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cover of episode S10 E7: [Nadia] Something in His Eyes

S10 E7: [Nadia] Something in His Eyes

2021/11/18
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Something Was Wrong

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Nadia
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Tiffany Reese
播音员
主持著名true crime播客《Crime Junkie》的播音员和创始人。
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Tiffany Reese: 本段落对连环杀手的定义、特征、动机以及精神病态人格障碍作了详细的解释,并介绍了美国联邦调查局对连环杀人的研究。重点强调了连环杀手并非总是精神错乱,而是具有极端反社会行为的特征,例如缺乏悔恨、内疚和同理心,以及寻求刺激、冲动和控制欲。 此外,本段落还介绍了Robert Hare博士对精神病态人格障碍的研究,以及如何通过量表评估个体的精神病态程度。精神病态包含人际、情感、生活方式和反社会四个因素,这些特征的组合构成了精神病态的框架,并在不同个体中表现不同。并非所有暴力罪犯都是精神病患者,并非所有精神病患者都是暴力罪犯;但精神病态的暴力罪犯能无视法律、道德或社会后果地实施犯罪。 Nadia: 我的姑姑Beth在1977年遭遇车祸,被一个名叫Bruce Lindahl的人所救。起初,家人视Bruce为英雄,并与他保持联系。然而,随着时间的推移,家人开始察觉到Bruce的反常行为,并劝说Beth与他保持距离。 后来,家人在报纸上看到Bruce因谋杀被捕的消息,震惊不已。Bruce被证实是一个连环杀手,犯下多起谋杀和强奸案。其中一名受害者是Beth姑姑工作的医院的护士,这使得这个事件与家人更加贴近。 Beth的家人从这个事件中吸取教训,强调了相信直觉和及时与亲友沟通的重要性。Beth的家人也对其他受害者的家庭表示同情,并呼吁大家珍惜家人,互相爱护。

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This chapter introduces Bruce Lindahl, a serial killer whose psychological profile is discussed, highlighting his extreme antisocial behavior and lack of empathy.

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Something Was Wrong is intended for mature audiences. Episodes can discuss topics that can be triggering, such as emotional, physical, and sexual violence, suicide, and murder. I am not a therapist or a doctor. If you're in need of support, please visit somethingwaswrong.com slash resources for a list of nonprofit organizations that can help.

Some names have been changed for anonymity purposes. Opinions expressed by the guests on the show are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of myself or AudioChuck. Resources and source material are linked in the episode notes. Thank you so much for listening. According to Psychology Today, a serial killer is an individual who murders a series of victims over a period of time, typically with gaps between each killing.

Some serial killers kidnap and or torture their victims prior to murdering them. While it's not always clear what motivates serial killers to commit such heinous acts, abnormal psychological processes, notably severe antisocial tendencies, are often to blame. In society, serial killers often generate fascination along with fear. Their crimes tend to bring notoriety, media attention, and criticism.

quote, fans who study their crimes or, in some cases, form relationships with the murderer. Criminal psychologists, law enforcement agencies, and the general public have long been interested in what motivates serial killers to commit terrible crimes. Because most people could never imagine doing the same, another question that draws serious interest

is whether or not serial killers can be said to suffer from severe mental illness that severs their contact with reality. But while some serial killers did appear to undergo psychotic breaks that triggered their crimes, overall, serial killers have rarely been found to be legally insane. Rather, the most consistent psychological feature among serial killers

appears to be extreme antisocial behavior. They tend to lack empathy, appear incapable of remorse, show no regard for laws or social norms, and have a strong desire to revenge themselves against individuals or society at large by carrying out violent, terrifying crimes. According

According to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, or FBI, serial murder is neither a new phenomenon nor is it uniquely American. Dating back to ancient times, serial murderers have been chronicled around the world.

Serial murder is a relatively rare event, estimated to comprise less than 1% of all murders committed in any given year. Attendees at the FBI's Serial Murderer Symposium agreed that there's no genetic profile of a serial murderer. Serial killers differ in many ways, including their motivations for killing and their behavior at the crime scene.

