Episode 45

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Published on:

24th Mar 2026

Serial Killer Psychology Exposed: Inside the Real Mindhunter - Part 1

Documentary filmmaker and Mindhunter co-author Mark Olshaker opens with one of the most chilling sequences in American criminal history: Ed Kemper - a 6-foot-8 serial predator who targeted hitchhiking co-eds to punish a mother who told him he'd never be loved - then drove to Nevada, called the Santa Cruz police from a payphone, and said, "It's me. I've done it. Come and get me."

In this Part 1 conversation with hosts Craig Floyd, Dennis Collins, and Bill Erfurth of Heroes Behind Behind the Badge, Olshaker traces how two FBI agents armed with nothing but their badges started interviewing the worst serial predators in American history - and built a system that changed how killers are caught. He reveals what goes on inside the mind of a serial killer before, during, and after a crime — and how those prison interviews became the Emmy-nominated documentary Mind of a Serial Killer and the book that named the movement: Mindhunter.

The conversation goes deep on Ed Kemper's displacement psychology, Sam Little's 90 confessed murders, and why FBI legend John Douglas once described Kemper as "rather likable." Olshaker also unpacks the crucial difference between MO and signature, and why understanding it is the key to profiling any serial predator.

Part 1 closes at the doorstep of Dennis Rader's story. In Part 2, Olshaker goes deeper into the serial killer who hid behind a church pulpit, whether these predators can be identified before they strike, and the kidnapping case he says was never going to end well.

If you support law enforcement stories told with honesty and context, like, subscribe, and share.

Turn on notifications so you don't miss Part 2.

Transcript
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What he would do is he would drive around in his car.

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He'd see a co-ed hitchhiking.

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She said, "Where are you going?"

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And she'd tell him and he'd look at his watch and say,

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"Oh, I don't know.

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I don't know if I have time to take you there."

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"All right, get in.

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I'll take you there."

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And that disarmed the potential victim.

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So she would get in with him.

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And then she was his.

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And this is, as you said, Craig,

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this is a classic case of displacement.

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He would he worked his way up killing enough of these co-eds until

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he had a sense that he had accomplished and

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possessed them as he never could have in normal life.

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And then he killed his mother.

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He bludgeoned her to death in her bed.

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And then took off with a claw hammer and ripped out her larynx so

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that she could never yell at him again.

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Threw it down the garbage disposal in the kitchen and garbage

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disposal threw it back out again.

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And he said, "See, she's still getting to me."

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And what's very, very interesting about Ed Kemper, as opposed to

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almost any other serial killer we've studied, is that he drove

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quite a ways away from Santa Cruz, I

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believe to Las Vegas or somewhere in Nevada.

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He picked up the phone at a phone booth

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and called the Santa Cruz police and said,

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"It's me.

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I've done it.

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Come and get me."

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To understand how Mark Olshaker came to know that story this well

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and dozens like it, we have to go back to the moment he walked into

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Quantico with a film crew and met the man

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who changed criminal investigation forever.

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Oh, Mark, on these episodes, we try to talk

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to all types of people in law enforcement.

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Sure.

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We call it heroes behind the badge because we talked to a lot of

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people who have done heroic things.

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We've talked to people…

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And then, Dennis, I follow Craig's posts on Facebook too.

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Okay, good.

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So you're familiar.

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But today, I am delighted that we have somebody who

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not only knows about some of the biggest cases that we've ever

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heard of, but knows a little bit about the background of some of

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these serial offenders that everybody,

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unfortunately, their house of words.

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Everybody knows their name, unfortunately.

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So I'm fascinated, and I think our listeners and audience will be

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fascinated by what you have to say because your background, you

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teamed up with a guy named John Douglas at some point.

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Tell us a little bit about who is John Douglas and why was John

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Douglas important to you in your work?

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Well, the way it all started was I am a novelist and documentary

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filmmaker and non-fiction author by trade.

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I was writing and producing films for Nova, the PBS science series.

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Yes.

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And I had read, as many of us had,

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Tom Harris's books, "Red Dragon and the Silence of the Lambs," and

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after I finished "Silence of the Lambs," I called Paula Absell, the

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executive producer of Nova at WGBH in Boston.

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And I said, "Paula, this book is really good, and I understand

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they're making a movie out of it.

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And if the movie is anywhere near as good as

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the book, I think it's going to be a big hit."

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Of course, I had no idea how big a hit it would be.

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And I said, "Look, why don't we go to Quantico, the FBI Academy?"

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And I met this man named John Douglas, who was the unit chief.

