Canadian True Crime - Russell Williams Debrief - with Criminologist Lee Mellor
Episode Date: October 13, 2019[Bonus content between episodes ] I had lots of questions after covering Russell Williams - so I had a conversation with Dr Lee Mellor - Canadian profiler, author, criminologist and serial killer expe...rt. He's also the host of Murder Was The Case.In typical Lee fashion, he doesn't hold back on any of his opinions. Definitely lots of food for thought. Disclaimer voiceover: Robin Warder from The Trail Went ColdTheme song by We Talk of Dreams Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Please note that this episode contains views, thoughts and opinions that are intended to
shed light on this case, but do not necessarily reflect those of the Canadian True Crime
podcast. Please use your discretion when listening.
Hi everyone. Don't worry, the next episode is still coming as scheduled on October 15th.
But in the meantime, here's a bit of bonus content for you, something that I haven't
really ever done before. As I was putting together the Russell Williams episodes, I had so many
questions about why he did the things he did. So I wrote them all down and had a conversation
with someone educated in the space that I know could shed some light. And that is Dr.
Lee Mellor, Canadian serial killer expert, author and fellow podcast host. I will let
him introduce himself. So without further ado, here's our conversation.
Hey Lee, how's it going?
Actually pretty good. I have returned to Brighton, Ontario recently, moved away from the big
smoke. And I find myself out here and you're asking me about Ross Williams. Well, Ross
Williams killed a woman in Brighton, Ontario while I was living here last. And this is
a town of 10,000 people or less. So I'm actually kind of eager to revisit these crimes. It's
been about a decade since I really spent time with them, but at the time they're at front
and centre of my life.
When I came to the end of this case and I realised that I had so many unanswered questions
about Russell Williams and the circumstances, I couldn't think of anyone better to ask these
questions to than you. And I was wondering if you could give my listeners a little bit
of background information on who you are and how you came to be, the person that I ask
about, Russell Williams.
Well, it began with me writing the first exhaustive book on Canadian serial murder. It started
that back in 2009. Of course, that was right around the time that Russell Williams became
active in November, I believe it was, of 2009. And then I was writing it through 2010. So
literally as I was writing the book on Canadian serial murder, at the same time I have a serial
murderer operating around the area that I'm in, which is probably the least likely place
for a serial murderer to be. So I was kind of pinching myself. I'm watching the news
headlines and part of me is going, it's a serial killer, it's a serial killer. Another
part of me is going, no, you're just thinking that because all you're doing is eating, breathing,
you know, drinking, sleeping serial killers. And it turned out to be an actual serial killer.
After I'd finished writing that book, I then published it, sold over 5,000 copies of it.
And then I wrote the sequel to that rampage Canadian mass murder and spree killing. When
that was published, I was then enrolled in a PhD program. Those books apparently counted
as a master's for me. So that was handy. And I enrolled in this PhD program in which I used
psychology, sociology, criminology and semiotics to study abnormal homicide and sex crimes. So
everything from serial murder to colts to rapists and pedophiles, necrophilia, all that. And I've
achieved my doctorate. And since then, I've been doing my podcast, Murder was the Case. I
interview all kinds of people around the topic of murder and violence, sex crime. So I've had
authors, podcasters, cops, criminals who did it, criminals who didn't do it, jurors, filmmakers,
you name it, just to begin. So there's all that. And plus, I also am the chair of the Academic
Committee for the American Investigative Society of Cool Cases. And I've worked probably about
a dozen cool case homicides through that organization.
That's really, really cool. And for that reason, I wanted to get started on asking you my leftover
questions after finishing the Russell Williams case. So my first question is, why did he start
acting on his deviant thoughts so late in life? Like, we know that he was in his 40s when he
actually started breaking and entering, and then it escalated from there. But why was it that he
waited for so long? Do you think? Well, I think I would preface that by saying we can safely assume
that the first recorded incidents were in his 40s. But I wouldn't be surprised if at some point in
his life, he'd also broken into homes or committed some sort of fetish burglaries. That doesn't mean
he was doing it his whole life. He might have decided to kind of clamp down at that at one
point and kept the lid on it. So what he's displaying is compulsive, paraffelic, violent
behavior. And so this means he would have developed these sort of tendencies from a very young age,
maybe as early as like, you know, 10s sometimes, but certainly by the time he was done high school,
he would have formed sexuality based on dominance of women. And let's just call them say,
fetishistic or paraffelic disorders. So I think that the reason that he didn't act out to his 40s
is that there were plenty of social controls or and personal controls in his way. I don't think
that he really ever wanted this side of his personality to blossom. So he was always manning
the gate to make sure that it didn't. And so the kind of controls that he would use to keep that
at bay was being so ambitious as a start. If you look at the guy's life, he's a workaholic. When
he's not a workaholic, he's playing sports, he's involving himself in community events.
And I think he's doing this all for like to the extreme that he's doing it, and he's excelling
in the military and other aspects of life, because it's literally his way of warding off this dark
side of himself. And along the way he gets married, I think that his wife once again comes in very
handy as a type of control. So he can he doesn't have to worry about being perceived as being,
I don't know, perhaps gay or unable to meet a woman or unwilling to she normalizes him.
