OPEN WOUNDS

Characters

Presenter: Juliana S.
Journalist: Sofia P.
Interviewed: Zahara A, Sharith R, Alyson P, Daniela R.
psychiatrist: Diana
Police: Laura M
Lawyer: Alejandra A

A special being will be created in zoom where the interviews of the program "open wounds" will be made.

Their most common sayings

"We all go a little crazy sometimes"

Theodore Bundy

"I don't remember killing anyone, I could have done it without knowing it. I'm not sure if I did."

John wayne gacy

"We serial killers are your children, your husbands, and we are everywhere.
And there will be more of his children dead tomorrow "
Ted bunny

"If I wanted to start killing there wouldn't be a single one of you left"
Charles manson

"Bringing a loaded gun to school would be as easy as entering it with a calculator"
Dylan klebold

Criminologist Alberto Pintado believes that "serial killers are not born", but rather "are made" under the social and family conditions that surround them during childhood, a fundamental stage for personality development.

There is a gene for violence. This is confirmed by the American researcher Adrian Raine, an entire institution in the study of psychopathies. In one of his books Anatomy of violence (Anatomy of violence, 2014) he talks about a gene responsible for the production of a hormone, which regulates the neurotransmitters involved in impulse control. Individuals lacking this gene would have a predisposition to violence, although that does not mean that they become future murderers, warns Raine, which leads us to think that it is our lifestyle, the way we educate, the norms of societies increasingly dehumanized which can provide the minimum conditions for human beings to kill.

Dr. Cesare Lombroso, who has been called "the father" of modern criminology, studied criminals imprisoned in Turin back in 1870.
He was convinced of the criminals, they were a step below in evolution, a regression to a type of primitive or subhuman man.
After years of study, he concluded that a murderer could be identified by the shape of his face and by the excessive length of his "simian" arms.
"The ears of a criminal," he wrote, "are often oversized."
"The nose is frequently turned up or flattened in thieves. In murderers it is usually aquiline like the beak of a bird of prey."