With
the discovery of the murders in Ohio allegedly committed by Michael Madison
comes speculation that a new type of criminal has emerged – the African
American serial killer.
Even
though at least one out of every two serial killers is African American
(Yaksic, 2006; Hickey, 2013), one of the most recurrent stereotypes in the field
of serial homicide research is that the majority of serial killers are
Caucasian. It is now known that several African American serial killers – Kermit Gosnell, Lonnie
Franklin, Lorenzo Gilyard, Carl Watts, Chester Turner and Vincent Groves – rank
among the most prolific in their respective states. Even by conservative
estimates, African Americans have historically been overrepresented among
serial murderers based on their share of the population (Kuhns and Coston,
2005). Despite these facts, African American serial killers have enjoyed some
measure of freedom to commit their crimes in the absence of consistent
intervention from law enforcement, rigorous study by academic researchers or
intrusion by the news media.
Fortunately,
much has been done in recent years to curtail the pervasive belief that the
race of serial killers is a ‘black and white’ issue.
Several
researchers have documented the African American serial killer’s ability to
operate with impunity. Since the public has perceived black murderers that
produce black victims as merely ‘urban homicide’, such offenders can be easily
ignored and overlooked (Jenkins, 1993). The false perception that black sexual
serial killers are rare makes it easier for them to go undetected for a longer
period of time (Geberth, 2012). Serial killings of black victims, especially
those who are impoverished and marginalized politically, are less likely to be
connected, prioritized for investigation and subsequently solved (Fox, 2012).
Little has been done to bring cases dealing with African American serial
killers to the public’s attention (Hickey, 2013).
In
order to understand why the prevalence of African American serial killers has
been misrepresented among law enforcement, one must consult a 1985 report
titled The Men Who Murdered that summarized the findings from interviews
conducted by two FBI profilers with twenty five predominantly Caucasian serial
killers (Ressler and Burgess, 1985). Subsequent criminological concepts and law
enforcement techniques were based on that non-random sample and are currently
still in use. Although the FBI recently stated that serial killers are a
diverse group (Morton and Hilts, 2008), the ramifications from the agent’s
findings in 1985 are still continuously affecting cases.
Countless
hours were dedicated to hunting a Caucasian man for the murders of seven mostly
Caucasian women in the Baton Rouge area between 1993 and 2003. Since law
enforcement agents were operating under the assumption that murders are
typically intraracial events, it came as a surprise when Derrick Todd Lee, the African
American man responsible for this string of murders, was apprehended. This case
highlights the dangers of abiding by a profile based on outmoded data. In their research on the sexually sadistic serial killer, Warren et al. (1996) erroneously proclaim that Caucasians are over represented in fantasy driven sexually sadistic serial crimes because of a different process of development of sexual identity among the two groups, a different potential for developing paraphilic preferences, or both. Leach and Meloy (1999) state that what is unusual in the case of Ray Shawn Jackson is that most sexual sadists in published studies are Caucasian males, making Jackson "racially unusual" as a sexual sadist. Unbeknownst
to most, there have been several examples of offenders – Calvin Jackson, John
Floyd Thomas, Jake Bird and Carlton Gary – who murdered victims outside of
their own race and for sexually sadistic purposes.
During
the hunt for the ‘DC Snipers’ in 2002, most criminologists believed that a
"white, lone-wolf type” offender was responsible for the atrocities that
were carried out by two African American men. The Lee and ‘DC Snipers’ cases
demonstrate that there can never be a behavioral profile that accurately
determines an offender's race since African American and Caucasian serial
killers behave in strikingly similar ways. Both kill for the same reasons and both
become killers due to a comparable mix of biological and psychosocial elements.
Obstinate poverty and plight may play a role as a causal factor in African
American serial killings, but it is rarely the offender's sole motivation to
commit serial murders. While African American serial killers do more often than Caucasian serial killers target elderly victims (Safarik et al., 2002), kill those
known to them, use recreational drugs to lure their victims and arson to conceal
their crimes, the underpinning desire
to dominate and control others is shared by both sets of murderers (Yaksic,
2006).