However, attendees did identify certain traits common to some serial murderers, including sensation-seeking, a lack of remorse or guilt, impulsivity, the need for control, and predatory behavior. These traits and behaviors are consistent with the psychopathic personality disorder.

Psychopathy is a personality disorder manifested in people who use a mixture of charm, manipulation, intimidation, and occasionally violence to control others in order to satisfy their own selfish needs.

Although the concept of psychopathy has been known for centuries, Dr. Robert Hare led the modern research effort to develop a series of assessment tools to evaluate the personality traits and behaviors attributed to psychopaths.

Dr. Hare and his associates developed the Psychopathy Checklist Revised, or PCLR, and its derivatives, which provide a clinical assessment of the degree of psychopathy an individual possesses. These instruments measure the distinct cluster of personality traits and socially deviant behaviors of an individual.

which fall into four factors: interpersonal, affective, lifestyle, and antisocial. The interpersonal traits include glibness, superficial charm, a grandiose sense of self-worth, pathological lying,

and the manipulation of others. The affective traits include a lack of remorse and or guilt, shallow affect, a lack of empathy, and failure to accept responsibility. The lifestyle behaviors include stimulation-seeking behavior, impulsivity, irresponsibility, parasitic orientation,

and a lack of realistic life goals. The antisocial behaviors include poor behavioral controls, early childhood behavior problems, juvenile delinquency, revocation of conditional release, and criminal versatility.

The combination of these individual personality traits, interpersonal styles, and socially deviant lifestyles are the framework of psychopathy and can manifest themselves differently in individual psychopaths.

Research has demonstrated that in those offenders who are psychopathic, scores vary, ranging from some to a high degree of psychopathy. However, not all violent offenders are psychopaths, and not all psychopaths are violent offenders. If violent offenders are psychopathic, they are able to assault,

rape, and murder without concern for legal, moral, or social consequences. This allows them to do what they want, whenever they want. I'm Tiffany Reese, and this is Something Was Wrong. You think you know me, you don't know me well. You think you know me, you don't know me well. You think you know me, you don't know me well.

Hi, my name is Nadia. I am telling this survivor story on behalf of my Aunt Beth. My Aunt Beth passed away just a few years ago, so she isn't able to tell this story herself, but I've been told the story by her and by many of our family members.

My Aunt Beth was a loving sister, mother, daughter, wife, had a beautiful spirit, could sing like an angel. It's important for me and I'm sure for her, for our listeners to know that family was everything to her. She had 11 siblings, so a very large family. The matriarch of that clan of 12 was also one of nine. So with hundreds of cousins, literally hundreds, family was very important.

Beth's story begins on an evening in 1977. She was getting dropped off by a friend in front of her family's home in Aurora, Illinois.

She was leaning into the car, chatting with her friend, waving to some of her siblings who were out on the porch and in the yard. And while she was standing along the road, just kind of leaning into the car, saying bye to her friend, a car came out of nowhere, came speeding up and hit her from the side. She flew up onto the windshield and the car actually just kept driving. She eventually rolled off the car and the car sped off.

We later found out that the driver of that car was so drunk he didn't know he had hit her. He actually had turned on his windshield wipers because he thought that the blood that was all over his car was just rain.

So, of course, with all of her siblings outside, family members who saw this happen were screaming for help. One of her sisters ran inside to get their mom. They began to call 911. Some of them thought that Beth had already passed away. While the family was waiting for first responders, a man pulled over and jumped out of his car to help. They would later learn the man's name was Bruce.

He yelled that he was an off-duty EMT, and he came to Beth's aid. He rolled her over. He placed a tourniquet. Thankfully, he knew how to do that somehow. He was performing CPR. He was making sure that they had called 911. And he provided assistance to my aunt until the first responders arrived. Beth was then taken to a hospital. And of course, the family members all went there as well, as did the man who saved her.

So the doctors were very grim about the situation. They honestly didn't think she was going to survive. They had requested that a priest come to do last rites. Throughout all of this, my family that was in the waiting room noticed that the man who had stopped to try to save her had stayed there in the hospital with them.

By the grace of God, my Aunt Beth survived, and the doctors told my family that she would have died if not for the bystander who stopped to render aid.

