Explaining John Dillinger's Criminal Behavior through Agnew's General Strain Theory

1308 Words3 Pages

There are many criminological theories that attempt to explain criminal behavior or crime patterns. For instance, Agnew’s General Strain Theory can be applied to explain why the criminal John Dillinger committed various crimes. Agnew’s General Strain Theory assumes that all individuals experience strain, which, in turn, causes negative emotions that can result in legitimate or illegitimate coping, depending on an individual’s constraints or dispositions. Thus, the continuous criminal behavior throughout John Dillinger’s life can be explained using Agnew’s General Strain Theory in relation to strain, negative emotions, and dispositions. John Dillinger was born on June 22, 1903, in Indianapolis. Three years later his mother died; his father remarried six years afterwards, but Dillinger resented his stepmother. Being raised by a very strict father, who invoked disciplinary extremes, Dillinger became a troublemaker. Dillinger quit school and got a job, but quickly got bored and decided to stay out all night. His father was concerned that city life was corrupting his son, so he decided to move his family to Indiana. However, the move made no difference, since Dillinger began to act the same as he had in the city. After a “break with his father and trouble with the law” Dillinger enlisted in the Navy (“Famous Cases,” n.d). In the Navy, Dillinger got into trouble and decided to leave his ship and move to Indiana, where he married 16-year-old Beryl Hovius in 1924. Both Dillinger and Hovius moved to Indianapolis with a “dazzling dream of bright lights and excitement” (“Famous Cases,” n.d). However, Dillinger had no luck finding work due to the Depression, and joined the “town pool shark, Ed Singleton” in search of easy money. Singleton and... ... middle of paper ... ...ls. Thus, the removal of positively valued stimuli, and the presence of negative stimuli at an early age, along with the failure to achieve positively valued goals led to feelings of anger and resentment that eventually lead Dillinger to express illegitimate coping. Dillinger’s lack of constraints such as social support, perceptions of social control, and community variables also made it possible for him to associate with delinquent peers such as Singleton and later with members of his gang. The prolonged associations with delinquent peers made it more likely for Dillinger to continue committing criminal acts. Thus, the continuous presences of strain, negative emotions and dispositions led Dillinger to become a criminal because Dillinger did not cope with those negative emotions in a positive way, which could have reduced the chances of committing criminal activity.

Open Document