Over
the last decade, law enforcement agencies have continually improved their
response to instances of serial homicide involving African Americans. The
allegations of racial prejudice that have been leveled
at one time against police organizations for taking crimes involving white
victims more seriously have
declined in recent years mainly because the demographics of today’s police
force better reflect those of the community (Jenkins, 1993). Police regularly
attend conferences and trainings that deal with techniques to pursue and
apprehend serial homicide offenders and the impact that such offenders have on
the community. Police are also now better equipped to link unsolved homicides
due to better communication mechanisms and advances in DNA technology.
Those
who report on the instances of serial homicide have been accused of ignoring matters
that involve race due to its demonstrative and controversial nature. In
response to these claims, researchers have collected hordes of empirically
collected data on African American serial killers in recent years (Jenkins,
1993; Walsh, 2005; Peterson, 2006; Yaksic, 2006; Branson, 2012; Cottrell, 2012;
Fox, 2012; Aamodt, 2013; Hickey, 2013; McClellan, 2013; Lester and White, 2014). Others have
highlighted case studies detailing the crimes of African American serial
killers (Keppel, 1995; Kreuger, 1998; Leach and Meloy, 1999; Beasley, 2004;
Kuhn and Coston, 2004; Morton, 2010; Reavis, 2011). The lives of two serial
killers, one African American and the other Caucasian, have also been compared
and contrasted (Wolf and Lavezzi, 2007).
It
has been said that, in issues related to police and criminal psychology, it
seems that people want simple answers and the media are happy to oblige this
desire (Aamodt, 2008). Once the race of the ‘DC Snipers’ became known after
weeks of national television coverage, media outlets realized the capabilities
of African American serial killers and have covered these cases more liberally
than in the past. The apprehension of Anthony Wayne
Smith, the
former Oakland Raider who stands accused of four Los
Angeles area murders, ushered the media into concluding that serial killers can
be of any race or occupation. The wide coverage received by suspected serial killer Darren Deon Vann alludes to a slow disintegration of the old adage that the media ignores black killers with black victims. In these instances, the media has determined, rightly
so, that there are no simple answers when race and criminality intersect.
Coupled
with the discovery of long dormant serial killers due to advances in DNA
technology and the newfound interest from the news media, the sudden emergence and juxtaposition of Anthony Sowell and Michael Madison in Ohio has
contributed to the appearance of a surge in murders committed by African
American serial killers. After analyzing empirically collected serial homicide
data, the results indicate that not only have African American serial killers
existed alongside their Caucasian counterparts for all of history, but that the
occurrence of serial murder itself is in decline (Fox, 2012; Aamodt & Surrette, 2013). Academic
researchers agree that we are not in the throes of an African American serial
murder epidemic. Rather, more attention is being paid to a once neglected
subset of killer.
To
refute and invalidate the persistent claim that African American serial killers
are disadvantaged by inferior intelligence which dissuades them from engaging
in serial murder campaigns, one must only analyze the recent case of Jason Thomas
Scott. Scott's crimes are regarded as one of the "most complex" cases
that Maryland law enforcement officials had seen as he engaged in a series of
forensic countermeasures to ensure that he would remain at large. African
American serial killers are every bit as capable as their Caucasian
counterparts but they are also aided by societal stereotypes that benefit their
longevity as killers. The acknowledgement of the presence of African American
serial killers and their abilities will inevitably deliver with it better
methods of detection and new measures of safety for the public.
References
Enzo
Yaksic, 2006
Can
a Demographic Make you Psychopathic
Eric
Hickey, 2013
Serial
Murderers and Their Victims
Joe Kuhns and Charisse
Coston, 2005
The
Myth That Serial Murderers are Disproportionately White Males
in
Bohm and Walker's Demystifying Crime and Criminal Justice
Philip Jenkins, 1993
African Americans
and Serial Homicide
Vernon
Geberth, 2012
Black
Serial Killers: The Perception Versus Reality
James
Alan Fox, 2012
Extreme
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Robert
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Morton and Mark Hilts, 2008
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Gordon
Leach and John Reid Meloy, 1999
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Anthony Walsh, 2005
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Anitra Peterson, 2006
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African
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Cottrell, 2012
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Aamodt, 2013
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Morton, 2010
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A. Reavis, 2011
Serial
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Ordained Baptist Minister
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Michael Aamodt and Michael Surrette, 2013 - September
Is the decline in serial killing
partially explained by the decrease in “free range kids?” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the
Society for Police and Criminal Psychology, Ottawa, Canada
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