Read Erased: Missing Women, Murdered Wives Online
Authors: Marilee Strong
Tags: #Violence in Society, #General, #Murderers, #Case studies, #United States, #Psychology, #Women's Studies, #Murder, #Uxoricide, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #True Crime, #Social Science, #Crimes against, #Pregnant Women, #Health & Fitness
Introduction
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begin looking into his wife’s disappearance for several days, enough
time for the trail to grow stale and for him to thoroughly cover his
tracks. He believed that if a body was never found and the suspect
refused to confess, he would never be charged— something the police
publicly declared in the Smart case.
Q
The concept of serial murder has only been recognized as a distinct
category of crime for a few decades, even though serial killers have
been making headlines at least as far back as ‘‘Jack the Ripper.’’
For nearly a century, the notorious slayer who terrorized Victorian
London was viewed as a criminal freak of nature, even though other
serial killings during the same historical period were soon reported
from Sweden to San Francisco. Then, in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
forensic psychologists in the FBI’s now famous Behavioral Science
Unit began assembling common characteristics from interviews and
case files of killers who now bear this moniker.
Although experts may disagree on what precisely is and is not
a serial homicide, naming and defining the crime opened the door
to serious research, which has led to hundreds of studies of these
type of killers by psychologists, sociologists, criminologists, and other
scientists.
Identifying a new crime category is a bit like discovering a new
or previously misunderstood disease: everything changes when the
phenomenon has a name. New syndromes in the medical field,
first noticed as a seemingly unrelated collection of problems and
symptoms, are often initially treated with shame and derision—from
alcoholism to posttraumatic stress disorder, anorexia and bulimia
to chronic fatigue syndrome. Giving them a name is the first step
toward serious scientific study and public awareness.
Q
• This book sets forth a profile of what I call eraser killing: a form
of intimate partner (or domestic) homicide that is committed
almost exclusively by men, done in a carefully planned manner,
often through bloodless means known as a ‘‘soft kill’’ (such as
smothering, suffocating, or strangling) so as to leave behind as little
evidence as possible or with the crime scene thoroughly cleaned up.
To further cover his tracks, the eraser killer disposes of his victim’s
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body by some means meant to ensure that it will never be found, or
erases anything that links him to her death by ‘‘staging’’ the murder
as something completely different—an accident, a suicide, or a
crime committed by a total stranger, such as mugging, carjacking, or
other random crime of opportunity.
• On the basis of five years of investigation into hundreds of
killings that I believe fit this profile, I will explain what is truly going
on behind the stories of missing women that have dominated the
news since the disappearance of Laci Peterson six years ago,
identifying the hidden pattern among cases that the media has
simply presented as mystery after unrelated (and often unresolved)
mystery.
• Using new research on the psychology of dark criminal
impulses in otherwise high-functioning men, I will also offer a
psychological profile of the factors I believe explain and drive this
curious breed of killer—men who live behind a mask of normality,
who seem incapable of violence to most of those who know them,
who lead productive and often quite accomplished lives right up
until the minute they kill the ones they supposedly love.
• This book will examine more than fifty eraser killings, some just
recently in the headlines, some dating back a century, challenging
some of the well-honed myths about domestic violence and
domestic homicide. For eraser killers are not like ordinary killers,
nor are they even like more typical wife- or girlfriend-killers. These
men do not commit their crimes in the ‘‘heat of passion’’ or in a
moment of out-of-control rage. Their crimes are not hot-blooded
but cold-blooded, arrived at after much thought and carried out
with meticulous care. Because these men premeditate and plan their
killings with inordinate stealth and cunning, because they are
fearless and expert at manipulating and deceiving those around
them, because they hold nearly everything that is true about them in
complete secrecy, the women in their lives often have no idea they
are in mortal danger until it is too late.
• The motive behind these killings is something else that has been
widely misunderstood and misrepresented both in the media and in
the courtroom. Fundamentally, eraser killers do not kill for the
reasons normally ascribed to murderers, such as greed, sex, or
jealousy. They eliminate the women, and sometimes children, in
Introduction
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their lives because their victims no longer serve any ‘‘purpose’’ in the
emotionally desolate world of the eraser killer, or are seen as
impediments to the kind of life they covet and fantasize for
themselves. In the mind of this type of murderer, it is better, easier,
and more satisfying for him to kill than simply to get a divorce.