She closes that avenue of conversation down. Look, I have a wife now, right? I'm married,
no questions asked. I'm normal. And then what happens in his 40s is that he moves away from
his wife. I don't think that that is necessarily what does it. It's not like him moving away from
his wife means that that cover goes away. He can still use that social cover. But I think that
she probably had somewhat of a regulating effect on him, knowing that he couldn't just do whatever
he wanted at any time in his own home. And so that gate then opens at the same time. He probably
reaches the zenith of where he can go in his military career. He's commander of the most
important Air Force Base in Canada, CFB Trenton. So now he's got to the final level of his professional
ambitions. And he's also likely coming face to face with the end of his own sexuality.
And realizing that if he waits any longer, all of the fantasies that he's had that he's been
struggling to control throughout his whole life that he's really not ever going to be able to
realize them. You know, the older he gets, the more difficult what he wants to do is going to be.
And I think there's probably another factor that we don't know about. I've read that he was
on some sort of different medication. And apparently there's a secret here that hasn't
been released to the public. So there is an X factor. And I think that that when combined with
everything else I've just talked about is what brought the wall crashing down and allowed the
sex murderer, tentacle, fetish monster to come pouring into reality through Russell Williams.
How did you find out about this secret that you're talking about?
It was in the newspaper actually, Dr. John Bradford, who is a psychiatrist, I believe,
either that or very well respected psychologist. He said that Russ Williams agreed to sit down
and talk to him about what it was that happened and that they had that conversation. But he will
never say what it is because Williams agreed on the terms that Bradford never reveal it.
And as Bradford is by far the older of the two, I think we can expect that he'll
probably take that secret to his grave. And, you know, so it's not like Williams gonna die
first and he can say, okay, I can finally tell you guys what it is. So unless you're able to
contact him and have no work, you're trying to convince him on getting into what that thing that
Russ confided in him was, you're gonna have to do with my speculative but informed analysis
in the meantime. I have zero charm so back to his wife. Do you think that he had like genuine
feelings of romantic love towards her or he was just kind of fond of her or and obviously this
is just speculation but it seemed like he really truly loved her and cared for her. Do you think
that that exists with alongside the man that he was on the inside? We're getting a little
bit Freudian here and that's always suspect but when I conceptualized this case, I thought she's
his mother figure. She is what keeps him being sensible and keeps him on the track and keeps
him clean and presentable. And I think their relationship was very much one of convenience
from what I've read about their relationship. It was basically sexless. In fact, they might never
have had sex to be honest with you. It's almost like, look, I need a husband but I'm not really
into a sexual relationship with men but I need a cover and I still want some companionship.
Great, me too. Let's do this thing. That's the type of relationship that I believe that they had
and given his crimes, I don't think he could arise to the level of what we would call love
although that term itself, you could argue, are we even talking about the same thing when we say
love much less consensus than hate? But I would say no, not what we would think of as true romantic
love, probably more like the sort of attachment that one would have to a female relative or
really close female friend and that he did care about her but I think he probably cared more about
her opinions of him and that's where that mother aspect comes in is he wants to always look good
in her eyes. Wow, what do you think is the difference between these people who have the
dark thoughts and don't do anything about it and then those who act like notwithstanding this
secret that you're talking about? Well, there can be any number of things that cause them to act
but the stock explanation is that they simply have a different brain so we're talking about
poor functionality in the prefrontal cortex of the brain which allows for people to restrain
themselves and control their impulses and urges. Another is the amygdala part of the brain
where people have empathy for others and that's sort of the emotional center so obviously
if you don't feel bad about hurting people whether they are individual victims or society as a whole
that is another missing control as would be the impulse regulation of the prefrontal cortex if
it wasn't functioning properly so those are sort of the stock answers and those can be impaired to
different degrees and I think in Russell Williams case they were likely not quite as impaired as
most serial murderers but still would have been that way. We also have to wonder about him going
on this medication and if Bradford's secret had anything to do with that and so a change in the
chemical composition of somebody's brain obviously could lead them to act completely
differently than they have for the rest of their life. What I'm not saying is that this would have
brought up all of these sexual desires and fetishes in him and the desire to commit violence against
women but it might have kicked down the door at least sort of lubed up the hinges so the difference
between those who act and those who don't is I would say largely biological but then we also
have to look at the circumstances of someone's life as well and people are subject to different
strains and stresses some people go through traumas and hardships that others don't and the more of
those that you encounter and the way in which you choose to handle them will dictate the way that
you think about your place in the world and how much you want to adhere to what is supposed to
be done anymore how much you want to keep walking the line and some people just decide that they're
on the outside now or that they'll never have a slice of the pie and that the world owes them
something or any number of justifications like that and when so you can have that paired with the
biology or it can be something altogether separate or it can just be the biology so there's no one
answer to your question but I think I've given you a kind of buffet there where you can see how
that the many routes that someone would take to arrive at the point where they go from
dark thought to dark action he is clearly an intelligent man I often wondered as I was going
