Criminal profiling on a serial killer, Joanna Dennehy PDF

Title Criminal profiling on a serial killer, Joanna Dennehy
Author Muhammad Javed
Course Artificial Intelligence
Institution University of Engineering and Technology Taxila
Pages 7
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Summary

As a result, the landlord was permitted to seize the tenant's belongings to satisfy the debt. The equitable lease is already recognized by the courts, as a result of the Walsh v Lonsdale concept. In addition, the case established a doctrine of anticipation, according to which a performable arrangeme...


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Criminal profiling on a serial killer, Joanna Dennehy Name University affiliation

Introduction: JOANNE DENNEHY, 31, certainly provided no effort to conceal that she is a serial murderer. At just the outset of her murder trial, her criminal conviction was unequivocal, even though she is alleged to have speculated to a female acquaintance about murdering as many as eight people before her arrest. Dennehy murdered three men by stabbed them throughout the heart also attacked two people (who managed to survive) in Cambridgeshire over ten days last March. Her sexual proclamations enticed the men she murdered to commit suicide. Gary Stretch, 47, and Leslie Layton, 37, her two suspected accomplices who were found convicted of committing offenses today, seemed to have been under her spell as well. Yet, and so far as we know, there is no suggestion of sexual motivations behind some of these murderers. While searching for a room to rent, she met her roommate and eventual victim, Kevin Lee, 49, including his business partner, Paul Creed. Creed claims that "She told that she'd been killed her father because he had raped her and even had Jacksons' child, which she had lost... She even revealed several scars throughout her arms, including the stomach." While Creed refused to house her, Lee "wanted to give a woman a chance." "She had spent 13 years in federal prison for murdering her father because he'd been inappropriately touching her from the age of five or six," Dennehy told another witness. That neither of these tales was real and were also they foreshadowings of things to come? Dennehy, who was nicknamed the "mean lady" by her neighbors for her physical bullying, worked parttime on Lee's rental properties through Gary Extend. Dennehy protested about Lee's threats and claimed "she might f***ing kill him" if he didn't pay them.

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Carla White, who shares a flat alongside Stretch, characterized Dennehy as "very rude and arrogant" three weeks before the murders. Dennehy ordered Whites to "f*** off" after holding her hand. Dennehy wrapped her arms around White's throat as she became "feisty." Dennehy let go of White's throat as well as apologized as he grabbed another hammer. Despite, or maybe because of, Dennehy's hostility, Lee, who'd already experienced the altercation, seems to have been drawn to her. Dennehy welcomed her first attacker, Lukasz Slaboszewski, 31, to visit her in an apartment she had connections to a few days later. She hacked himself to die nearby. She publicly figured out her victim's body to a young woman after placing it in a wheelie-bin. Dennehy then killed two more people ten days later: Falklands veteran John Chapman, 56, and her tenant and afterward lover, Kevin Lee. Stretch, then Layton was sent to the screen to capture the bodies then assist Dennehy with their disposal. Dennehy may very well have acted seductively against Chapman because he was said to have been heavy on alcohol and drugs when he was killed. Lee received a message from Dennehy shortly after Chapman's murder, requesting himself to meet her and indicating that she decided to dress him away then rape him. Dennehy stabbed him throughout the chest and afterwards abandoned him, covering him in something like a black strapless robe. Lee was discovered with his buttocks exposed and faced downwards. According to the prosecution, this was a "carefully constructed... act of comment humiliation." Stretch was told by Dennehy to think of her as a killer a few days later, making it very clear that she has been only involved in murdering people. Within a week of driving throughout the country, they tracked down Dennehy's next victims in Hereford, where she assaulted them and said, "I need my fun." Dennehy's behavior is much more

