Case Study

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When horrific crimes occur in large cities, many of them can be chalked up to gang violence or to the larger population of that specific city. But when horrific crimes happen in small cities like Lincoln, Nebraska, people begin to ask questions like who did this and why. In 1958, a nineteen year old man named Charles Starkweather put the entire state of Nebraska and possibly the entire nation in a state of terror. With his murder spree taking only three days, Starkweather had collected a body count of ten bodies, including two teenagers and a young child. Understanding Starkweather’s past and state of mind begins to answer the second question of why. Charles Starkweather was from a respectable hard-working family in Lincoln, Nebraska. Though they were not wealthy by any stretch of the imagination, the Starkweathers always provided for their large family. As a child, Starkweather suffered from several ailments that made him different and a target of bullies (Allen, 2004). In fact, he used his physical strength to get back at many of his childhood bullies. He was able to release much of the anger he held inside when he was able to physically bully those that had bullied him. Overall, Starkweather lived much of his life as a social outcast and blamed many of his problems on his inability to “blend-in” with his peers. One of the first murders he performed was on his girlfriend’s family. Whether Caril Ann Fugate was an active participant or not, Starkweather murdered three of her family members in cold blood with disregard to Fugate’s feelings. The murder of her Fugate’s two and a half year old sister shows that Starkweather acted impulsively. Starkweather recalled that she would not stop crying so he “needed to shut he... ... middle of paper ... ...oducing the ideas of pain, suffering and sorrow, Starkweather would be asked to work on recognizing and respecting these concepts. Starkweather would, also, be asked to track his likeliness of remorse for his crimes. By tracking this feeling, therapy progress can, also, be tracked. Making a person with antisocial personality disorder own their actions and take responsibility for them and their effect on others is necessary for reaching a therapeutic way of life. At any time that Starkweather’s progress begins to stall, sessions with him would be conducted to sort out what part of the process he dislikes, thinks is useless or simply cannot identify with. Working slowly, Starkweather may reach a point where he is no longer a danger to himself might make him a candidate for more privileges during his incarceration, which would likely be the rest of his life.

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