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Robert Ressler - [Part 1] - Criminal Profiler - Documentary

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    (narrator) Nothing is more difficult than hunting the hunter of man.
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    (Robert Ressler) A serial killer is a
    predator,
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    but they hunt human prey.
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    (narrator) The FBI investigates at least 50
    serial killings per year.
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    (Robert Ressler) They have fantasies that
    drive them to violence,
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    and they kill and kill
    again.
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    (narrator) Who becomes a victim is
    determined by only one thing:
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    The mind of the
    serial killer.
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    (Robert Ressler) A profile is a psychological
    portrait of a killer.
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    It establishes a map into
    the mind of the murderer.
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    (narrator) And that is where the hunt has
    to begin.
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    Alexandria, Virginia, on the
    outskirts of Washington, DC.
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    Two police officers revisit a
    series of brutal murders that occurred two decades ago.
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    The first case that
    occurred,
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    the body was found in a drain area.
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    (narrator) Detective Tom Moorehead fills in
    the case history for his
    visitor.
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    The second one was
    reported missing,
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    and it was six weeks before we
    found her.
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    Her automobile was found,
    though, right away.
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    (narrator) The body count kept rising.
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    Number three was found in
    a creek,
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    submerged in the water.
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    There was sexual assault on all
    of those.
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    After the autopsy, fluids were
    sent to the lab,
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    and it indicated that they had
    been raped.
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    (narrator) The details of the killings were
    so gruesome,
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    they shocked even seasoned
    investigators.
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    There were two that were
    stabbed,
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    the one that had been missing
    for about six weeks - she had
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    been stabbed somewhere around
    20 times to the upper part
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    of her body.
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    The medical examiner had
    said that it was an indication of overkill,
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    which is a lot of times
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    they're acting in sort of a
    frenzy.
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    Five woman.
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    Three of them died in just one month.
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    At that particular point,
    we had no idea who it was,
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    so we were just wondering how
    would it be for the next one.
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    (narrator) What makes a man kill his fellow
    man?
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    There are no easy answers, but
    Robert Ressler has made it
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    his mission to find
    them.
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    The emerging profile of a
    profiler.
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    Robert Ressler began his
    career as a military
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    investigator for the U.S. Army.
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    He was stationed in Europe and
    the Far East.
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    In the Army, he learned how to
    catch criminals.
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    I became convinced that
    understanding the motives
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    of the killer would ultimately
    make me better at catching them,
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    so I started studying psychology and continued as a
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    criminal investigator.
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    Upon leaving the Army,
    Robert Ressler was looking
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    for a way to achieve his
    goal.
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    I wanted to work for the
    best,
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    and that was the FBI.
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    Here I thought I could combine
    my knowledge of
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    criminal behavior psychology.
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    I was especially interested in
    serial killers because here
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    I thought psychology played
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    a major role in why they killed
    and how.
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    (narrator) When Ressler joined the Bureau
    in 1970,
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    his interest in modern
    psychology was frowned upon.
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    The FBI was a place where hard
    evidence counted.
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    Despite the internal opposition,
    Ressler formulated a plan
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    to study the behavior of serial killers.
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    He called it profiling.
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    (Robert Ressler) I had a working lunch with
    the Director of the FBI
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    this time, William Webster.
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    At the end of the lunch and
    said, "Mr. Ressler,
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    I think you have a great idea.
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    I want you to align yourself
    with academics and outside
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    people outside the FBI of the
    highest quality,
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    and I want this program to be
    successful."
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    That gave it life.
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    Back in Alexandria, Virginia,
    the killer had stabbed his
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    victim first in the back, then the front,
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    then everywhere.
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    (narrator) The morgue.
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    This is where Robert Ressler
    looks for clues.
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    (Robert Ressler) Each time I walk into a
    room like that,
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    I'm afraid I'm going to see
    something worse than I've ever
    seen before.
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    I figured out very early
    that there are two types of
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    serial killers,
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    and that's organized and disorganized.
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    Just by looking at the crime
    scene and how the bodies are
    found,
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    I can establish a pretty good basis for a profile.
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    (narrator) Detective Moorehead tells
    Ressler that all victims
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    were found completely dressed.
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    Yet, they had all been raped
    before they were killed.
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    If they're dressed
    properly,
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    I would say that the killer has
    ordered them to dress
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    themselves.
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    If they're dressed improperly,
    then it would indicate the
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    killer dressed them after death.
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    So whether or not they were
    dressed by themselves or
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    whether or not they were dressed
    by the killer becomes, again,
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    another look into the killer's mind.
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    (narrator) Ressler notes this telling
    detail.
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    If the killer was able to
    instruct the women to dress,
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    this would suggest somebody who
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    was in control of his own senses,
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    enough to plan the kill,
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    an organized mind at work.
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    This is how it always begins.
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    Picking up the scent.
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    Beginning to track the serial
    killer.
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    (Robert Ressler) On a very personal level,
    I just wonder what is his
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    force that takes ahold of a
    person and pushes them over
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    the edge.
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    (narrator) Robert Ressler has been on the
    trail of this evil ever since
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    he was nine years old.
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    Catch me before I kill
    more.
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    I cannot control myself,
    scrolled with lipstick on
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    the wall by a desperate killer.
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    Chicago.
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    1946.
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    A city gripped by fear.
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    The chilling words of America's
    first modern serial killer
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    captured the imagination of the
    entire country.
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    Two women, brutally murdered,
    found in carefully arranged
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    settings.
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    The killer had even bandaged the
    mortal wounds as if ashamed
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    of what he had done.
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    (offscreen voice) It came into my head that I must
    have done something,
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    and I realized it must have been
    a child.
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    (narrator) The northwest side of
    Chicago.
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    This is where Robert Ressler
    grew up.
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    (Robert Ressler) So it's good to be back in
    Chicago.
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    Well, you know, it's been....
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    (narrator) He still stays in touch
    with his old friend,
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    Phillip .. l Kozlofsk..
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    Together they roamed the
    neighborhood streets when
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    they were boys.
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    It was a long, hot summer when
    the string of bizarre killings
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    known as the lipstick murders
    shook this city.
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    The boys were so intrigued, they
    formed their very own
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    detective agency.
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    Their mission?
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    To catch the Lipstick Murderer.
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    (Robert Ressler) The whole idea came from some
    movie that we had seen where
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    kids were detectives,
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    and we decided we were going to do this.
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    Could have been. Right, right.
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    It was a lot of cloak and
    dagger involved with this.
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    You know, the kind of the false
    beards and the dark glasses,
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    which, of course, no proper spy
    operation can be without.
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    (narrator) But the games soon ended
    when the killer struck again.
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    Police found body parts
    floating in the Chicago sewers.
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    They identified the victim
    as six-year-old Suzanne Degnan.
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    She had been snatched from
    her home, murdered,
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    and dismembered.
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    It really paralyzed the city
    of Chicago.
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    It was a frightening aspect to
    have a child taken from
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    her bedroom in the dead of
    night,
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    body parts found in sewers - of
    course,
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    this guy confessing to all.
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    The police arrest William Heirens,
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    a 17-year-old student.
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    He confesses everything.
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    The Lipstick Murderer now has a
    face.
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    The Heirens' case had a
    tremendous impact,
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    in general, on people in
    Chicago.
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    In your case, it actually led
    you to try to somehow gain some
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    insight into the mind of this
    person as to why he was doing it,
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    and then this led to, led....
Title:
Robert Ressler - [Part 1] - Criminal Profiler - Documentary
Description:

Documentary about Robert Ressler, and his methods of profiling serial killers.

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Duration:
10:03

English subtitles

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