Throughout this night, my family kind of got to know this man. His name was Bruce and he was a hero. So they were thanking him and telling him that he was a hero and he kind of stayed with the family. As Beth then went home and was recovering at home, Bruce would visit pretty often. He would come by and spend time with her.

As they got to know him, the family learned that Bruce was born on January 29th, 1953 in St. Charles, Illinois, making him 24 years old at the time of Beth's accident. He became an honorary member of their family and would often be invited to family dinners and events. Beth's mom even tried to offer Bruce a reward for saving her life.

So they were standing on the porch and she handed him a check. And we think it was for about $100, which in 1977 was a lot of money, especially for my family. And Bruce stood there, ripped up the check on the spot and said, I'm no hero. I was just at the right place at the right time. I'm just a good Samaritan. And

And they all remember him saying, I'm just a good Samaritan. He got to know some of her siblings. With 11 siblings, there's a lot of people to get to know, but the ones that were home at the time and not off at college and everything. So one thing that my family members remember is that Bruce had a pet bird.

If their memory is correct, it was some kind of hawk. It was a large bird. He would wear this big leather glove and let the bird fly around and land back on his wrist. And some of Beth's sisters were kind of creeped out by that. Despite her sister's feelings about Bruce's choice in pets, Beth began spending more time with him, which they also didn't agree with.

Best sisters didn't quite approve of them hanging out. They always met at night. So Bruce always requested that they meet late at night, 10 p.m., 11 p.m., midnight, every time. So one of best sisters remembers telling her that she didn't want her spending a lot of time with someone who wouldn't make time for her during the day. Another one of best sisters also didn't quite approve of them hanging out.

This sister was a nursing student at Copley Hospital, and she didn't like the way that Bruce looked at her when she would come home from nursing school and her scrubs or her nurse clothes. And overall, a lot of the siblings just kind of got a bad feeling about Bruce. I've heard from multiple of Beth's siblings that it was something in his eyes. It was something in the way he looked at people that they couldn't quite describe or pinpoint, but it just kind of set them on edge.

So my Aunt Beth tried to kind of brush off their feelings about Bruce to her. After all, he had saved her life.

I know that sometimes people bond with others in those types of situations, so maybe that was part of it. But she really liked spending time with him. Eventually, Beth did listen to her siblings, and they grew apart. Over time, Bruce stopped coming by to spend time with her family as well. And that was kind of that. The family didn't see Bruce that much anymore. Beth moved on. She went on to get married, have two children, have multiple grandchildren, and

And while not everyone loved being around Bruce, it was known that if it wasn't for him and his heroic actions, none of the rest of Beth's life would have been possible. Everything they thought they knew about Bruce would prove to be false. But then in 1981, the family got the Daily Newspaper, and there was Bruce.

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So then in 1981, my family got their daily newspaper and they all took their favorite sections. But one of my cousins looked down and there was Bruce.

Bruce Lindahl was found dead atop an 18-year-old man named Charles Hubber, whom he had stabbed to death near the sliding glass door of a Naperville apartment on Ogden Avenue. Investigators initially thought they had a double homicide on their hands and a killer on the loose, but a coroner's report revealed otherwise.

The autopsies determined that Lindahl had, in his rage of stabbing Mr. Hubber, accidentally severed his own femoral artery and had bled to death laying atop of him. During their investigation, police also determined that Lindahl and Hubber had met at a nearby bowling alley, then called Gala Lanes, on Aurora Avenue in Naperville.

Law enforcement also said the scene where the bodies were found suggested that Lindahl may have planned to also kill Hubbard's girlfriend, who was sleeping a few feet away in another room.

At the time of his death, Bruce Lindahl was known to various police departments and had been arrested many times. In fact, at the time of his death, he was suspected in the June 23rd, 1980 rape and kidnapping of Deborah Koleander. The 25-year-old victim was abducted from the Northgate Shopping Center in Aurora and taken to Lindahl's house, where he raped her. Deborah managed to escape and

and ran to a neighbor's house where she called 911. Lindahl was charged in Kane County with deviant sexual conduct, rape, and aggravated kidnapping, then released from jail after posting bail. That summer, Lindahl allegedly told a friend that if Koleander did not testify, he could get out of it. Police were also told by another friend of Lindahl's that he had offered him $2,000, a gun,

alcohol, and pills to, quote, get rid of the victim, end quote. On October 7th, 1980, two weeks before the trial, Koleander vanished after leaving work at Copley Memorial Hospital, where she was a nurse.

