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The Truth About Serial and Mass Murders Essay

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A murderer is a murderer. There is no doubt about it, a person like that deserves to be punished for the crime they committed. However, not every killer is the same; there are some who are mass murderers who go on killing rampages for reasons of their own, and then there are the serial killers that love to kill people because it makes them feel some sort of emotion. People often mistake these killers as one and the same, but in reality they are completely different in the ways they are profiled by the police, how they commit their murders and the effect they have on the community and the nation.
Granted mass and serial murders are both killers, the police profile them differently. Even though they each have a different style of killing, …show more content…

But the secret behavior, the back stage behavior is something only the victims will see”. Larson shows us just that sort of behavior of Holmes throughout the book. “He cast himself as a demanding contractor” (Larson 67), this shows his front stage behavior. Then in another part of the story he shows his back stage behavior. “He could open the door and look in on Anna and give her a big smile, just to let her know this was no accident, then close the door again, slam it, and return to his chair to see what happens next” (Larson 296). Profiling these characteristics is an important way to catch them sooner and end up with fewer victims.
Murder sets most people on edge, whether serial or mass. But no matter the reaction they have on the community and the nation, they are two different types of killers. In the book, Larson quotes what the Chicago-Times thinks of Holmes “He is a prodigy of wickedness, a human demon, a being so unthinkable that no novelist would dare to invent such a character” (Larson 370). R.M and S.T. Holmes state that “The terror instilled by a serial killer permeates the communities’ consciousness, there is no perceived end to the situation until the killers is apprehended.” They also say that “people feel a personal vulnerability when a serial killer is at large.”. But a mass murderer makes the community and the nation feel differently than a serial killer does. Larson reports

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