РефератыИностранный языкJwJw Gacy Essay Research Paper The question

Jw Gacy Essay Research Paper The question

J.w. Gacy Essay, Research Paper


The question is: How could a man considered by so many to be an


upstanding citizen actually be the murderer of 33 young men? To this


day, nobody really knows for sure. Within this paper I intend to


examine Gacy?s life through the lens of three psychological theories in


order to give some insight into some of the factors that may of caused


Gacy to act as he did. John Wayne Gacy Jr. was born on March 17,


1942 in Chicago Illinois to John and Marion Gacy. For the first eleven


years of his life, John Jr. attended a local catholic school along with his


two sisters, Joanne and Karen. Gacy was considered by his teachers to


be an average student with no outstanding qualities except for the fact


that he tended to be compulsively neat (Linedecker, 1980). In high


school, Gacy did not perform as well academically. He ended up


attending four different high schools but he never completed his senior


year. This might of been due to the abusive relationship Gacy had with


his father. The entire Gacy family fell victim to John senior?s drunken


brutality. He beat his wife, terrorized his daughters, and constantly


abused and belittled John Jr. Throughout the abuse, though, John Jr.


managed to have a strong relationship with his mother (Linedecker,


1980). After a few years of working as a janitor, Gacy decided to go


back to school. He enrolled at Northwestern Business College, and


within a year, earned his degree. After graduation he was offered a job


with the Nunn-Bush shoe company, and within a year he was promoted


and moved to Springfield Illinois. Things were looking good for Gacy at


this point of his life. While living in Springfield, Gacy married one of his


co-workers, Marlynn Myers. He also became involved in the local


chapter of the Jaycees. Gacy loved to be noticed, which was probably


why he was so active in the organization that was dedicated to


improving the community. He was so active, in fact, that within a year of


belonging to the organization he was elected vice president. Gacy and


his wife eventually packed up and moved to Waterloo Iowa, were he


was offered a job by his father-in-law working for a Kentucky Fried


Chicken franchise. Everything seemed to be going great for Gacy until


he was arrested for allegedly committing sodomy with a teenage boy.


He was convicted and sentenced to ten years in prison, where he spent


only three and was eventually released on probation. During this time,


his wife divorced him and took custody of their two children. After


prison, Gacy moved back to Chicago and into a small house located at


8213 West Summerdale Avenue. To the people that lived around him,


Gacy was considered to be a good neighbor. He was always throwing


lavish parties at which he spared no expense. Once again, things


seemed to be going Gacy?s way. He got married again, started his own


contracting company, and once again became involved in the local


Jaycees. In reality, though, Gacy was not at all what he seemed. While


living at 8213 West Summerdale Avenue, Gacy secretly committed 33


murders that eventually shocked the nation and made him the worst


serial killer in American history. He preyed on young teenage boys from


all walks of life. Some worked for him at his contracting company and


others were young male prostitutes working the streets of Chicago.


Gacy would lure these young men into his home by promising them


drugs and then proceed to sexually molest and murder them. Gacy was


eventually caught in 1978 after he abducted and murdered his last


victim, a young boy named Robert Piest. Piest?s mother was waiting for


her son outside the pharmacy he worked at when Robert ran out and


told her he would be out in a minute. He first had to talk to a man about


a contracting job for the summer. Robert was never seen again.


Robert?s mother contacted the police and told them about the


contractor her son spoke to. The police eventually arrived at Gacy?s


house to ask him some questions. When they entered, they noticed the


unmistakable odor of dead bodies (Linedecker, 1980). They eventually


searched the house and found 33 dead bodies buried in a crawl space


under the house. Gacy was immediately arrested and sent to jail to


await trial. He was eventually convicted of 33 counts of murd

er and


sentenced to death. The execution took place on May 10, 1994 by


means of lethal injection. Probably one of the best ways to understand


how a man could commit such heinous crimes is to analyze his life using


different psychological theories and paradigms. One paradigm,


Eysenck?s Three-Factor Model, breaks down personality into three


factors: extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism. Each of these three


major factors can be broken down again into more specific traits(


Cloninger, 1996). Most people, when measured, will usually score high


on some traits and low on others. Gacy, on the other hand, seems to


score fairly high on most of them. Traits that accompany extraversion,


such as sociability, dominance, and sensation seeking are traits he


would score particularly high on. He exhibited extreme sociability


through his various parties, successful business relationships, and


through his work with the Jaycees. He also exhibited extreme


dominance and sensation seeking through his molestation of young men.


Gacy also scores high on most traits that accompany neuroticism,


especially irrationality and moodiness. For obvious reasons, Gacy could


be considered an extremely irrational man. He also was very moody.


His wife once told a story of how one minute he was throwing furniture


in a fit of rage and the next minute he was back to his normal self


(Linedecker, 1980). It seems strange that Gacy would score high on the


traits that fall under psychoticism such as impulsiveness,


unempatheticness, and anti-socialness, considering the fact that he also


scores high on extraversion traits, which are basically opposites of


psychoticism traits. One could argue that, in a way, Gacy was two


different people. To his friends and neighbors, he was an extremely


extaverted man, but in reality he was a social deviate. Another


psychological theory that could be used to explain Gacy?s behavior is


Freud?s psychoanalytic theory. In his theory, Freud believed that


childhood experiences were the main determinants of adult behavior.


He came up with four different stages of development, all of which


affect behavior. Freud?s stages of development consist of the oral, anal,


phallic, and latency periods. It is possible for an individual to become


fixated at any one of these stages depending on how stringent one?s


parents are during each stage. According to Freud?s theory, Gacy?s


adult behavior was probably caused by aversive events that took place


during the anal and phallic stages of Gacy?s development. During his


entire life, Gacy was considered by many to be compulsively neat and


orderly. Even when he buried the bodies of his victims under his house,


he made sure they were all lined up symmetrically with each other


(Linedecker, 1980). This would indicate that he was fixated during the


anal stage of development. During this stage, if one?s parents are too


regimented during toilet training, one can become overly neat. During


the phallic stage, the child learns what it is to be male or female by


identifying with the same sex parent. Gacy never really identified with his


father due to John senior?s abusive behavior towards his son. One could


argue that this was the reason for Gacy?s abusive behavior as an adult


or even that it was the cause of his homosexual tendencies. A third and


final psychological theory that could be used to interpret Gacy?s


behavior would be the Social Learning Theory. According to this


theory, a boy learns to be masculine by being rewarded for masculine


behavior and punished for engaging in feminine acts. As a child, Gacy?s


father never rewarded him. He was, though, constantly punished, but


never for any rational reason. Once again, one could argue that this


contributed to Gacy?s homosexual tendencies as an adult. John Wayne


Gacy Jr. was a man that many considered to be normal. In reality,


though, nothing could be further from the truth. By using the lens? of


psychological theories, we come closer to understanding what drove a


seemingly normal man to commit such unthinkable crimes. References


1. Cloninger, S. (1996). Personality: Descriptions, Dynamics, and


Development. New York: W.H. Freeman And Company. Linedecker,


C. (1980). The Man Who Killed Boys. New York: St. Martin?s


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