The Hamilton Spectator

Making killers into stars

Knowing that so many murderers actually look forward to the notoriety, the media continues to feed their obsession

- DAVID VON DREHLE David Von Drehle wrote this for the Washington Post

There it was again. On the car radio after this morning’s school drop-off: The killer’s motives are unknown. Maybe you heard it on the evening news. Maybe it popped into your mobile device. Maybe it appeared in the morning paper.

The killer’s motives are unknown. Which killer? I’m not naming names. This week on the radio, it was a man in a van in Toronto. But it could have been the guy with no pants at the Waffle House, or the kid at the high school in Florida, or the sniper with the bump stock in Las Vegas ... the nightclub in Orlando, Fla . ... the grade school in Sandy Hook, Connecticu­t ... the movie theatre in Aurora, Colorado ... the university in Virginia ...

His motives are unknown. So we must hear the killer’s name over and over again. We must view the same mug shot or driver’s licence photo with every update of the day’s headlines.

I suppose there is nothing new in this pursuit. The murderer’s mind is magnetic; drawing in Dostoevsky and Dreiser, captivatin­g Capote, mesmerizin­g Mailer. Last week, the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing was awarded to Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah for her powerful magazine essay in search of the motives behind the Charleston, S.C., church massacre.

Indeed, I’ve gone myself in search of motives. I have combed the psychiatri­c files of a serial killer and traced the movements of a firebomber. But that was a long time ago, and in the ensuing decades I’ve noticed a dismal sameness to these projects. The killer is alienated, aggrieved and grandiose. He is oversensit­ized to his own hurt and dead to the pain of others. Take a narcissist, stir in some paranoia, season with sociopathy, and there’s your deadly stew.

But it’s such an unsatisfyi­ng concoction. Our hunger for reason isn’t satisfied by a stew of irrational and nonrationa­l factors. Mental distress is a what, not a why — or so it seems in the onward pursuit of the elusive motives.

Sometimes, the killer spells out his reasons, as the Charleston murderer did. He hated black people and hoped to start a race war. There was no deeper gloss than that, he insisted.

Yet it’s never quite explanatio­n enough, because no motive ever matches the awful weight and finality of the crime. We want something commensura­te, something symmetrica­l, an injury or crusade equal to all the blood shed by innocent strangers. Instead we have only these small men with their lethal inadequaci­es.

If the only harm done were this communal disappoint­ment — motives still unknown! reasons unexplaine­d! — I would not be complainin­g. But evidence continues to accumulate that many of these killers are eager for their moment in this spotlight. “Directors will be fighting over this story,” said one of the Columbine High School attackers in a pretaped video testimony.

“Just look at how many fans you can find for all different types of mass murderers,” observed the Sandy Hook attacker.

“A man who was known by no one, is now known by everyone,” the man who attacked an Oregon community college observed. Writing admiringly of yet another homicidal enigma he had seen on television, the Oregon attacker continued, “His face splashed across every screen, his name across the lips of every person on the planet, all in the course of one day. Seems like the more people you kill, the more you’re in the limelight.”

And so it continues, new sickos stimulated by the images of the ones before, staking their own claims to a news cycle or two, their own faces flashed repeatedly on the screen, and their motives pronounced unknown. On the car radio this morning, there it was again: The reporter said the man in Toronto was a fan of the mass killer in Santa Barbara, Calif., who summed it up this way: “Infamy is better than total obscurity.”

So I ask my fellow journalist­s: When the killers themselves are telling us they draw inspiratio­n from the prospect of our coverage, why do we continue to say their names and show their pictures?

Evidence continues to accumulate that many of these killers are eager for their moment in this spotlight. “Directors will be fighting over this story,” said one of the Columbine High School attackers in a pretaped video testimony.

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