• Eraser killers often go to extraordinary lengths not just to
manipulate a crime scene or make a woman disappear but also
to manipulate the police, the courts, and justice itself as part of their
high-stakes game. This manipulation, I believe, is something that is
also key to the nature of the eraser killer and becomes almost an end
in itself—an enjoyable battle of wits in which he is sure he will
always come out on top.
• In a kind of Catch-22 that is built into the American criminal
justice system and its reliance on antiquated and faulty assumptions
about this type of intimate homicide, police and prosecutors are
very often sandbagged before they can even launch a homicide case.
This book will provide several illuminating stories that expose the
unintentional loopholes that both encourage eraser killers to believe
that they can get away with murder and very often make it possible
for them to do just that.
For example, eraser killers have used constitutional protections
against search and seizure to seal off the scene of their crimes, usually
in the victim’s own home, and prevent police from entering by staging
the crime to appear to have happened elsewhere. Investigators are
forced to wait sometimes for weeks, sometimes years before the
actual murder scene can be searched and forensically examined, thus
giving a killer as much time as he needs to completely erase all the
evidence.
Murder is much harder to prove when the killer takes pains to
leave no physical evidence behind. Someone clever enough to make
sure his victim’s body remains hidden stands a good chance of
never being charged with murder, much less convicted. Eyewitness
testimony—the only truly noncircumstantial evidence—is notori-ously unreliable. (Groups like the Innocence Project are regularly
getting rape convictions overturned after DNA tests prove that the
victim identified an innocent man.) Yet most jurors buy into the pop-ular stereotype that circumstantial evidence is not proof, a sometimes
insurmountable burden even when the body is not hidden.
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‘‘They couldn’t put the gun in his hand,’’ jury foreman Thomas
Nicholson declared after acquitting
In Cold Blood
star Robert Blake
of killing his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley—in spite of the fact that
Blake openly hated his wife and that two men testified that he had
attempted to hire them to ‘‘whack’’ her. (Bakley was ultimately shot
to death as she waited for Blake in his car outside a restaurant where
the two had just dined together, Blake claiming that at the time the
shooting occurred, he had gone back inside to retrieve a gun he had
inadvertently left behind.)
Prosecutors are often loath to take on no-body cases, knowing
that if a defendant is acquitted, there will be no second chance to
convict him even if the victim’s remains are later found right in
the defendant’s backyard. Jurors erroneously but almost uniformly
view circumstantial evidence as a weak form of proof, internalizing
an attitude, often expressed in the popular media, that a case is
‘‘merely circumstantial.’’ Nearly every one of the sixteen hundred
potential jurors who were queried to serve on the Peterson case
initially expressed qualms about circumstantial evidence, believing it
was not ‘‘real’’ evidence—or, as one put it, ‘‘My understanding is
circumstantial evidence is what you
can’t
prove.’’
Peterson juror John Guinasso said he would not have voted to
convict if the bodies had not washed up where they did— on the
shore of San Francisco Bay ninety miles from the Peterson home in
Modesto, California, and within about a mile of the exact spot where
Scott told police he had spontaneously decided to go fishing the day
his wife disappeared.
Q
In exploring these and other issues, I draw sometimes heavily
on my investigation and analysis of the Scott Peterson case, which
I believe to be a quintessential eraser killing, and which can shed
more light on the phenomenon than perhaps any other single case.
