I imagine if an autistic individual had co-occurring psychopathy, they may be able to lie masterfully—with enough practice.
For what it’s worth, I think the murderer may simply be psychopathic and not be autistic, as Dr. Brocato implies.
I personally know many individuals with autistic traits, but none of these people have psychopathic traits—that I have witnessed, at least.
I also personally know only two individuals who I think are psychopathic. The first (a relative) shows no signs of autism and instead was often manic in his youth. The second (a former roommate) was socially awkward, but this awkwardness was due to his intensity, his need to control others, and his simmering anger that would suddenly erupt, appalling both co-workers and roommates. Like the murderer we discuss here, he was an excellent student, but unlike the murderer, he always had a girlfriend, in spite of his creepy vibe. (If a man is handsome enough, he usually has no problem finding a woman to put up with him.) Anyway, I periodically look up his name to see if he has moved away, or if he is in prison.
IMO