Psyche
of Criminal mind- a perplexing mystery
Aditi
Gyanesh
Whenever a crime takes place, no matter how insignificant
it is, it creates havoc in people’s mind. They continuously think what would be
the mindset of the person who committed such a heinous or strange act. Psyche
of a criminal mind has always been a mystery for people across the world.
As per studies of criminal psychology in Delhi
University and different psychologists in city a criminal mind can vary from
hard core criminal (may be having base in brain chemistry) to that of a normal
individual. The psychological factors that makes a criminal mind includes an
unrestricted or uncontrollable impulse for anything, lack of sensitivity to
other’s right and suffering, fear (of law, loss of reputation) is either undeveloped,
transiently overwhelmed or is assessed to be taken care of.
“Human mind is one of the most complicated
structures in world. It’s as typical as taking out each and every thread from a
tangled ball. People often come to me with this kind of questions and that is natural
but it’s difficult to explain such crucial instincts to normal person
verbally,” said Dherendra Kumar, known psychologist in Delhi.
The sudden impulse like lust, greed, anger, or
passion for money and opposite sex overwhelms other mental faculties. In this
situation when human being is controlled by one of these emotions, lack of
sensitivity to other’s rights or suffering is lost, which leads the person to
conduct the crimes like rapes, murders, continuous mental or physical tortures
and many more.
“Aarushi murder case is one of the examples of
impulsive murder case, which was the result of parents’ anger,” said S.K.
Sharma, Delhi-based psychiatrist. “Same is with Nirbhaya-gang rape case, on
December 16, when the accused attacked Nirbhaya out of rage, in spirit of anger
and lust after being drunk,” he added.
The tendency to commit different crimes varies from
person to person, although the psychological impulse remains same, lust, greed
and anger. Crimes like spreading terrorism, white collared crimes, forgery,
identity theft, burglary and many others, all have different people with
different mindsets. People become terrorists in
different ways, in different roles, and for different reasons. Perceived
injustice, need for identity and need for belonging are common
vulnerabilities among potential impulses in terrorists’ mind.
Apart from terrorism and other crimes
like rapes murder, physical and mental abuse prevailing in society, there is
trend of white collared crimes, forgery and identity theft. The press is full of it. Two years back when, SEC
accused Rajat Gupta, a senior executive at McKinsey & Company and a former
director of Goldman Sachs, of providing inside information to a hedge fund.
Corporate scams like
those of Mr. Gupta are obviously found influenced by lust and greed for money.
“The temptation to attain profit from their positions adds to their spirit of
committing such crimes. They are not scared because they have feeling of not
being arrested, in any case,” said Deepak Raheja, a psychiatrist
dealing with criminals.
To explain psychology of criminal mind to those with
the normal mindsets, criminal activities can be divided into three---
impulsive, planned and repetitive. When the person is under control of lust and
greed, he or she calculates the gain versus danger, and when gains weigh heavier,
the plan is executed. In repetitive impulse initial success acts as instigation
for repeated and bigger crimes.
In most of the cases, the person who is convicted or
accused is told to suffer from “Anti-social personality disorder”. It is the
development of the person’s personality in such a way that he or she does not
learn socially appropriate skills and behaviour patterns which are based on
respecting others’ rights and feelings. There is aggression, lack of guilt,
lack of tolerance of frustration causing disregard for social values and norms.
“Sudden aggression and passion blows away person’s
ability to understand or react, I was influenced by my friends to ask for money
from my uncle and when he refused to give. I could not control my aggression
and murdered him. Now at age of 50, I realize that what I did was inhuman and
unexpected,” said Bahadur Chand (name changed), who was convicted 20 years back
for murder of his uncle. Bahadur lives in Ravi dass camp, in Delhi which is a
small slum, and works in a small auto garage now.
There are basically two types of
aggression, hostile aggression: is motivated by anger or hatred and is intended
only to make the victim suffer. Instrumental aggression on the other hand is
motivated by an incentive, usually economic. Undoubtedly, hostile and
instrumental aggressions are often combined in the same act.
In addition to brain
differences, people who end up being convicted
for crimes often show behavioural differences compared with
the rest of the population. Perceived feeling of being deprived, unsuccessful,
inability of meeting the desired goal in socially appropriate manner and
correctness of one’s self need are some of the factors that differentiate a
criminal mind from those of normal man.
A criminal mind and a normal mind differ in terms
of their perception of the world and the meaning that is attributed to personal
experiences. This interpretation in the case of a criminal mind is based on
extremity and is symbolic of intra psychic conflict, according to the Freudian
school of thought. In some cases, thinking may be coloured with several
cognitive distortions, whereas in some cases there may be complete shift of
reality, where the individual may be operating on various delusions and
hallucinations. Another factor that distinguishes a criminal and a normal mind
is self-esteem, the evaluative dimension of
the self that includes feelings of worthiness, pride and discouragement. It exists
as a consequence of the implicit judgement that every person has of their
ability to face life's challenges, to understand and solve problems, and their
right to achieve happiness, and be given respect. The understanding of
self esteem in a criminal mind is distorted.
Overall, these studies
paint a picture of significant differences between people who commit serious
crime and people who do not. Not all people with antisocial personality
disorder, or even psychopaths end up breaking law and not all criminals meet
criteria of these disorders. Different criminal minds have different symptoms
to define it.
“It
is important to understand that the social and psychological factors are more
‘felt’ than actually understood. That is why not every person, who is deprived,
becomes a criminal and on other hand those with plenty may turn to crime,” says
Dr. Deepak Raheja.
