The Anatomy of Evil

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by Michael H. Stone


  Derrick Todd Lee, a serial killer from Louisiana, when finally arrested and convicted, was called "evil incarnate."31

  Ronald Kennedy and Jerry Jenkins in Casper, Wyoming, lured Becky Thompson and her half-sister, Amy Burridge, to a remote spot near the Freemont Canyon Bridge, raped Becky, and then threw both girls over the bridge. The author who wrote of the incident spoke of his having been a child, living in Wyoming, when the crime occurred, and mentioned that he was "splashed by the unexpected evil of it all."32

  Phillip Skipper, with his wife, brother, and stepson, in northeast Louisiana, bludgeoned a black neighbor-a woman who had actually helped them financially and had included them in her will. Phil then paid a black man to masturbate into a cup, the contents of which Phil then tossed over her, to mislead the police into thinking her assailant was a black man rather than her white neighbors. People, including Sheriff Bunch, who knew the family, spoke of the wife, Lisa, as "an evil woman from an evil family."33

  Nancy Kissel, living with her wealthy husband, Robert, in an upscale "ex-pat" community in Hong Kong, had been cheating on her husband. He learned of this through the help of a private investigator. When confronted, she then bludgeoned Robert to death with a lead statuette and then tried to make it appear as though the murder were "self-defense" from his "abusiveness." When her lies were exposed and she was convicted, the Hong Kong newspapers wrote of Nancy: "Evil foreign woman murders husband."34

  Skylar Deleon conned a retired couple into selling him their yacht and then into meeting them on the yacht to "close the deal." He then subdued them and tossed them into the ocean. Skylar had conned a notary into backdating documents that would appear as if the couple had granted Skylar power of attorney over their assets. Described as "pure evil" by his own cousin, Skylar was also depicted by a detective on the case as "a complete sociopath guilty of a kind of pure evil that is rare."35

  Gary Ridgway, the serial killer from Washington State, escaped justice for many years. During that eighteen-year stretch, he killed (by his own estimate) some seventy women. When Sheriff David Reichert-the man who helped capture Ridgway-confronted him, he called him "an evil monstrous murdering coward," to which Gary replied, "Yeah, I am."36

  Dennis Rader, who gave himself the moniker "BTK" (for bindtorture-kill), when finally captured, spoke openly to FBI expert Roy Hazelwood about his bondage fantasies. At his trial, attorney general Phil Kline told the audience: "In a few minutes, you will look face to face with pure evil; victims whose voices were brutally silenced by the evil of one man will now have their voices heard again."37

  Ray and Don Duvall, two brothers from Michigan, savagely beat up two hunters in a bar in the northern part of the state and boasted of having then "fed them to the pigs." Whether they did or not is unclear, but the Duvalls were so intimidating that no witnesses came forward for seventeen years. When the brothers were finally arrested, the prosecuting attorney, Donna Prendergast, told the jury: "There is no understanding of evil, there is only the recognition of what evil is."38

  In the chapter that follows, we will see numerous examples of evil acts, many that end in murder, though not all of them. And we will examine many additional examples of people whom-because of the numerous and grotesque acts they had committed-the public, including journalists, authors, and the victims themselves or their relatives, unhesitatingly called "evil."

  Chapter One

  EVIL IN PEACETIME

  Canto II, II. 7-12

  O muse, o alto ingegno, or m'aiutate; O mente the scrivesti cio ch'io vidi, Qui si parry la tua nobilitate. lo continciai: Poeta the mi guidi guarda la mia virtu s'ell' e possente prima ch'a l'alto passo to mi fidi.

  O muse, o lofty mind, now help me; O memory that wrote down what I saw, here will your nobility appear. I began: "Poet who are my guide, consider my strength, if it is powerful enough before you entrust me to the deep pass."

  will be concentrating throughout these pages on evil in peacetime in its various forms and degrees. I am using "peacetime" here as a shorthand term for acts committed either by individuals or by several perpetrators working together. There are plenty of evil acts carried out by rioters, members of opposing street gangs, political protesters and the police who try to subdue them, and the like. All of these situations can be considered something just short of a declared war, but the individuals involved in the clash are nameless and are usually acting more as people swept up in the heat of the moment. In a riot, for example, the sense of personal responsibility for whatever one side does to the other-and that may include brutality of the most gruesome and shocking sort-is pretty much lost. Questioned later, one at a time, the participants may say, "We did it," rather than "I did it." Or they might say, "Well, they started it!" The point here is that in a riot, people from ordinary life-with no criminal record, who had no forethought as to what they were going to do and no idea they were even going to get involved-are seldom disturbed or vicious. A terrible situation arose, forces got unleashed in otherwise ordinary law-abiding folk who never dreamed themselves capable of pummeling or maiming others, and lo and behold, they ended up doing things that the bystanders and commentators later on called "evil." I don't feel there is much we can learn about the evil that may emerge in the crowd, the mob, the gang-except to say that in extreme circumstances almost all of us can take part in regrettable actions that would (or should) later move us to shame and remorse.

