Feb. 11, 2019
Intensive serial killer database garners media buzz
Sasha Reid has compiled what may become the most comprehensive serial killer database in the world.
Riley Brandt, University of Calgary
Each day when Sasha Reid sits at her desk in her shared 10th floor office in the Social Sciences building at the University of Calgary, she looks upon the chilling mugshots of some of the most notorious serial killers of our times.
Among the ghoulish 15 sheâs posted on her wall, there is âThe Killer Clown,â John Wayne Gacy, and âThe Milwaukee Cannibal,â Jeffrey Dahmer. Ted Bundy, linked to the murders of at least 30 women, executed in 1989, and Ed Kemper, currently serving eight life sentences for his crimes, including the gruesome killing of his own mother, also stare back at her.
Reid doesnât flinch. The recently recruited sessional instructor in both the University of Calgary sociology and psychology departments â currently completing her PhD in developmental psychology from the University of Toronto â is fascinated with such men and sheâs dedicated her academic career to finding out what made them tick. What moulded them and led them down their monstrous paths? What are the connections between these men and what can we learn from them?
It's a line of research that has huge appeal. Over the past year Reid has been featured in a number of high-profile media outlets including the Toronto Star, Vanity Fair, CTV News, and Vice.com. Sheâs also set to appear soon in a Netflix documentary series on âThe Unabomber,â Ted Kaczynski.
Whatâs drawn media to Reid is an exhaustive project sheâs been working on for the past six years, compiling what may become the most comprehensive serial killer database in the world. It includes 645 variables on the behavioral and psychological development of 6,250 known serial killers, dating back to the 15thcentury. Two years ago, she also began compiling an in-depth missing persons database, which includes over 10,000 missing persons and unsolved homicides.
When it comes to the profiling of serial killers, Reidâs approach is highly critical. âIf you look at the history of profiling, itâs riddled with issues,â she says. âItâs been more of an art than a science. There have been cases where profiles have actually thrown police off track and others have died because of it. Itâs important that profiles be based on hard statistics. Because that makes it more of a science, and thatâs the approach Iâve taken.â
Most serial killer databases rely primarily on static traits with very basic questions. Was the subject abused as a child? Were they married? Did they have a criminal past? âThis contributes to research that is overly simplistic and invalidly reductionistic,â Reid explains.
âMy database goes far beyond this because I approach it as a developmental psychologist, so, chronological age is important to me,â Reid explains. âI will ask, âWas there child abuse, yes or no?â but then take it much further. At what age did the abuse begin? When did it end? What kind of abuse was it? Who was the abuser â mom, dad, stepdad, momâs boyfriend?â
The 645 variables in her database span from the killersâ pre-conception to death, says Reid, and when she says sheâs looking at every microscopic piece of data she can get her hands on, sheâs not kidding. âWhat was going on in the parentsâ background prior to conception?â she asks. âWere they in a house with lead-based paint? Was the father an alcoholic? Was mom doing drugs or drinking during the pregnancy? Then we look at the childhood. Were they born with any abnormalities? Were their birthing complications? Maybe an umbilical cord wrapped around their necks? Was it a breached birth?
âWe look at everything down to the microdetails and I donât think prior databases have done so.â
Reid has also found that previous databases lack the voice of the killers. âOffenders are viewed as objects of research and passive participants in their own life experiences,â she says.
Thatâs why her database includes âqualitative informationâ derived from diaries, home videos and interviews with the killers. This has been invaluable, she says, because it has provided insight into the way the killers have interpreted their respective environments and life experiences.
âWhen you look at their lives, at first, thereâs so little that connects them,â says Reid, motioning to her wall of murderer mugshots. âSome of them are from poor families and some are rich. Some are from non-abusive families, some experienced extreme abuse. Itâs all over the map!â
But looking at the ways theyâve interpreted their respective worlds is helping Reid find developmental links between her subjects â for example, in the way the killers tend to process and conceptualize death.
âItâs important to see them as human, because they are,â she adds. âPop culture and the public make them monsters, but theyâre not. They werenât born out of fire, they were born the same way you and I were born. Itâs what happened along the way. There was a very complicated series of accumulated risk factors at play that led them down this path, to an expression of deep, maladjusted psychopathology. This begins in early childhood.
âItâs important to learn what happened.â