Although many feel that they already know this case quite well, I
believe that this book breaks new ground by
• Exploring the real motive behind Peterson’s murder of his
pregnant wife, something even the jurors who convicted him did
not seem to fully understand
Introduction
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• Explaining how the death of his unborn son, Conner, was not
simply an unfortunate by-product of his decision to kill his wife
but represented a pivotal aspect of his motivation
• Offering the first comprehensive psychological portrait of Scott
Peterson and explaining how different and competing aspects of
his personality made him believe he could commit the perfect
murder but also caused him to make fatal errors that got him
convicted
• Revealing many new and disturbing facts about the case,
including an alternative plan Peterson may have been
considering for disposing of his wife and child that would have
prevented their bodies from ever being found and all but
ensured that he would never have been charged with their
murders
I do not believe Scott Peterson killed his wife in order to be
with another woman or to collect on the substantial inheritance
his wife had coming. That he was having an affair and that he was
living beyond his means, spending recklessly on such luxuries as an
expensive golf club membership in the weeks before his first child
was to be born, are important clues into his psyche. But they do not,
in and of themselves, constitute motive. They are ultimately what
film director Alfred Hitchcock called MacGuffins, red herrings that
obscure rather than reveal the darker machinations of the plot.
Clearly there is something very disturbed in the psychological
makeup of a man who could coldly plan a murder, but was unable
or unwilling to face a divorce; who could strangle or smother his
pregnant wife to death but could not displease her by maintaining
that he did not want children; who could turn on his fourteen-carat
charm to woo a new lover, but was unable to use that charm and
power of persuasion to succeed in his job as a salesman; who believed
himself fully capable of outfoxing the police, never doubting his
ability to fearlessly win every nerve-wracking encounter, but whose
fragile ego was threatened by the rapidly approaching responsibilities
of fatherhood.
The Peterson case is rife with these seeming contradictions, which
no one has yet been able to explain. I believe that they are not
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actually contradictions, but instead are part and parcel of the peculiar
psychology of eraser killers. The strange and unstable mixture of
pathologies that drives these killers explains not only their criminal
success but also the mistakes and contradictions that sometimes get
them caught.
When I began covering the Peterson case, the facts were so horrific
that I wanted to believe that it was an anomaly. Unfortunately for
the score of ‘‘missing’’ women who have since made headlines—and
many more whose stories did not make national news but were no
less tragic— the Peterson case turned out not to be singular at all.
Whereas part of the media—led by the more innovative and less
tradition-bound producers in cable television—covered these stories
intensively, many editors, news anchors, and print columnists simply
scoffed at such coverage. Some even extended their derision beyond
media outlets they dislike to an unseemly attack on the victims
themselves.
My own belief is that the recent flood of such seemingly inexplica-ble stories makes many people uncomfortable. Perhaps the betrayal
at the heart of these crimes is too unsettling, too challenging to the
illusion of safety we cling to in the sanctuary of our own home.
Those who dismiss news coverage (and books) focusing on this
kind of crime have never sat down with the shell-shocked family
members of women who have never been given even the dignity
and validation of a trial. The most tragic eraser killings are those
in which there is no arrest, no arraignment, no trial, no justice, no
body recovered, no funeral, no burial, no headstone— no answers or
resolution of any kind.
I have written this book so that all of us may start to understand
a type of crime that has been right in front of us but obscured from
view, just as its perpetrators have intended. My hope is to cast light
on the shadows where the killers have hidden their faces from us. It
is an attempt, however inadequate, to give voice as best I can to these
women whose deaths have left them voiceless, for erased women
are truly silent victims. They cannot call out for justice. They cannot
point a finger at their killer, whose true face they may have recognized
only at the moment of their death.
P A R T
O N E
Eraser Killing
The History and Psychology of
a New Criminal Profile
C H A P T E R
O N E
Out of the Shadows
Q A newtype of killer iswreaking havoc across
America and around the world. He has made countless headlines in
recent years, but until now his core identity has been hidden. He is
not driven by rage or lust. His conscience is not set loose by drugs or
alcohol— the deadly fuels that can turn some men into momentary
killers. Unlike most other murderers, he very often has no criminal
record and sometimes no history of violence whatsoever. He is an
intelligent, careful, methodical killer.
He is also someone who has always been a fabricator of reality.
He is not your harmless garden-variety fibber but a compulsive,
pathological liar whose lies are meant to get a reaction out of others:
to inspire their admiration, to evoke their sympathy, to get him
exactly what he wants. He makes up stories big and small, often
lying about things for no readily apparent reason. But he is especially
practiced at deceiving others about who he really is.
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