Reporting by reporter YEN,SHENG-FEN / photography by CHEN,YING-JEN
Release time: 2025/02/07 20:30
Last updated: 2025/02/07 20:30
In the Kaohsiung mutilation case, the suspect surnamed Zhang killed three women at home. Criminal psychologists pointed out three major reasons, including emotional problems, antisocial personality, or previous involvement in crimes, which may be the motive for committing the crime. However, they are not directly related to the background of the suspect. Past case statistics show that only 40% of murderers have criminal records.
The forensic team carried the body parts of the deceased to identify DNA to further confirm the identity of the deceased. The main suspect in the Kaohsiung dismemberment case, surnamed Zhang, was so thin and slender that he was so cruel and cruel that he carried out the murder.
Wang Po-Chi, associate professor of the Department of Criminal Justice at Ming Chuan University “(Serial murderers) themselves have some emotional problems. Traditional criminal cases may be related to feelings, property, or they had hatred before. Whichever one of the three is successful, it is likely to become such a situation. Some of them may be more fragile and insecure, or have anti-social personality.”
Wang Po-Chi, associate professor of the Department of Criminal Justice at Ming Chuan University: “The first requirement for (serial murderers) is that there are more than three people involved, and the second is age. In fact, they may be older than traditional violent crimes or murder crimes.”
Experts have analyzed in the past that 40% of murderers have a criminal record, so the motive for committing a crime may not be “directly related” to the background criminal record.
Wang Po-Chi, associate professor of the Department of Criminal Justice at Ming Chuan University “He needs to be in a familiar environment, and of course he will be more able to do it. He may have to find another place with a water source for cleaning.”
Let’s start with someone familiar. Even if the evidence is conclusive, why does he still deny it?
Wang Po-Chi, associate professor of the Department of Criminal Justice at Ming Chuan University: “I wonder if it is also his delaying tactic. Anyway, I will recognize your evidence wherever it goes. Maybe in the past, he may have had related cases, but he was not caught in the past.”
The police must continue to break through their defenses to get him to confess, uncover the secrets hidden behind him one by one, and give an explanation to the victim’s family.