RT Article T1 Condemned homicide offenders and externalizing psychopathology JF Routledge handbook of homicide studies SP 739 OP 755 A1 Peters, David J. A2 Bonner, Taea A2 DeLisi, Matt LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1924790203 AB Previous research shows that homicide offenders exhibit above-average externalizing psychopathy that is strongly correlated with criminal career. However, it is unknown whether these findings apply to offenders who have committed especially severe or aggravated homicides that have resulted in a capital conviction. To address this gap, we identify distinct psychopathy profiles using latent class analysis (LCA); and then describe demographic and criminal history differences across profiles. Using archival data and appellate records, a unique large-scale database of 636 condemned capital murderers in California was constructed to measure psychopathy (PCL-R), antisocial personality disorder (ASPD), and sexual sadism. Results of the LCA find that 16% of capital homicide offenders exhibit few signs of psychopathy, ASPD, or sexual sadism, with scores very close to the non-criminal general population. By contrast, 26% fell into the upper-range psychopathy class, with externalizing psychopathy far above those of general homicide offenders. At the extreme end, the 31% of condemned murderers in the clinical psychopathy class stood out. ASPD and sexual sadism disorder rates were ten times higher. Rates of attempted and prior murders were ten to 20 times higher, and murder of inmates in prison was 130 times higher. Clinical psychopaths were three times more likely to kill victims using manual strangulation, and 30 times more likely to engage in necrophilic activity with victims. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 752-755 SN 9781032506593