So this hero to my family was in the newspaper with all these horrible stories around him. And I think it was hard for my family to reconcile that. Someone that they saw as, you know, he saved their sister. And then they find out that other young women and a man from their community had been murdered by him. And that kind of unraveled this whole other life that Bruce had that my family didn't know about.

He had been accused of rape. He had been accused of assault. And they ended up linking him to multiple murder victims. One thing that stood out to our family was his connection to a murder of a nurse at Copley Hospital. That is the same hospital that my Aunt Beth's sister worked at as a nurse.

And she remembers how she felt when he looked at her when she would come home from nursing school and her scrubs and everything. And so the fact that another nurse at her hospital was one of his victims, I think, speaks to how close this was to our family. It was happening in towns around where they lived.

After the disappearance of Deborah Koleander, on December 22nd, 1980, Lindahl allegedly attacked a 30-year-old woman outside a North Aurora restaurant after she refused his advances. Police said the woman identified Lindahl from a photograph and linked him to the case months later.

On January 28, 1981, Lindahl was charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, resisting arrest, and not having a firearm owner's identification card when he allegedly aimed a shotgun at Kane County Sheriff's deputies who were serving Lindahl with a warrant for illegally recording a phone conversation.

In 1982, several months after Lindahl's death, Deborah Koleander's body was discovered by a local farmer in a shallow grave. An autopsy was unable to determine how she died, but her death was ruled a homicide. Prosecutors sought multiple continuances while a search for Koleander took place, but the murder case was dismissed in 1981 due to speedy trial rights.

During the 70s and 80s, DNA evidence and crime data tracking was nothing like it is today. It often took years for neighboring police stations to link crimes committed by serial killers due to these setbacks. As years passed and technology advanced,

Detectives began to suspect Bruce Lindahl in the murders of several other victims. One of those victims was 16-year-old Pamela Maurer of Woodbridge, Illinois, who died a year before Nadia's Aunt Beth was hit by the drunk driver.

On the evening of January 12th, 1976, high school student Pamela Maurer had left a friend's house and was walking to go buy a Coke at a nearby McDonald's when she was murdered. Her body was found the next day by a road crew on the side of College Road in Lyle. An autopsy later revealed that Maurer had been strangled and authorities said she had been sexually assaulted.

Pamela's tragic murder remained a mystery for years. Despite police thoroughly investigating, it would take decades for them to solve the case.

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Thankfully, detectives who investigated the murder of Pamela Maurer preserved DNA evidence from her body before the technology was available to be tested. And in 2001, this evidence was used to create a DNA profile of her suspected killer. No hits were generated at the time.

Then, in 2019, advanced DNA technology helped authorities create a composite of the killer. This resulted in the creation of a snapshot prediction for traits the killer had, such as eye and hair color and face shape.

This profile helped detectives link Bruce Lindahl to the case, and on January 13th, 2020, 44 years exactly after Pamela's body had been discovered, authorities announced that DNA evidence connected Lindahl to the 1976 killing. Police later shared they had evidence linking Lindahl to the 1979 disappearance of a missing Downers Grove High School student, Deborah McCall.

After his death, numerous photos of young women were found in his home. One of them was a photo of Debra. If she was one of his victims, she's the only victim who remains missing. She was last seen leaving her school. Her DNA and dental records are available for comparison should her body be found. Currently, her case is classified as endangered missing with foul play suspected.

If alive today, she would be 58 years old. Unfortunately, Lindahl's crimes did not end there.

