The Drew Peterson case, Tennessee military facility shooter Mohammad Abdulazeez, and the Bill Cosby deposition are analyzed with retired FBI agent, James Fitzgerald. In addition to exploring the motivations for fanatical killers, and sexual predators, we examine the information that can be learned from prison letters. Finally, we look into the latest news on the Washington D.C. killing of the Savopoulos family, and the ongoing investigation of Daron Wint and others in this uncensored Crime Time episode, hosted by Allison Hope Weiner.
James R. Fitzgerald was the Program Manager of Threat Assessment/Forensic Linguistics at the Behavioral Analysis Unit 1 of the FBI. Fitzgerald knew little about profiling or linguistics when he joined the FBI in 1987. But, while assigned to the field office in New York City, he worked cases involving stalking or threatening letters sent to Jane Pauley, Bryant Gumbel, Don Imus, Donald Trump, and Rush Limbaugh, among others.
In 1995, Fitzgerald became a profiler at the FBI Academy at Quantico, Va. As part of Fitzgerald’s profiler training, he learned about analyzing communications. He later obtained a Master’s degree in linguistics from Georgetown University. (This was his second MS. His first was in Organizational Psychology at Villanova University.) As he has at his present company, The Academy Group, Fitzgerald created a linguistic-oriented database of threatening and/or suspicious letters, similar to one the Secret Service maintains.Fitzgerald now works for the Academy Group in Manassas, Va., which provides profiling services for private industry as well as a university instructor, author, and technical advisor for television programs (Criminal Minds) involving the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
00:01 Welcoming back Jim Fitzgerald to Crime Time.
00:35 Drew Peterson recap.
02:51 Examining the prison letters.
04:36 The mitigating factors in the Jodi Arias and Drew Peterson Letters.
07:32 The purpose of the letters.
08:54 The Tennessee shooter update.
10:06 The categories of mass shooter candidates and “True Believers.”
16:53 Social network access and profiling a killer.
21:16 Propaganda and engaging with the depressed and disenfranchised.
24:48 Bill Cosby deposition release.
26:05 Cosby’s response to quaaludes.
27:08 Analyzing Cosby’s quaalude statement.
30:57 The motivation of sexual predators.
33:58 Bill Cosby’s legal team and representatives.
35:18 The Washington Mansion murders updates.
36:01 The investigation.
40:18 Victim deaths and odds of survival.
42:39 Thank you and goodbye.
James R. Fitzgerald was the Program Manager of Threat Assessment/Forensic Linguistics at the Behavioral Analysis Unit 1 of the FBI. Fitzgerald knew little about profiling or linguistics when he joined the FBI in 1987. But, while assigned to the field office in New York City, he worked cases involving stalking or threatening letters sent to Jane Pauley, Bryant Gumbel, Don Imus, Donald Trump, and Rush Limbaugh, among others.
In 1995, Fitzgerald became a profiler at the FBI Academy at Quantico, Va. As part of Fitzgerald’s profiler training, he learned about analyzing communications. He later obtained a Master’s degree in linguistics from Georgetown University. (This was his second MS. His first was in Organizational Psychology at Villanova University.) As he has at his present company, The Academy Group, Fitzgerald created a linguistic-oriented database of threatening and/or suspicious letters, similar to one the Secret Service maintains.Fitzgerald now works for the Academy Group in Manassas, Va., which provides profiling services for private industry as well as a university instructor, author, and technical advisor for television programs (Criminal Minds) involving the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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