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notable for her attempts to attract attention to her killings, as though to prove her story about killing her father. It's evident that perhaps the killings were a source of pride for her; they drew attention and left her feeling victorious. According to a relative, Dennehy was "trying to jump around" in excitement because she saw herself face mainly on the news. Women make up as little as one out of every six known mass murderers, but the number of additional female criminals has risen dramatically since the 1950s. However, the reputation for female serial killers has changed, in line with shifts in female empowerment roles. These women were already armed with guns and knives, as opposed to poisons and other secret killing methods in the past. Women's function as nurturers has been less associated with slaughter and has become much more phallic. Women murderers are much less likely to have previously had a connection with crime victims now. Their motivations have shifted as well. The female serial killer known as the "Black Widow" of Colonial times, who assassinated one spouse or the other for money, is no main challenge. Joanne Dennehy, and according to her youngest daughter Maria, 29, "was a great kid and my parents' preference." She was said to have a normal childhood with loving parents and then have excelled in school. She then dropped out of high school but dropped out of high school when she was 15 years old. Joanne's parents, who expected her to have been a lawyer, tried to persuade her to return home when she became 16, but she declined and moved in with John Treanor, now 37, although she had two siblings. Maria remarked: "There was marijuana and other drugs were involved. She developed a rebellious streak." There seem to be no signs of a family crisis. Maria, on the other hand, acknowledged that her sister's late accusation of rape was not unexpected, saying: "I believe she did so to maintain control over the situation. She likes it when people understand she's in control." Dennehy was Page | 4

classified with paraphilia lesbianism by a professional forensic psychiatrist throughout her trial. Inflict suffering, embarrassment, or bondage on some other person creates sexual excitement. As with other depravities, as it is frequently re-enacted, this disorder appears to become much more severe and aggressive over time. An intense involuntary fantasy that is already being carried out even in practice by the victim is at the core of violent crimes. Since the story has been so firmly ingrained in the killer's psyche, its realization is impossible to have been satisfying throughout the end. In the unconscious, the past truth remains unchanged, which often contributes to the recurrence of crimes. This same scenario which seems to have been carried out in Dennehy's case was flirtation accompanied by a vicious stab. The perpetrators have all been men, and embarrassment was a significant factor, according to the prosecutors. It is indeed a circumstance that indicates Dennehy might just have tried to harm – and kill – these people in the same way she may well have been hurt in the past, namely, by making them feel sought and wanted before violently assaulting and humiliating them. "They might not have flipped me off; individuals should never have flirted towards me," Dennehy said. The risk was right there. Dennehy does seem to be afraid of becoming insecure in her need to feel in charge, targeting White's welcoming hand as an example. Dennehy took advantage of her status as a "man-woman," referring to herself as "gay" and bullying everyone around her. This, though, does not mean that she wished to be a male. At one stage, that might be the story. At work, however, there may be a deeper dimension. Our mother would be our first love relationship and the most important person in our lives. Would that be conceivable that Dennehy's anger was aimed at her devoted mother, who'd already deceived her by having a second child alongside her hubby? The older child often perceives this Page | 5

circumstance as a painful disappointment and betrayal, especially if that child has been idolized. This "extra" care can be highly manipulative, as it puts enormous conflicting exhaustion on the child while ignoring his or her basic needs, including weaknesses. The child transforms into a god with no boundaries and, as a result, no protection. We don't know why Dennehy started killing when she did. We realize that Dennehy's former boyfriend, John Treanor, kicked her out of the building after she continued to harass and assault him. As one of my neighbors recalled: "Jo was a force to be reckoned with. She was a thorn in my side from the start. She used to beat him all of the time, and he'd end up with black eyes and bruises on his hands." Dennehy's current feud with Lee, her husband, including his decision to evict her from her home, may well have been fatal. Dennehy's final denial may very well have reopened a manipulative wound from her childhood, triggering debilitating feelings of resentment and anxiety. As a consequence, murder must have been the only answer to absolute insanity, counterintuitively.

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References: O'Donnell, B. (2016). Male and female murderers in newspapers: Are they portrayed differently?. Fields: journal of Huddersfield student research, 2(1), 45-65. Pettigrew, M. (2020). Confessions of a serial killer: A neutralisation analysis. Homicide studies, 24(1), 69-84. Canning, D. Critically evaluate a major criminal case from within the last 50 years.

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