Increasing number of heinous crimes in India has
raised questions on the mindset of the society which is actually making people
vulnerable to crime. There are three main deterrents against crime - legal,
social and religious. Unfortunately, all three are falling down. This paves way
to break the psychological barrier against crime. Reasons like loneliness, lack
of social and emotional support system, changing priorities due to changing
value system, lack of fear, poor emotional quotient and social quotient
ultimately signals brain to harm other people out of rage.
Rapes being one of the topmost crimes in India according to National Crime Records Bureau
in 2011 have triggered the senses of common people. Involvement of Juveniles in
sexual crimes, increased number of sexual crimes especially those with minors
has alarmed the country after the outrageous Nirbhaya-gang rape case and rapid
increase in juvenile crimes. Every second sexual harassment case reported now
involves minors as the victims.
Psychology behind rapes depends upon lust, anger and
jealousy majorly and in case of rapes of minors its lust for physical contact
and having sex. The basic factor is, women are perceived as weak, vulnerable
with no voice. The perception that they cannot and will not complaint due to
fear of stigma and discrimination encourages the perpetrators of such crimes.
Sensitization in society and media has majorly affected
people, which have renewed the concept of women being helpless. Media being
motivator of women on one hand has actually used her creation on earth for
promoting their business. People with poor educational standards and poverty
hit backgrounds do not understand the marked line between sensitization and
actuality. Losing their senses they develop lust in their inner mind especially
Juveniles and start searching for prey. Addiction to alcohol and drugs, which
they think is important for standard living, adds to the degree of crime.
“After so much of hue and cry over women safety, now
minors are being the easiest prey to attack on, as they are least resistant,”
said S.K. Sharma, a psychiatrist.
All factors which ‘encourages’ crime in general
becomes more prominent in cases of minors. Small kids offer least resistance
and threat. In certain crimes they do not even know what has happened to them.
And this is what such criminals look for. Their minds are working on only one
principle – pleasure and pain. They know that with older people they are in
risk of resistance and retaliation which is painful for them. Even the feeling
of being judged as bad person is painful. So their minds are trained to search
for soft targets which offer no pain.
As mentioned above Juveniles are equally involved in
sexual crimes now days as elderly criminals. Curiosity to know everything,
carelessness of parents, exposure to everything in media, low education
standard and peer pressure affects a juvenile very rapidly, and they want to
behave like elders. They crave for everything they see in front of them which
ultimately lands them in trouble. Peer pressure during adolescence is strong,
sometimes so strong that teenagers engage in antisocial acts.
A juvenile criminal mind is characterized by
low intelligence, impulsiveness or the inability to delay gratification, aggression, empathy, and restlessness, or troublesome behaviour, language
delays or impairments during childhood development and lack of emotional
control.
Mindset of juvenile criminals is characterized by two prominent factors – high
impulsiveness and incomplete social maturity. Every society expects or sets a
particular age by which social maturity is attained. To pull them out of that
situation a holistic program is required which deals with their circumstances,
their correct social learning and their personality development.
According to members of different juvenile boards of
Delhi and Chandigarh, they feel that good number of detainees accused of rape
and murder are slapped with these charges for being present on the scene of
crime. But in cases where the juveniles are charged of heinous crime, their age
borders 18 years or the age is doubtful. Many times it’s just a few months less
than 18 years.
Many of the convicts and juveniles accused in these
sexual crimes or any unexpected antisocial activity turns out to be mental
patients later on. Later when they are exposed to society, they are filled with
feeling of revenge and in spirit of taking revenge they keep on committing crime
again and again. Psychologists deal such kind of criminals as psychopaths and
sociopaths. Nithari case, in 2006, the Noida serial murder case of children by
a businessman’s servant Surender Kholi, is one of those cases that involved
psychopathic activity.
Difference between sociopaths and psychopaths are
always debated in terms of inborn versus environmental, the basic difference is
that a psychopath has locus of disorder in temperaments (poor EQ) leading to
social disorder (poor SQ) whereas a sociopath has social disorder as locus
leading to temperamental disorder.
Psychopaths are born having temperamental
distinctions that cause the behaviour of risk seeking, impulsiveness,
fearlessness as well as inability to socialize in an ordinary manner. On the
other hand sociopaths are born having normal temperaments, and their condition
is a consequence of the negative environmental experiences that influence
autonomic nervous system and neurological growth which may result in
physiological responses like those which psychopaths present.
After discussion on so much of psychological
ideologies of criminal mind, now the question arises that what is actually the
way out from all this increasing psychological disorders in society’s mindset.
Increasing crime level has become a concern for everyone. After Delhi-gang rape
case everyone is concerned about reforms.
Senior lawyer at Supreme Court and former Solicitor
general of India Gopal Subramanium said, “No doubt we need reforms but for
binging those reform we all have to implement a well thought and framed
strategy. Press, police, politicians every part of society needs reforms.”
Gopal Subramanium is also member of J.S Verma Committee established for framing
recommendations to reforms society for females, and males also upto an extent.
After heights of heinous crimes in society Indian
government finally decided to bring reforms and make India a better place to
live where there would be less sexual crimes. It suggested for J.S. Verma
Committee, which later on came up with required changes in law and order to
bring down the rate of sexual crimes in India. It covered all the sections of
society from political leader to low class people.
Apart from framing different rules and regulations
there is another changes which needs to be brought in like psychological
changes.
Society and family must uphold value system. Unfortunately in today’s world the
difference between right and wrong are getting blurred. This leads to breaking
down of the psychological barriers in people’s mind to resist from erring in
the zone of wrong. The individuals who are already
crept into world of crime and needs to be changed should be helped with proper
and adequate treatment which is inclusive of spiritual awareness, counselling,
pharmacotherapy and a supportive rehabilitation program to help cope with their
inner conflicts and lead meaningful and functional lives.
“Taking initiatives would be a better option to for
bringing in reforms rest depends on society what kind of changes it needs,”
said Deepak Raheja later.