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And the more I learned about him, the more I knew that he was kind

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of a living legend within the police and law enforcement community

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for having really been the pioneer of behavioral science and

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criminal investigative analysis as

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the FBI was starting to practice.

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And John Douglas had spent two stints as a street agent, one in

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Milwaukee and one in Detroit, where he'd learned a lot about

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criminal behavior, just observing

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the people that they were arresting.

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And the time he got to Quantico, he and

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another agent named Robert Ressler, Bob Ressler,

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were assigned to what they called road schools, which was they

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would go out for two weeks at a time and teach one week each to

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local law enforcement agencies and kind of give them a

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superficial but fairly in-depth orientation to what they were

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teaching in the behavioral science unit at Quantico.

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And John had the idea that, as he said, you know, you can only

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drink so many margaritas and hang out in the hotel so long.

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So he said, "Along as we're on the road, let's go into the prisons,

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the penitentiaries of the places where we are and just see if we

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flash our FBI badges if we can get

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to talk to some of these offenders."

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But what they were able to do by being very prepared by studying

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the case files ahead of time so that these guys couldn't say

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anything that wasn't really true or was they were able by talking

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to these people, by finding out what was going on in the minds of

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these offenders, violent offenders, predatory offenders, to claim

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what was going on in the offender's mind before, during, and after

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the offense, what was going on between the offender and the victim.

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Therefore, by having this for the first time profound understanding

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of what the criminal was like, they could start to profile them and

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figure out what it was that they were

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that the police should be looking for.

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And let me just say one thing.

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John has said in the beginning,

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profiling does not catch criminals.

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Profiling helps the local police or local investigators narrow

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their search, focus their investigation.

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They're the ones who catch the criminals.

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So in any event, so we started interviewing them.

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They let us go through all their case files.

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We came up with some cases that we thought were interesting.

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We followed them up and we ended up with a film called Mind of a

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Serial Killer, which was nominated for a national Emmy.

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And the first time it was on PBS, it got quite good ratings.

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And the behavioral science unit and specifically the investigative

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support unit started getting a lot

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more requests from local law enforcement.

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And so it was altogether a very positive experience.

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We're very proud of that film, even to this day.

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And then I would say several months

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later, John called me and he said,

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you know, I'm getting ready to retire from the bureau.

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And do you think anybody would be interested in my story?

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And if they are, would you be interested in writing?

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And I kind of immediately said yes and yes.

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And so let's see.

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And so called my agent.

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He encouraged me to write a proposal, which in a sense was, okay,

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this is the real story behind Silence of the Lambs.

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And John Douglas is the character that the Scott

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Glenn character in the movie is really based on.

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And Scott said very often that John was the one who really taught

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him, you know, how to be an FBI agent.

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And so he worked with Jodie Foster when they were doing the film.

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And

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so we went to New York, talked to a

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number of publishers, got several offers.

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And out of that came this memoir,

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history of profiling, if you will, which probably one of my most

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important contributions was somehow to come up

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with the name Mindhunter, which really stuck.

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And love the name Craig, you have it there, don't you?

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Yeah, look at this.

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We just wanted to hold it.

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There you are.

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And Dennis and Bill, I think I've told you in the past, but Mark

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Olshaker, when I did a radio show years ago here in the DC area, he

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was my favorite guest I ever interviewed.

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And I never forgot Mark.

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And Mark became a great supporter of the National Law Enforcement

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Officers Memorial and the museum that we were building.

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And I had to have him back as a guest on our show today.

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And we'll probably have him back because this guy is full of

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stories and of great interest to

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law enforcement and to the average.

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Looking at his profile, my gosh, we

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could do a whole series of interviews here.

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But for today, I think you've already, you've already profiled.

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Yes.

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Yes.

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I have profile.

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Not as good as John Douglas could have

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probably done it, but you know, in my own little way.

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But Craig, I would love, I know that you have a particular

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admiration for Mark and for his work.

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Why don't you lead us off?

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What do you think our audience would like to know that's inside

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Mark's book and inside Mark's documentary, but inside his brain?

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What do you think people want to hear?

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And let me jump right in.

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Mindhunter did well enough that we just continued.

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We did a second book called Journey into Darkness.

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And we've done, we have done a bunch of

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books over the, probably 10 altogether.

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We did one called the cases that haunt us, which talks about

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prominent murder cases throughout history, beginning with Jack the

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Ripper and ending with the JonBenét Ramsey case talking about,

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okay, what can we tell, what can we tell people about this from

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investigating it from a behavioral standpoint?

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Absolutely.

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Craig, why don't you, yeah, you've got a good handle on all this.

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Well, first of all, Mark, I'm interested

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myself, who was the first serial killer?

