¶ … sexual homicides and the many things that can be related to them. Using two books, the author of this paper details the meaning of many terms including pyromania, necrophilia and paraphilia. Each of the terms is described and discussed in its relation to sex crimes, or lack of criteria for prosecution for sex crimes. Many people relate the term sexual deviancy to criminal behavior. This paper separates criminal behavior from simple deviant behavior and holds them against each other for comparisons.
DEVIANCE AND DEATH
Sexual homicides are one of the scariest things that we face in life. Every so often we hear the news that someone has committed sex crimes, or sex murders in our area, or the areas of our loved ones, and it sends shivers up our spines. We often wonder what causes someone to commit such violent acts of anger against another human being. Though we don't like violence in any venue, we can comprehend crimes of self-defense, or an argument gone badly. Try as we might, we will never be able to understand how someone can get any pleasure from committing sex crimes and murders. Sex crimes and sex criminals are not all alike. There are many different manifestations of the need to commit lewd sexual conduct and there are sometimes fine lines as to when that behavior becomes criminal. One thing that has been established, sex homicide and sex crimes are never about love. They are about anger, power and rage. The better we understand the various behaviors and desires, the more able we are to prevent them from being committed by being able to target certain behaviors and attitudes as possibly dangerous.
There have been many books and studies on the sexual predator and behaviors that accompany them. Robert Ressler, Ann Burgess and John Douglas wrote Sexual Homicide: Patterns and Motives in 1998. In addition, Ronald Holmes penned Sex Crimes in 1991. Both books explore the patterns, problems and behaviors of sexual criminals. They look at the why, the when, and the surrounding events, in the effort to better understand the criminal and perhaps provide insight to their world so that they are more easily discovered and caught. In the world of serial sex murder investigations, there are many terms that the average person will never hear. Terms like peraphilia, necrophilia., pyromania, and others are routinely tossed around during investigations and projections. Understanding what these terms mean and the personality traits, which accompany them, gives us a better view of sex criminals and their thought patterns.
Before we can examine the reason for lust crimes themselves, it is important to fully understand some of the terms that are common in the field. Paraphilia is a term used to refer to sexual acts, behaviors or feelings that are directed at not consenting human beings. The term can refer to one who violates animals or it can refer to humans but the humans must be no consenting. Many times, the acts must involve the suffering of one or both parties to fall under this term. While some lewd behaviors only impact the person committing the behavior, this particular term has a significant impact on the victims as well as the perpetrator. The act of rape, the forced engagement of pain during sexual overtures, even if they do not include penetration falls under this term (Ressler, 1995). The most common characteristics of a person, who practices this type of deviant behavior, are an angry person who has a need to feel powerful and important. Targeting victims provide some sense of empowerment for the perpetrator, as does the act itself. While the majority of the population would not condone this type of behavior, the act itself being completed does not always constitute criminal behavior. If two parties are consenting, then no crime has been committed. An example of this term being brought to fruition without a crime being committed would be the occasional sexual preference for being choked while engaging in sex. The choking is not supposed to be taken to death, but it is taken close enough to cause excitement for those who like to practice paraphilia. Because one of both participants suffer at the hands of each other, the term applies, however, because each partner is a willing participant no crime is being committed. This is one of the rare times that it is not a criminal behavior. It does however become a criminal behavior in the event of rape, or bestiality or child molestation and other examples (Holmes, 1991). According to the diagnostic criteria,...
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