The current serial murder classification scheme incorrectly types serial murderers as supremely intelligent killing machines while discounting their socialization, experiences, and choices. This book exposes serial murderers as run-of-the-mill hometown losers, who brutalize women, and are lucky to escape apprehension. Like other atypical homicide offenders, modern-day serial murderers are propelled forward by a deep sense of entitlement, easy access to firearms, and a nonchalant attitude toward using murder to attain their goals. Readers should come away with a deeper understanding not of the ultra-rare or the "deadliest" serial murderers but of the more common offenders who pose a consistent threat to day-to-day life. The book utilizes the Consolidated Serial Homicide Offender Database, one of the largest and most robust open access databases of multiple murders available, presenting new thinking on areas such as:
- myths and stereotypes
- the impact of entertainment on the perception of serial murder
- inaccurate prevalence estimates
- spree/serial hybrid offenders
- the classification of two and three victim serial murderers
- how serial murderers pursue longevity
- the characteristics of aspiring serial murderers
- whether hit men and gang members are serial murderers
- if and why serial murder is in a state of decline
- how many serial murderers are responsible for the homicides that sent innocent people to prison
- luck as a factor of "success" for serial murderers.
These findings are illustrated with 200 narrative vignettes of serial murder series that occurred between 2011 and 2021, such as Itzcoatl Ocampo, Charles Severance, Nikko Jenkins, and Pamela Hupp, offenders who may be unfamiliar to many but represent the next iteration of the serial murderer.
Correcting decades of flawed assumptions about serial murderers, and written in an accessible and concise style, Killer Data is essential reading for students and scholars of criminal justice and criminology, law enforcement professionals, and the interested general reader.
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-Dr. Marissa A. Harrison, Penn State Harrisburg, Research Psychologist and Author of Just as Deadly: The Psychology of Female Serial Killers (forthcoming, Cambridge University Press)
"Killer Data provides a contemporary exploration and insight into serial murder. A must-read contribution to the field!"
-Dr. Clare Allely, University of Salford, England, Reader in Forensic Psychology and author of The Psychology of Extreme Violence: A Case Study Approach to Serial Homicide, Mass Shooting, School Shooting and Lone-actor Terrorism
"Enzo Yaksic has been immersed in serial murder research for nearly two decades, amassing information about deviants and psychopaths to better understand them. The culmination of that effort is Killer Data, a definitive state-of-the-union report on serial killers in the 21st century. Through his research and insights into the continually changing and evolving phenomenon of serial homicide, Yaksic ushers students, scholars, police officials, and the news media into a new unprecedented understanding of serial killers today and potentially in the near future."
-Peter Vronksy, Ryerson University, lecturer and author of Sons of Cain: A History of Serial Killers From the Stone Age to the Present (2018), and American Serial Killers: The Epidemic Years 1950-2000








