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
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violence. An individual with a disturbing concentration of all three
traits could be extremely dangerous.
Even though Paulhus and his fellow researchers have not applied
the Dark Triad to murderers, having studied it only in general
community populations, I believe that the concept provides the
missing link needed to explain the complex and often contradictory
psyche of eraser killers—whose actions at one moment may be
expertly calculated and at the next astonishingly self-defeating. It
would explain why these killers are described by friends, by police, and
sometimes even by their victims as charming yet callous, generous yet
self-centered, solicitous yet highly controlling. The use of the richer
psychological vocabulary of the Dark Triad allows us to describe and
make sense of behavior that has heretofore seemed incomprehensible.
Q
Let’s explore the three psychological traits in a little more depth,
beginning with psychopathy.
Not all psychopaths are like the humorless killing machines
depicted in an entire genre of true-crime books and movies. Many are
likeable, charismatic charmers, but their charm is slick and insincere.
They may be able to mesmerize and manipulate others with finely
honed skills of persuasion and flattery, but beneath the glossy surface,
their words are devoid of any real meaning or honest emotion.
Some psychopaths can fake normality better than others. We may
occasionally pick up on the sense that something is not quite right,
the vaguely queasy feeling one gets when a movie and its soundtrack
are out of sync. But more often than not we are fooled, even dazzled
by the show they put on for us.
They know how to draw us into their web because psychopaths are
masters of studied communication. But nothing they say connects
to anything genuine inside. The classic description of psychopaths is
that they ‘‘know the words but not the music.’’ They move through
the world with the deceptive verisimilitude of computer animation,
their emotions painted on, their words spoken as though by an actor
reciting lines. It is all a performance, calculated for the effect it will
have on a select audience, to get what they want by pretending to give
us what we want.
Psychopaths are practiced liars and expert manipulators. ‘‘Some
psychopaths get this huge joy out of duping people,’’ says Paulhus.
The Dark Triad
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‘‘Being on the sly, having a secret life: that is the greatest part of what
they are doing.’’ As one man who topped out on Hare’s psychopathy
test said, ‘‘I lie like I breathe, one as much as the other.’’ They lie when
there is no reason to lie, even when they are certain to be caught.
In a nationally televised interview with
Good Morning America
’s
Diane Sawyer, Peterson said he told police about his affair with
Amber Frey the very night Laci went missing, a statement police
immediately contradicted, and he had to retract before the second
part of the interview had even aired.
‘‘A psychopath will look you in the eye and lie when the truth
would be easier because they get a kick out of lying to people like
Diane Sawyer,’’ said former FBI profiler Candice DeLong. ‘‘They feel
superior.’’ When caught, they just shamelessly roll over into another
lie or, in the words of Robert Hare, ‘‘rework the facts so that they
appear to be consistent with the lie.’’
Even veteran researchers are taken aback by the sheer emotional
emptiness of psychopaths, and the remarkable ability many have to
hide that fact from those around them.
‘‘[W]e are dealing here not with a complete man at all but with
something that suggests a subtly constructed reflex machine that can
mimic the human personality perfectly,’’ Hervey Cleckley wrote in
The Mask of Sanity
. ‘‘. . . So perfect is this reproduction of a whole
and normal man that no one who examines the psychopath in a
clinical setting can point out in scientific or objective terms why, or
how, he is not real. And yet we eventually come to know or feel we
know that reality, in the sense of full, healthy experiencing of life, is
not here.’’
Now let’s examine the second dimension of the Dark Triad:
narcissism.
Narcissists have a grossly inflated sense of their own abilities and
importance. They believe they are unique, special, blessed, touched,
golden, and they want to be recognized for it—even without the
achievement to back it up. Like the mythological Narcissus, who
died of excessive pride because he could not stop gazing at his
reflection, pathological narcissists have an insatiable need to be
admired. They also have what forensic psychiatrist Martin Blinder
calls ‘‘an overweening sense of entitlement’’ and are consumed with
fantasies of unlimited success, power, sex, brilliance, and love. Yet
they have little capacity for genuine love because they are only
interested in being loved. Narcissists live life behind a mask, and
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many lead elaborate double lives, pretending to be something or
someone they are not.
