Ex-Assistant FBI director compares Idaho Murders Suspect to Notorious Serial Killer. Suggests more Victims
Former FBI In an interview this week, Chris Swecker, assistant director of the University of Idaho, stated that he believes that 28-year old man who is accused of killing four University of Idaho students was like Ted Bundy.
Swecker’s comments come after authorities arrested The Daily Wire will not name the suspect in accordance with its policy of denying mass murderers the fame and notoriety that they seek. The suspect was 2,400 miles from the crime site in Monroe County, Pennsylvania.
It had been over a month since Kaylee, Ethan Chapin and Xana Kernodle were killed in their home.
Swecker told Fox News: The Suspect “bears so much resemblance to Ted Bundy, it’s scary.”
“I’m not a behavioral scientist, but those that the FBI behavioral scientists have been studying this for a long time, and people like this, don’t just spontaneously combust overnight,” Swecker stated. “I mean, there’s a build up to it. There are urges, as urges are latent, and then they’re played out in stalking and breaking and entering and creeping through people’s houses and that sort of thing. And, you know, peeping into windows, and that that urge becomes more overt, at some point.”
“Now he’s 28 years old, I find it hard to believe that his first kill is a violent quadruple homicide, using a large hunting knife. And, you know, it just doesn’t ring true to me,” He went on. “I think there’s a build up to this. I’m afraid that if you look back at his previous college … you might find some history there.”
Swecker stated that serial killers who have this kind of psychological profile are more likely to be serial killers. “urge to kill” And that they “can act normal for a period of time and then they go psychotic, then they go back to normal, or at least normal on the out[side].”
Heavy.com reported that the suspect, who was pursuing a Ph.D. in criminology at Washington State University’s Pullman campus, had conducted a survey seeking to “understand how emotions and psychological traits influence decision-making when committing a crime,” The suspect wrote.
The suspect requested that the criminals share his information. “thoughts and feelings” They were present throughout the whole experience of the crime.
The survey asked criminals whether they had prepared for their crimes before they did, how far they traveled in order to commit them, and what steps were taken to find their victim.
It was also mentioned that the suspect had once worked in “part-time security for the Pleasant Valley School District in Pennsylvania.”
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