Deadly Charm: The Story Of A Deaf Serial Killer

Paperback
from $0.00

Author: McCay Vernon

ISBN-10: 1563684438

ISBN-13: 9781563684432

Category: Adoptees & Orphans - Biography

From the day he was born, Patrick McCullough faced hardships and reacted with untempered anger. His mother, a soon-to-be-divorced military wife, was late to realize that he was deaf and never learned how to handle his outbursts. Eventually, she abandoned him by petitioning for him to be a ward of the state. Stints in mental institutions and dismissals from several schools punctuated the rest of McCullough’s early years. Despite this severe childhood, no one could have predicted the outcome of...

Search in google:

Born deaf and given to the state by his mother, Patrick McCullough faced a hard life with equal parts of charm and rage that eventually lead him to kill. Publishers Weekly Florida-based forensic psychologist McCay Vernon and journalist Marie Vernon (coauthors of Deadly Lust) present a striking portrait of Patrick McCullough, “[s]o far as can be determined... the first and only deaf man ever to be identified as a serial killer.” McCay Vernon's personal encounters with him both in and out of prison add an authoritative tone to this psychological probe of a man with a volcanic anger and an inability to accept rejection. Despite his IQ of 120, McCullough's relatively late diagnosis of deafness impeded his development of language skills and “trapped [him] in a silent world.” Already unmanageable as a three-year-old, McCullough went on to spend time in mental institutions and seven years in prison for two murders committed in the 1980s. His tragic life ended in 2001 with a bloody murder-suicide. But the authors argue, unlike most serial killers, McCullough did not kill for sexual pleasure but because of his rage (caused possibly by neurological damage) and inability to accept rejection. Drawing on a range of sources from court records to interviews with McCullough's friends, the authors provide a disturbing portrait of an atypical serial murderer. (May 31)

\ Publishers WeeklyFlorida-based forensic psychologist McCay Vernon and journalist Marie Vernon (coauthors of Deadly Lust) present a striking portrait of Patrick McCullough, “[s]o far as can be determined... the first and only deaf man ever to be identified as a serial killer.” McCay Vernon's personal encounters with him both in and out of prison add an authoritative tone to this psychological probe of a man with a volcanic anger and an inability to accept rejection. Despite his IQ of 120, McCullough's relatively late diagnosis of deafness impeded his development of language skills and “trapped [him] in a silent world.” Already unmanageable as a three-year-old, McCullough went on to spend time in mental institutions and seven years in prison for two murders committed in the 1980s. His tragic life ended in 2001 with a bloody murder-suicide. But the authors argue, unlike most serial killers, McCullough did not kill for sexual pleasure but because of his rage (caused possibly by neurological damage) and inability to accept rejection. Drawing on a range of sources from court records to interviews with McCullough's friends, the authors provide a disturbing portrait of an atypical serial murderer. (May 31)\ \