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Was it Jack the Ripper?

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Was the first serial killer here in the United States?

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Who was that?

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Well, it's a very, very interesting question, because we generally

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talk about the modern era of serial killers beginning with Jack the

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Ripper in the East End of London in the

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summer, spring, summer, and fall of 1888.

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But it's probably true that there

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were serial killers long before that.

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Probably things that we attributed to werewolves or witches or

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whatever throughout European history

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probably were early serial killers.

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We can't prove that, but it's logical.

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It makes sense.

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So we start in terms of our analysis with Jack the Ripper.

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And as I said, in our book, The Cases That Haunt Us, we take a stab

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at who we think Jack the Ripper really was.

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And one of the things I found out when I was doing research on the

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case at Scotland Yard in London is I firmly believe that the

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Metropolitan and the City Police, the two

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police forces in London at the time and to this day,

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a pretty good idea of who it was in spite

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of the fact that it's never been revealed.

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Interesting.

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Okay, so there's a question that I think you address in the book

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Mindhunter, and that is, are serial killers born to be serial

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killers or are they manufactured?

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In other words, the way they were treated by their mother, their

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father, something in their life that triggered

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this rage and forced them to go out and kill people.

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I'm just fascinated by that.

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Ed Kemper, for example,

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a huge guy, I think six foot eight, whatever, and his mother

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treated him as if he were a monster and

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made him feel that way his entire life.

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And women, his mother told him women would never

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be interested in dating you, so why even bother?

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That was the way he was treated.

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And he hated his mother.

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But instead of killing his mother, he goes out and kills all these

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other women before he kills his mother.

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I mean, it's an amazing story of violence and just the most

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despicable criminal that perhaps we've ever known.

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And yet you in the book, I think you and John

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talk about maybe it was he was manufactured.

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Maybe he wasn't born with all this violence in his mind.

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What's your theory on that?

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Well, Craig, I think you've hit on probably the most fundamental

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issue in the entire study of violent predators, which is, are they

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made or are they born nurture or nature?

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And the answer, again,

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it's generally almost always a combination.

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There's probably something hardwired

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into these people that makes them impulsive.

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It makes them violent if they if they're frustrated and all that.

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And yet at the same time, we have seen very few of these guys, and

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they're almost always guys by the way,

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we can talk about that later if you want,

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who do not have some kind of a bad background.

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And Ed Kemper is the perfect example.

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Usually they are either abused, they are neglected,

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they are abandoned, they come from abject poverty.

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There's usually something really bad in their background.

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And so what they grow up with is this resentment, this anger.

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And at the same time, because of what they've been through this

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feeling of entitlement, that the laws of society don't apply to me.

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And some of them develop, as we've talked

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about, a sense of grandiosity as a result.

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But that sense of grandiosity is at war with this deep seated

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feeling of inadequacy that they have.

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And then that's triangulated with this feeling that I've talked

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about, about resentment, about society, for not giving them what

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they wanted and what they thought they were entitled to.

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And the regular laws don't apply to them.

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Now, Ed Kemper is a perfect example of that because he was

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a big guy.

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He was felt very impotent growing up because of his mother.

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His mother couldn't handle him.

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He sent him off to his grandparents.

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He eventually murdered his grandparents.

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He actually liked him.

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At a young age, right?

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I think he was only 14.

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And living on their farm, he actually liked his grandfather.

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But once he'd killed his grandmother, you know,

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he felt he had to kill him to cover up the crime.

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Obviously, the crime was not covered up.

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He was institutionalized for a while, sent back to his mother, who,

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as you said, Craig, always said he was inadequate.

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He would never make it with girls.

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She felt he was dangerous to his sister.

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She essentially had him sleep in the basement

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next to the furnace and locked him in there.

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Now, this obviously created a tremendous amount of resentment.

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And what he did was classic displacement.

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When he became able to do so,

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his mother worked at the University of California at Santa Cruz.

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And he started killing young, beautiful co-eds at the Santa Cruz

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community to get back at his mother

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and say, "See, I can control them."

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And he was a very smart, intelligent guy and very cunning.

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I mean, one of the most chilling things about him was, I remember

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he went to a court-appointed or a psychiatrist appointment.

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The psychiatrist said he was doing quite well.

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He had the head of one of his victims

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in the trunk of his car at that time.

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He was also very, very smart.

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He would,

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his MO, his modus operandi, and we can

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make a distinction between MO and signature.

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Modus operandi is what you have to do to commit the crime.

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Signature is what you have to do to

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make it emotionally satisfying for you.

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So, MO is the way he got to get to

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these co-eds and rape them and kill them.