But the flip side of narcissism—what lies behind the mask, on the
other side of the mirror—is insecurity. Any evidence that does not
fit the grandiose view a narcissist holds of himself must be denied,
devalued, avoided at all costs. A highly narcissistic person’s need for
constant external self-validation may be so great that if access to his
‘‘supply’’ is frustrated, he may act out violently.
Blinder, who has consulted on hundreds of domestic homicide
cases over the last four decades, believes intimate partner killers
are intensely narcissistic and somewhat psychopathic. They feel no
remorse or guilt for their crimes because they don’t believe they have
done anything wrong. In fact, they often see themselves as the victim.
Psychopaths, narcissists, and Machiavellians are all manipulators,
but narcissistic manipulation is the most emotionally insidious, the
kind to which an unsuspecting woman is most vulnerable. When
Scott was forced to admit to Amber that he lied about being married,
he spun another more elaborate and self-serving lie about having
recently ‘‘lost’’ his wife, something so difficult to talk about that he just
pretended he was never married. It was a lie so emotionally loaded,
told with Academy Award–caliber drama, that within seconds
she
was
feeling sorry for
him
.
She
was holding
his
hand.
She
was comforting
him
and forgiving
him
. And she was no longer asking any questions.
The third aspect of the Dark Triad is Machiavellianism. Like the
author of the sixteenth-century political treatise who advocated an
end-justifies-the-means approach to wielding political power, people
with a high degree of Machiavellianism have a strongly utilitarian
view of the world. Other people are just pawns in their game, objects
to be used for their own gratification.
A high degree of Machiavellianism is associated with sexual aggres-sion and has been found in otherwise ‘‘normal’’ college students who
commit date rape. ‘‘High Machs’’ are schemers who use every means
at their disposal— flattery, manipulation, deceit— to gain advantage
over others. Where the psychopath acts impulsively without any
concern for the consequences, a Machiavellian is a more strategic
manipulator.
‘‘One can connect all three of these characteristics in someone like
Scott Peterson,’’ said Paulhus. ‘‘If indeed he is a major narcissist he
feels like he is special, like laws don’t apply to him. He’s entitled to
do things that other people are not supposed to do. That leads into
The Dark Triad
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Machiavellianism. That sense of superiority means he can manipulate
others because they are not as clever as he is. Then you work your
way down into psychopathy: remorselessness, impulsiveness.’’
When I asked Dr. Paulhus why someone like Scott would continue
to call and pursue Amber Frey even when it was so against his own
interest, he explained by showing the relationship and differences
between the closely linked Dark Triad concepts.
‘‘A pure Machiavellian would not be that stupid,’’ said Paulhus.
‘‘If you’re driven purely by Machiavellian self-interest, the last thing
you do is set yourself up in any way to get caught. But narcissists
are driven by more than self-interest, or at least a different type of
self-interest: a superiority, a grandiosity that needs to be nurtured.’’
Machiavellianism may account for the almost perfect plan Scott
came up with to get away with murder. But his continued commu-nication with Amber—against his attorney’s strict orders, and when
only a fool would not realize she was working with the police—seems
to be a reflection of his narcissism. He needed her to fill up a vacuum
inside him, to admire and adore him—to believe, as he begged
her to believe in one of their calls, that he was ‘‘not a monster.’’
Despite her nationally televised appearance at the police station, it
was inconceivable to him that she would betray him, that he would
not be able to keep her in his thrall.
Thomas Capano was so strongly narcissistic and Machiavellian that
he insisted on controlling every aspect of his defense—a strategy that
backfired horribly and certainly contributed to the jury’s decision
to recommend death over life in prison for the murder of his
girlfriend. He then unsuccessfully used the mistakes caused by his
own orchestration to claim ineffective assistance of counsel and
demand either a new trial or a lighter sentence. In papers his
lawyers filed in response to Capano’s motion, the extraordinarily
manipulative nature of his personality was revealed.
Capano hired four accomplished attorneys to represent him at
trial, one of whom was the state’s former attorney general, but
refused to follow their advice and ordered them to do his bidding.
He forced one to deliver an opening statement that stunned everyone
in the courtroom, acknowledging for the first time that Anne Marie
Fahey was dead but blaming her death on a ‘‘tragic accident’’—while
refusing to tell the attorney what might possibly back up such a claim.