  Cultural and historical factors count in the equation of what we regard as evil in times of peace. Some actions in the past by those in positions of great power were seen-by them-as necessary, even though many at the time felt those actions were evil. Reading about these events centuries later, we also regard them as evil. History is filled with examples of what we now, looking back, regard as evil-as when general or kings order bloody punishments, including torture, to "wrongdoers" as a warning to the populace. England's King Henry the Eighth provides one such example. Desperate for a son and heir, he had his first marriage annulled (never mind that Catherine of Aragon had given him a daughter, later to be known, ironically, as Bloody Mary). After his second wife, his then beloved Anne Boleyn, miscarried what would have been his son and heir, he had her beheaded though she gave him a healthy daughter (the future Elizabeth I).1 He had his fifth wife, the teenaged Catherine Howard, beheaded when she was caught cheating on him.' Was there evil here? Certainly not in the executioner: he was just doing his job, one that he did as efficiently and painlessly as that job allows. As for the beheading of Catherine Howard, some kings look the other way at an adulterous mate. Henry was not of that mold. His fury was at least understandable to us, though we may feel he went a bit too far. Perhaps there was evil in beheading Anne (and her equally innocent brother, George), since he did this for selfish motives. To weasel out of a marriage that seemed unlikely to bear (male) fruit, Henry, exercising his powers, compelled his inner circle to conjure up tales of adultery and treason about his guiltless wife, Anne, and her brother. There were no poll takers in sixteenth-century England, so we don't know how many would have voted (anonymously!) that Henry's action here had been "evil." As for Catherine Howard, very few in those days would have objected to her beheading. Her public execution was anyway meant as an act of terror, warning anyone with eyes to see that they had best not take liberties with their king. And Henry was not a mad monarch in any case. What he did was in keeping with his personality: he could be loving to those he cher ished and who respected him, yet, insistent upon having his way, brutal to those who crossed him. Perhaps to justify his ways, he took a page from Machiavelli's The Prince, written when Henry was twenty-two and filled with advice for how a ruler should rule and when the ruler, to restore order, must be harsh or even cruel.'

  Notwithstanding the above examples, the people I want to draw attention to throughout these pages are people the great majority of whom have acted as individuals and who have done the kinds of things to others that most people would call evil. What drew my own attention to this particular s
ubject was a murder case some twenty years ago, in which I was called to serve as an expert witness in a court of law. The defendant had stabbed to death his pregnant wife and children, so there was little hesitation in the press or in the minds of most people who knew of the case in referring to the crime as "evil." As for motive, this man had felt threatened with exposure: he had cheated on his wife and had done some other disreputable acts-but the murder of his family had an unplanned, "spur-of-the-moment" quality

  The case stimulated my interest in murder. I thought it might be useful if I could get the members of the jury to think of an imaginary line along which different kinds of murder (and different murderers) could be categorized, starting with the most understandable and least horrific murders and stretching all the way to those that were the most mindboggling and horrific. This was the beginning of the scale that I was to call the "Gradations of Evil." I began to read full-length biographies about famous murderers-the ones found in the true-crime section of a bookstore-because these books generally give a great deal of personal detail about each murderer. There would be material about the childhood background of the man or woman in question, about what the family had been like, about what crimes may have preceded the murder. And I would learn whether the murderer abused drugs or alcohol, was mentally ill, had suffered a head injury when young, or had tortured animals or set fires. As a psychiatrist with a specialty in disorders of personality, I combed through each biography for impressions and reminiscences of the people who knew the murderer-friends, relatives, and also lawyers, doctors, and (if the person had been in prison) jailers and other inmates-who could give a picture of what the murderer had been like. Was the person shy or outgoing, able to care about others, or totally self centered, open or secretive, candid or habitually lying, calm or hottempered, forgiving or vengeful, submissive or domineering? Was the person jealous, greedy, violent ... ? Were there other malignant personality traits? I paid close attention to whether the author of the true-crime book used the word evil in describing either the crime or the murderer. Was the word used in other accounts about the same killer in newspapers and magazines? And if so, was that the impression of the writer, or of the police, the judge, and the prosecutors, or of the relatives of the victims? Above all, what was the special quality that had prompted anyone to say the word evil: Was it the cunning way used to lure the victim? The callousness of the killer? The extreme suffering endured by the victim?

  My idea was to give the jury a better grasp of who the murderer really was in everyday life and of where the murder fit along this imaginary line from least to most horrifying and inhumane. Could I identify, in other words, divisions, or "gradations" that made one type of murder more evil-seeming than others, in the opinion of the authorities and the public? When I gave my impressions to the jury, I had not as yet read more than a few dozen biographies of murderers. There were not so many different natural divisions I could make along that line, but I felt they could be put into perhaps half a dozen such categories, or "compartments." As dreadful as it was to murder one's pregnant wife and two small children, the husband had acted impulsively and had not subjected his family to torture. So this crime, though it was called evil, struck me as less deplorable than, say, the serial murders of children that had been committed in the mid-1960s by Ian Brady and his girlfriend-accomplice, Myra Hindley, in the English moors.4 Brady had first strangled his victims and had then recorded their screams on a tape recorder, for use later as a kind of aphrodisiac for him and Myra.' That was torture and callousness of a sort that went beyond anything I had heard of in the crime literature up until that time. That was twenty years ago. Worse was to come. But at the time, I placed that example at the far end of my evolving scale: evil at the extreme.

