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本帖最后由 Evo 于 2023-11-2 13:31 编辑
犯罪心理学家说杀戮是有预谋的,凶手知道他在做什么。
有个细节是他在杀人之后用受害人的手机给受害人的父亲发信息,要求后者去学校接受害人。
这是一个绝对的控制狂。
另外,用锤子多次击打头部致死,这本身就是一种非常暴力的杀戮方式。
Paul Thijssen was a psychopath who “knew exactly what he was doing” when he took a hammer to a school and murdered Sydney water polo instructor Lilie James, a top criminal psychologist has claimed.
A former student at St Andrew’s Cathedral school where the murder took place last week, Thijssen’s fatal attack was not a spontaneous act of violence.
Instead, it was a premeditated crime for which he had a clear intention, Tim Watson-Munro told news.com.au.
“These men know what they’re doing. They’re not insane, they’re aware of the time, place and person,” the expert said following the killing last Wednesday night.
“There’s a degree of planning and they often build up to it,” he said, acknowledging that like in the case of Ms James, it was “very unusual to break up and get killed straight away”.
Ms James, 21, was reportedly beaten to death with a hammer before being found with “serious head injuries” in the school’s gym bathroom.
Thijssen is understood to have sent a text to Ms James’ dad from her phone after she was killed. Pretending to be his victim, he messaged asking to be picked up.
The twisted act, which came before Thijssen drove to Vaucluse in the city’s east - where he was later found dead - was described by Mr Watson-Munro as extreme cruelty.
The psychologist, who has served as an expert witness in criminal cases to determine if the accused was legally insane, said the lengths Thijssen went to before, during and after his murder made him seem like a psychopath.
There is typically a pattern of escalating conduct throughout the course of a relationship that ends in one person being murdered, he said.
“It’s normally characterised by coercive control, emotional control, physical control, financial control... demanding they see less of their family or cut them off entirely, questioning their work or demanding they quit, and sharing bank accounts so they can control their money.”
Women didn’t enter relationships with these men “thinking they were going to end up where they are”, he said, but “degree by degree they get used to what’s going on”.
“Often these guys love bomb them, shower them with affection, gifts, chocolates and jewellery, and at some point, the relationship shifts,” he explained.
“The underlying thing is that the men are very insecure and feel the need to control.”
https://www.news.com.au/national ... 754c8493d2ac3eceb0c |
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