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This is what we need to ask Aphrodite Jones when we have her onWell I hope so since most, if not all, are out of prison now. I think Laurie is still in but Im not sure.
This is what we need to ask Aphrodite Jones when we have her onWell I hope so since most, if not all, are out of prison now. I think Laurie is still in but Im not sure.
That could be. This is what drives me crazy is we will never really know WHY. No matter what the girls say how could we ever believe them?RSBM
I, personally,, have a very hard time understanding how anyone can NOT know right from wrong in some situations, though. How can one NOT know killing someone is wrong? They were exposed to normal society, it's not like they lived in a "killing is just fine" bubble (that I could understand better).
But I have no frame of reference. I can't have you so I'll kill you? You made me feel bad so I'll kill you? I might get closer to having a concept if it was "torture you" instead of "kill you", and maybe that was the actual goal. To inflict pain, and death was just a by product of that goal.
WECOME. SO GLAD YOU MADE IT.Hi all. A new member of WebSleuths and the book club here![]()
Exactly right, Jo_sews, the girl’s backstories begin to explain so much of this, especially Melinda and Laurie. Those girls had horrible upbringings. I’ve worked in the juvenile justice and adult corrections systems and so much can be understood by looking at how people are raised. I think it was a psychotherapist who did an assessment on Melinda and testified that she functioned emotionally on the level of a 3 or 4 year old. I think this book does give us some good information about the girl’s backgrounds and just how awful their parents were.There’s something to be said about the human brain not being fully developed until 25 years of age. I’m not excusing the behavior, but there’s no thought of consequences…also the girls involved in the crime were all abused in some way. Again, not an excuse but some of them lived in such demented environments, how can they know right from wrong? I find the back stories give some insight into how things can get so crazy.
Looking forward to the zoom! I don’t share much about my true crime interests with people I know…they aren’t as passionate about it as us folks… is passionate the right word? I just always wonder, ‘why’? How did it get to this point?
I worked for a while in a mental institution helping to train the patients to work in a coffee shop, to gain some work experience. The range of functionality was diverse, some of the patients seemed totally zoned out (probably heavy meds) and I wondered, ‘how did these people get this way.’ And then their parents came to visit. Then I got it. And what really amazed me was the therapists, many of them really needed therapy!Exactly right, Jo_sews, the girl’s backstories begin to explain so much of this, especially Melinda and Laurie. Those girls had horrible upbringings. I’ve worked in the juvenile justice and adult corrections systems and so much can be understood by looking at how people are raised. I think it was a psychotherapist who did an assessment on Melinda and testified that she functioned emotionally on the level of a 3 or 4 year old. I think this book does give us some good information about the girl’s backgrounds and just how awful their parents were.
I’m looking forward to the zoom, too!
I looked it up, they are all free now.This is what we need to ask Aphrodite Jones when we have her on