Psychopathy Case Study

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Introduction Psychopathy is a term used to describe an individual who is very compulsive and lacks empathy, remorse and of course guilt (O’Grady 2014, 83). In Canada, there is an estimated 300,000 psychopaths, making up just 1% of the population (Hercz 2001). Almost all serial killers and majority of Canada’s dangerous offenders are psychopaths (Hercz 2001). Two of these violent criminals can be found in Ontario, Michael Rafferty and Terri-Lynne McClintic. This couple was charged with first degree murder for the murder of Tori Strafford in 2009. The two criminological theories that can be applied to the murder of Tori Strafford is psychopathy and the social learning theory (O’Grady 2014, 80-81). With two non-sociological, criminological theories; psychopathy and the social learning theory, the murder of Tori Strafford can be explained through the psychopathic and learned …show more content…

However, with time, the psychological community has narrowed it down to seven basic traits. To be diagnosed psychopathic one only needs to have three of these qualities (O’Grady 2014, 83). The seven traits are as follows: failure to conform to social norms, deceitfulness such as dishonestly and the use of aliases, impulsiveness, aggressiveness, no regard for others’ lives, irresponsibility, and lack of remorse (O’Grady 2014, 83). Both perpetrators, but specifically Rafferty demonstrated numerous psychopathic traits. Prior to meeting McClintic, Rafferty made a living off having several girlfriends and conning them into paying him money, he even convinced a mother of five to become an escort and pay him a portion of her earnings (Banaski et al. 2016, 266). Many of the women he dated appeared in court with explicit details of his strange sexual desires, and one women even claimed in a police report he had drugged and raped her, although he was not charged (Banaski et al. 2016,

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