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And signature is what he did to them,

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which was emotionally satisfying to him.

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So, they had the local police check him out.

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And so, as I'm saying, as far as I know, he's the only one who once

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he'd gotten out of his system, he turned himself in.

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And he's still in prison after all

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these years, after all these decades.

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And last I heard, he was not interested in parole.

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He didn't think that he would do well in the outside world.

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And what he spends a lot of his time doing now, he's got a very

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nice voice, what he spends a lot of his time

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doing is recording audiobooks for the blind.

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Really?

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Really interesting.

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Mark, here's what was amazing to me is that John Douglas, going

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into these prisons, interviewing people like Ed Kemper, the worst

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of the worst, and he actually in the book

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says, "I found Ed Kemper rather likable."

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He had a sense of humor.

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And I just can't fathom that given the

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violence, the depraved nature of this man.

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I mean, how do you judge that?

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Well, it's just certainly can't

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justify or excuse any of his crimes.

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But I think John felt a certain degree of sympathy and empathy for

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him, because he's one of these people, despite the way he was

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hardwired, if he'd had a different upbringing, if he'd had some

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support, if he'd had some encouragement from his mother,

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he might not have turned out that way.

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And that's the point that I want to jump in about right now is

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because, you know, during my time as a cop, and you'd handle all

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these kind of different violent incidents and whatnot, and you'd

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look at this guy that you just locked up, and you're thinking,

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"Wow, this guy's out of his freaking mind."

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Which, of course, certainly, makes sense to you, Bill.

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No doubt.

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But then my point is, based on what we're talking about, about his

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mother, then you'd go to these people's houses, and you'd look at

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the family, and you'd look at the parents, and you'd say, "No

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wonder this guy's freaking nuts, because she's nuts."

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Right?

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And so, clearly, I mean, I'm sure as you've written your books, and

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you've done these backgrounds and investigations,

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I'm sure that this woman, I mean, just based on what we've just

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spoken about, about how he treated, how she treated his son, her

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son, rather, growing up, she must have been nuts.

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And that's just kind of, you know,

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it's like a chip off the old block.

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Yeah, in fact, Bill, when we did the first book, my mother, who was

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a school teacher and then sort of in mid-career, went to law school

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and became a lawyer, after she read Mindhunter, she came to John

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and me and said, "So it's always the mother, isn't it?"

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And I said, "Not always, Mom."

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"Mostly."

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I said, "That can have a lot to do with it, yeah."

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That's great.

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Yeah, it's pretty crazy.

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I gotta tell you, we've got a few things in common, for sure.

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And as you stated, you did some

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documentary films, and I did some documentary films.

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But more importantly, is not too long ago, I was contacted by a

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British producer over in London about Sam Little.

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And I'm sure you know about Sam Little.

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You know, he is responsible, well, he confessed

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at least to 90 murders to a Texas state ranger,

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who is referred to as the serial killer whisperer.

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And they did do a show about that.

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And we wanted to do a documentary about it, or

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this producer in Britain wanted to do a show.

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So this guy, Sam Little, was pretty interesting because, you know,

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everybody has different motivational things.

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And the case you just talked about was more than likely, you know,

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this guy's mother wrecked him, and made him feel so insignificant

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and impotent and any number of things

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like you described, and created that.

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This guy, Sam Little, though, he

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was a different type of serial killer.

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And I remember because we spoke to the Texas Ranger, who debriefed

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him and sat for hours, you know, talking to him about these cases.

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And he would show them, he would show

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Sam pictures of the victims that he killed.

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And right away, he would get excited.

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And I think I know where you're going with this.

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You know, I'm going with this, right?

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Because you probably, you know, you've heard this.

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And he would get sexually aroused over this.

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So that's a whole different ballgame.

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Maybe you can expound.

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Yeah, but I think you brought

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up a very, very important point, Bill, which is that, as John says,

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if you catch these guys, which you want to, because you want to get

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them off the street as quickly as possible, you can lock up the

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body, but you can't lock up the mind.

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One of the reasons probably that a lot of these predators were

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willing to talk to John and Bob is

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they wanted to relive the crimes.

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You take somebody like Dennis Rader, the BTK strangler who was, who

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terrorized Wichita, Kansas for decades at a time.

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He's in prison for the rest of his life.

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I would be willing to bet that he spends his

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nights reminiscing and reliving each of his cases.

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Each of each of each of each of his murders, which he, which he

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called his products, which John always said, you

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want to understand the artist, look at the art.

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And in this case, I'm not exaggerating.

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In a lot of these cases, this is their art.

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This is what's most important to them.

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And Craig and I have talked about the fact,

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are these serial killers who get away with it?

