A number of experts have weighed in on who may be responsible for a series of murders in Stockton and Oakland—with one providing a very specific description of the perpetrator.
and Oakland, California, has left these communities on edge. Now, the victims’ families and city residents are looking for answers.
He may be killing out of a need to appease intense feelings of anger, Yaksic says. Killing may be “the offender’s way of relieving the stress and pressure he experiences in daily life,” Yaksic told The Daily Beast by email.“Part of the reason that many serial murderers target the unhoused, beyond their inherent vulnerability, is that they reside in unmonitored places and generally do not have devices such as cellphones that can record them,” Yaksic wrote.
For the families of the victims, there are currently more questions than answers about the person who took the lives of their loved ones. Three more men would die in the weeks that followed, all in the same five-mile radius of north Stockton. On Aug. 30, Jonathan Hernandez Rodriguez, 21, was shot while sitting in his car outside the apartment complex where he lived off East Hammer Lane. On Sept. 21, Juan Cruz, 52, was shot outside an apartment complex on Manchester Avenue.
Rinek says we should be careful not to make assumptions about the perpetrator, and emphasized that very little information has been made public by police. However, having reviewed the case, he gave his thoughts about the killer. “If you took all these locations, and determined the center of them, what would be there?,” he says, “It’s very possible that the offender is living right there.”
LaTour, described the shooter as wearing dark pants, a dark hooded sweater and a black mask, in an interview with a local outlet 209 Times. Rinek says this is key, because it shows the perpetrator is trying to conceal their identity. It is this gun that may prove key to identifying the killer. Police have implied that they have ballistic evidence that links all seven shootings. Rinek says it’s interesting the police have chosen to make that information public.Robert Shug, a forensic psychologist and a professor of criminology and forensic psychology at California State University Long Beach, usually encounters serial killers when he interviews them after they’ve committed their crimes and been caught.
“We don’t know what the motive is. What we do believe is that it’s mission-oriented,” Stockton Police Chief Stanley McFadden said on Tuesday, “This person’s on a mission.”
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