Annette Lazar, today in her 60s, is one of Lindahl's living victims. She met Lindahl in 1979 when she was 20 years old while walking to a friend's house. He pulled up in his car and asked her what she was doing. He then lured Annette into his house by offering to sell her pot. The next thing she knew, he had grabbed a gun and threatened to rape her. Annette told him no, and he put the 9mm to her head

and grabbed her by the throat. She then begged Lindahl to take the clip out of his gun before he raped her, and he did. Since Annette could not physically fight back or flee, she switched tactics and used her fawn response, which ended up saving her life. She flattered and complimented him, saying that she really liked him and that he was her type. Her quick thinking worked, and the flattery convinced him to let her go.

Annette was covered in marks and had bruises around her neck. She reported her sexual assault to the local Aurora police, hoping to save someone else from becoming a victim of Lindahl. Police said the case was investigated and given to the Kane County State's Attorney in 1979, but no charges came from the analysis.

In 2020, police investigators revealed that they suspected Lindahl may be responsible for as many as 12 murders and nine rapes across Illinois. In 2019, the Lyle Police Department investigators compiled a map showing where the unsolved rapes and murders happened, and the crimes and body locations are all surrounding known Lindahl addresses.

For Nadia's family, the news of Lindahl's crimes still shocks them to this day. I believe that the sisters of the 12 siblings of my family all kind of see themselves as survivors in this story because they all had this feeling about him. And obviously they're glad that they had told Beth to stop spending time with him.

So my Aunt Beth passed away a few years ago with cancer. Before, they linked Bruce to more of these murders through additional DNA testing and genealogy analysis.

So she wasn't able to share the story herself, but I was happy to share it because she liked to use this story as a learning point for myself and my other younger cousins in our very large family that if it weren't for her sisters being upfront with her about how they felt about Bruce and about just kind of how he acted around everyone and the times of day that he wanted to hang out and some of the things that he would say or do,

She might have not stopped hanging out with him and she might not have been a survivor of the story of being someone that he was interested in. She would use this story to teach us to trust our gut, to stand up to people, to be upfront with our friends and family about

how we're feeling about who they're associating with. So I was happy to share with all of you so that if there's someone that's acting in a way that you don't think is right, it's important to let your loved ones know how you feel and to not be embarrassed to do so. It was kind of a coming-of-age story.

And then with the recent developments and with more and more cases that he's linked to, if I see something in the news about it, I'll call one of my ancestors or brothers and just kind of, you know, did you see this? And we just kind of reiterate to each other, I love you, be safe, be smart. But it's not something that we let define us or we talk about a lot because we don't think he's really worth our time at this point to talk about.

I think that she would want everyone to remember that family is everything. And her sisters being honest with her and pushing her to stop seeing him may have saved her life. And because she loved her sisters so much, she listened to them, even though she really didn't want to at the time.

And our family being so large, we all kind of live in the same place in Illinois. Not many of us have moved outside of state. All these cases are close to our hearts because these are people from our community. And my aunt would see them as family as well. For her, family wasn't just the people related to her, but the people who lived and worked in her community. She really loved everyone.

So our hearts go out to the families who didn't have this outcome with Bruce and those who were victims of him. So I think she would just want everyone to remember to tell your loved ones that you love them and put family first. Thank you for having me on your podcast. And I'm happy that I was able to share this story and hopefully people can learn from it.

When missing person Debra "Debbie" A. McCall vanished from Downers Grove on November 5th, 1979, she was 16 years old. She was last seen wearing a sweater, a beige hooded zip-up jacket, light brown suede shoes, and a yellow gold necklace.

At the time of her disappearance, she stood at 5'2 and weighed 105 pounds. She had long brown hair and gray eyes. Her upper teeth were crooked and she had freckles. She may have been wearing contacts. Those with information regarding the case are asked to contact the Downers Grove Police Department at 630-434-5600.

If you have any information regarding other crimes of Bruce Lindahl, the Lyle, Illinois Police Department urges people with information to call 630-271-4252. Thank you again to Nadia for sharing her Aunt Beth story with us all today. Until next time, stay safe, friends.

Something Was Wrong is an Audiochuck production, created and hosted by Tiffany Reese. Our theme song was originally composed by Glad Rags, covered this season by Basic Comfort. You think you know me, you don't know me. What do you know me, you don't know me. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve? No!

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