  At the other end, I made a category for people who had killed someone but whose action could be viewed as a justified homicide and therefore not technically murder (which refers only to unlawful killing), let alone "evil." This category would "anchor" my scale at the absolute lowest point, where the notion of evil disappeared. The case that attracted my attention as I was creating the scale had occurred in Wyoming: a teenage boy, Richard Jahnke Jr., had killed his abusive father.6 Richard Sr., besides constantly beating his son and daughter, whipping his wife, and going around the house with a pistol pointed at them, also sexually molested his daughter. Sixteen-year-old Richard Jr. saw no way of escaping the abuse: his father, after all, was an agent for the IRS. The mother lacked the courage to admit her husband was abusing the entire family. Richard had gone to the authorities, but they turned a deaf ear (as is quite common in such cases). So in November of 1982, Richard Jr. shot his father to death with a rifle. The case shows how our ideas about right and wrong, and about evil, can undergo change over the generations. Richard's act clearly violated the Bible's fifth commandment: Honor thy father and thy mother, as well as the seventh: Thou shalt not kill. The punishment in biblical times for killing one's father or mother was not light: such a child "shall surely be put to death." 7 Even cursing one's parents or stubbornly disobeying them could get a child stoned to death "by the men of his city"8-as a stern warning to any like-minded youngster.

  I am unwilling to believe that there were no abusive parents in Moses' time; however, no allowance was made then or for the next three thousand years for that contingency. Even in 1982 Richard was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to five to fifteen years in prison. The governor of Wyoming, a man ahead of his time, quickly commuted the sentence to time served at a state-run boy's school "till he was twenty-one" and where Richard would win a conditional release in less than a year. So what fifty years ago would have been a clear-cut murder case was, in 1982, still not considered close to an instance of "justified homicide." The law has begun to recognize that severely abused children and wives sometimes have little recourse except to kill their more physically powerful adversary-the husband or father-using surprise or deception. But any kind of planning or premeditated element has always earned, until very recently, a first-degree murder conviction. This, despite the law having a vague grasp of the fact that a hundredpound woman, when under murderous attack by her two-hundredpound husband, has no real chance of winning or even surviving. If escape is impossible, she (or a child under similar attack) must take the aggressor by surprise. The Jahnke case and those similar to it became my "zero-point" for what was to become my Gradations of Evil Scale.

  So far my scale had three points: the two extremes and a case in the middle, where there was evil but no torture and little if any planning. Before showing my rudimentary scale to the jury, I added a few more points: one for jealousy murders, another for men and women who clearly had schemed-with "malice aforethought," that is, with "guilty mind" and prior intention9-to kill someone they regarded as an obstacle to some important goal. And then, an additional point for serial killers who, unlike Ian Brady, did not engage in torture.

  Jealousy murders, the sort where someone surprises a spouse in bed with a lover and then kills the spouse or the lover (or both), are the most understandable to the public and the most likely to earn a measure of sympathy-even though the public recognizes that the murder was morally indefensible and wrong. People reacting to such a story are likely to think: If I were in your place, I'd do the same, or I'd at least feel like doing the same. Murders of this sort are considered the least "evil" or perhaps not evil at all. People committing a murder prompted by jealousy feel they are engaged in a kind of "righteous slaughter," where the killing becomes an antidote to the unbearable humiliation and emotional pain of the betrayal.10 We might be moved to say that the act was evil, but the person was not. The example I had used at the time was jean Harris's murder of her lover, the "Scarsdale Diet" doctor, Herman Tarnower, when she discovered he had been cheating on her with another woman."

  For a schemer driven by malice aforethought, I used the case of Steven Benson. The son of sixty-three-year-old tobacco heiress Margaret Benson, Steven had racked up big losses in a number
of failed business ventures. He had embezzled several millions from his mother already, and she was about to have her books examined to see where the shortages were coming from. For Steven, that lent some urgency to the problem. The way he figured he could even the financial balance sheet was to accelerate his inheritance, so to speak, by advancing the date of his mother's death ahead of God's schedule. To that end he planted two pipe bombs in the car she was about to take a ride in. His mother died in the explosion, as did a nephew; his sister survived, badly burned.12 Benson, convicted two years later, collected two life sentences rather than the ten million dollars he was counting on. Because of the diabolical planning that went into Benson's scheme (if his sister had died too, then all the heirs except himself would have been put "out of the way"), he belongs to a higher (i.e., worse) spot on the evil scale-higher even than the man who killed his family.

  I saw the need for another category, one that covered crimes people found more disturbing than the murder of one's mother for monetary gain but less disturbing than a serial killer who tortured his victims. I chose Ted Bundy, since he was a serial killer with many victims, but he did not subject them to torture.13

  At this stage of its development, the scale had some six points, or compartments. If we put them next to each other, with the most horrific cases at the far right-the ones people would just about unanimously find "evil" and somehow worse than those in the compartment just to the left-we would end up with a simple scale that would look something like this:

 

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