(He would ultimately claim that a second mistress found him and
Fahey together and pulled a gun out in a jealous rage, which went
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off as she and Capano struggled over the gun—a woman who had
nothing to do with the murder but whom Capano had manipulated
into buying the gun he used to kill Anne Marie.)
He insisted on testifying in his own defense against his attorneys’
better judgment and refused to allow them to prepare him for
cross-examination. Grossly overestimating his abilities, he claimed
he didn’t need any preparation, but then became so belligerent on
the stand that the judge at one point had him removed from the
courtroom.
Just as he had carefully planned his crime and its cover-up (in
addition to obtaining a gun that he believed could not be traced to
him, he bought in advance the 40.5 gallon cooler he would use as a
coffin), he told his attorneys what questions to ask and exactly what
words to use in asking them.
Capano seemed to delight in the way he pulled the strings on his
own advocates and parceled out information only when he felt like
it. As counsel Joseph Oteri remarked in contemporaneous notes he
took just thirteen days before trial, Capano admitted that ‘‘he was
playing with our heads about his defense’’ and wouldn’t tell them any
facts about what happened. Even with his life on the line, and despite
his intelligence and legal prowess, Capano could not overcome his
darker instincts.
The trial judge, and subsequent appellate courts, rejected his argu-ment of ineffective assistance of counsel. However, seven years after
his conviction, the Delaware Supreme Court set aside Capano’s death
sentence because one juror had held out on the issue of premeditation
and planning. The state could have retried the penalty phase before
a new jury and sought another death penalty verdict, but that would
have required remounting virtually the entire six-month case. Not
wanting to put Anne Marie’s family through that again, prosecutors
agreed to a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Q
The cardinal feature of all three syndromes, which plays into all the
individual characteristics of Dark Triad disorders, is the absence of
empathy. The ability to empathize with others, to ‘‘feel their pain,’’ is a
core part of what makes us human. People with this ugly constellation
of traits can lie, cheat, use, manipulate, hurt, and kill with impunity
because they are completely indifferent to the suffering of others. The
The Dark Triad
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utter callousness displayed by eraser killers is all the more astonishing,
considering that their victims are supposedly their ‘‘loved’’ ones.
When it came to disposing of his wife, Katherine, ironworker
Joseph Romano exhibited no more compassion or remorse than the
professional assassins in Brian de Palma’s blood-soaked remake of
Scarface
. After beating his thirty-nine-year-old spouse to death, most
likely with a baseball bat, in their Quincy, Massachusetts, home in
1998, he carved up her corpse with a power saw he had borrowed
earlier that month from a neighbor. He placed her severed remains
in fifteen plastic garbage bags, which he helped city trash collectors
hoist into their truck the following day. He then set about cleaning
up, repainting the basement where the dismemberment took place,
and hosing down Oriental rugs in his yard—the latter act so strange
that neighbors noticed and remembered it.
Their two-year-old son witnessed the dismemberment of his
mother, acting out the scene with dolls when questioned later by
pediatric trauma specialists.
‘‘The last memory that Bruno talks about is seeing his mother’s
head in a bucket,’’ said Mary Louise Fagan, Katherine’s sister, con-fronting her brother-in-law at sentencing. ‘‘That’s what you gave
Bruno, Joe: nightmares, memories, and horror.’’
The Romano’s marriage had been breaking down for years, and
Katherine had given her husband a deadline to leave the home she
owned by the first of the month. Three days before that deadline,
she disappeared. Like many eraser killers, Romano was dead set
against sharing anything with a soon-to-be ex-wife, even if it actually
belonged to her. When police came to his door after her father
reported her missing, Romano expressed a profound lack of empathy
and indifference to her absence.
‘‘Who the hell knows where she went?’’ he told the astonished
officers.
Romano had once threatened to put his wife ‘‘where her family
would never find her.’’ In that, he succeeded. Her body was never
found, the trash bags incinerated before police could ever search the
dump. But bits of bone, cartilage, and deep-body tissue were detected
on hidden parts of the saw after Romano returned it to the neighbor,
and minute amounts of blood spatter were found in the bedroom
and basement.
For months before the murder, Romano had been talking about
how much he hated his wife and wanted to kill her. Only one juror at
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