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Are they brilliant?

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You know, are they able to evade law enforcement?

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Well, first of all, thank God

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there's no Hannibal Lecters out there.

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That's a complete myth.

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Let's say at least none that we know of.

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Could be Dennis though, you know,

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never know

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the guy next to you, right?

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Well,

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although let me just tangentially say

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that John said with all that he knows about

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getting away with murder, there's no way he could do it.

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He said, everybody's got some kind of, he

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said, everybody's got some kind of vulnerability.

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Whether it's the post offense behavior.

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I said,

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you know, what would be in your case?

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He said, I don't have to go into murder.

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He said, you, you, he said, you know, I,

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I was not the most exacting out of ways.

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He said, you put in the FBI, you put an expense report in front of

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me and I'll start to sweat, you know, what do

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they found that I've gotten wrong, you know?

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So, uh, yeah, that's funny.

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I have an interesting question though, Mark, because, you know,

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you, we talk about a lot of these serial killers

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and, and, and most of them are historical, right?

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I mean, they go back years ago.

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What do you think about today?

Speaker:

I mean, you just don't hear about these prolific serial killers or

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serial criminals, uh, today, like you did in the past.

Speaker:

And it's my belief that it's just because

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you just can't get away with that anymore.

Speaker:

There's a, there's a video camera on every corner.

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Every vehicle has a black box in it, like an airplane.

Speaker:

Now you can track everybody by their cell phones.

Speaker:

I just think it's just not as likely or

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as possible, uh, as it was back in the day.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I think that's, I think that's very true.

Speaker:

I mean, we have a lot more law enforcement modalities to work with.

Speaker:

And of course, DNA has been, uh, has been a major issue because,

Speaker:

uh, you know, if you've got DNA, um, and look, a lot of crimes, you

Speaker:

don't have, you don't have, as you know, from your own experience,

Speaker:

Billy, you don't have all that kind of physical evidence.

Speaker:

Uh, there's what they call the CSI effect in juries where, because

Speaker:

CSI gets all kinds of, uh, scientific

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evidence, juries expect you to have it.

Speaker:

You don't always get it, but in the case of sex crimes and these

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kinds of predatory murders, very often there is DNA or something

Speaker:

like that that you can, uh, that you can work with and use.

Speaker:

So I think you're right.

Speaker:

I think, uh, you don't have as many of these dramatic extended

Speaker:

long-term, uh, excuse me, uh, serial cases.

Speaker:

Um, and look, even in the case of BTK, uh, they got him on a

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computer disc, uh, something that didn't exist

Speaker:

to begin with when he first started his crime.

Speaker:

Mark Olshaker has spent 30 years inside the

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minds of the worst predators in American history.

Speaker:

Next time we go deeper into the man who hid a serial killer behind

Speaker:

a church pulpit, the question of whether these monsters can ever be

Speaker:

predicted and the case that Mark says was never going to end well.

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About the Podcast

Heroes Behind the Badge
We tell REAL stories about REAL cops.  And we expose the fake news about police and give you the REAL truth.
From the front lines to the final call, Heroes Behind the Badge brings you the untold stories of America's law enforcement community. Led by Craig Floyd, who spent 34 years working alongside police officers across the nation, alongside veteran facilitator Dennis Collins and law enforcement expert Bill Erfurth, this podcast cuts through misconceptions to reveal the true nature of modern policing.

Our dynamic trio brings unique perspectives to each episode: Craig shares deep insights from his decades of experience and relationships within law enforcement, Dennis guides conversations with meticulous research and natural flow, and Bill adds engaging commentary that makes complex law enforcement topics accessible to all listeners.

Each episode features in-depth conversations with law enforcement professionals, sharing their firsthand experiences, challenges, and triumphs. Drawing from extensive research and real-world experience, we explore the realities faced by the over 800,000 officers who serve and protect our communities every day.

From dramatic accounts of crisis response to quiet moments of everyday heroism, our show illuminates the human stories behind the badge. We dive deep into the statistics, policies, and practices that shape modern law enforcement, offering listeners a comprehensive understanding of what it truly means to serve in law enforcement today.

Whether you're a law enforcement professional, a concerned citizen, or someone seeking to understand the complexities of modern policing, Heroes Behind the Badge provides the context, insights, and authentic perspectives you won't find anywhere else. Join us weekly as we honor those who dedicate their lives to keeping our communities safe, one story at a time.

Presented by Citizens Behind the Badge, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting and advocating for law enforcement professionals across the United States. Join over 126,000 Americans who have already signed our Declaration of Support for law enforcement at behindbadge.org.