through the crimes why did he do such stupid things along the way for example he didn't appear to
wear a condom there was DNA found everywhere because he ejaculated it all over the place
all the photos and the videos he took he was careless with you know his tire tracks and his
boot prints in the snow do you think that he perhaps wanted to be caught why was he so careless
okay so I'll start with just the why was he so careless part and but I've got to divide it into
two things because but I've got to divide it into two things because I think there's two separate
answers to different mistakes that he made so we're gonna start with ejaculating all over the
place in the age of DNA not using a condom taking photos and videos I would group that into what I
would call his signature behaviors so it is his motive he's not going to enjoy doing this unless
he ejaculates he's not going to enjoy it unless there's a condom involved he needs the photos
and videos so that he can relive his fantasy so the reason he does that is because it's the entire
motive for the crime like it would be probably easier to get away with robbing a bank if you
didn't take any money but if your goal in robbing the bank is actually to take the money and that's
at the core of your motive then even if there's a die pack that explodes on you or the bills can
be traced or whatever you're still gonna do it because you're motivated by money he's motivated
by sex without a condom involving ejaculation and then reliving the whole experience through photos
and videos now when it comes to the other parts of the forensic evidence that are not related to
his sexuality so leaving the tire tracks the boot prints I think that's a little bit more difficult
but how I would conceptualize that is just because you're in just because you're in sorry just because
you are an intelligent person in an institutional way so you know how to follow the rules you can
learn skills how to fly a plane or whatever I think that's different than criminal competence
the sort of cunning and street smarts that you get from frankly probably having committed
lots more crimes before and having been caught for lesser things so because Williams doesn't
have a criminal record before all of this comes to light we can assume that he's never been caught
for doing this sort of thing in the past and it's the sort of what doesn't kill me makes me
stronger principle in that if you are constantly committing crimes and getting caught for them
and you live a criminal life you learn through negative results what not to do so you often
hear rapists who graduate to murder say well I got caught because a witness told on me next
time I'm going to kill them so they don't do that so they can't do that and the same would go for
simple little things that seem obvious to us looking from our point of view but mistakes
that we might make ourselves because especially if we were driven by this sexual compulsion
like he was so I imagine that he was so much into this idea of being the commando the professional
the home invader I think that was very much how he conceptualized himself as almost like this
elite recon person and so he was so much into playing out that role even picking the locks
which to be honest with you no burglar does that it takes too much time you just smash the window
and reach in but I think that was a part of his fantasy too not necessarily the sexual part holy
but a fantasy of who he was and he got caught so much in the wearing camouflage or sorry dark
clothing and you know sort of blocking out his face aspect of it that he forgot about the little
things like hey if I park my car in the snow it's going to leave tire tracks so two separate answers
to that question but I'm pretty confident with with my answers to those
Do you have a passion project that you're ready to take to the next level?
Squarespace makes it easy for anyone to create an engaging web presence grow a brand and sell
anything from your products to the content you create and even your time when I launched this
passion project six years ago I needed some kind of online hub to manage all the non-podcasting
tasks that come with podcasting I chose Squarespace because it's an all-in-one platform that seamlessly
helps me achieve multiple goals it's important to have a website that looks good and I was inspired
by Squarespace's wide selection of clean and modern templates they can be easily customized with
pre-built layouts and flexible design tools to fit your needs and you can even browse the category
of your business to see examples of what others have done I use the built-in blogging tools to
create a new page for each episode and there are so many intuitive options from embedding
an audio player so listeners can stream episodes to scheduling posts to be published on a certain
date an easily moderated comment section and automatically displaying recent episodes on the
homepage every Squarespace website and online store includes SEO tools to help you maximize
your visibility in search engines and I love the powerful insights I can get from the analytics
tools helping me better understand who's visiting the site where they came from and how they're
interacting with it do you have a passion project or business idea or something to sell
go to squarespace.com slash ctc for a free trial and when you're ready to launch use offer code
ctc to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain that's squarespace.com
slash ctc with offer code ctc and get your passion project off the ground today.
This might be a stupid question but it is one that came to me nonetheless
why did he always strip completely naked like one would think that you could just keep your
shirt on if your goal was was sexual why why did he always have to be naked why was he standing
in a backyard naked and I'm going to give you probably what sounds like a very stock answer
to that and it's simply that in his fantasies that he had been masturbating to thinking about
this behavior throughout his whole life he was naked in those fantasies I think also there may
have been a quality of him that was somewhat exhibitionist like no joke intended but it's
going to be funny the kind of like look at it sort of attitude yeah that simple really it certainly
wasn't due to forensic awareness or anything like that because we've already covered the fact that
he left plenty of clues so yeah I would just say that that's what he wanted sexually so it goes to
signature again interesting another thing I noticed was with marie france komo he was violent from
the start and and she fought back hard and that seemed to be like quite taxing on him so with
Jessica Lloyd he seemed to tell her again from the get go that he was going to let her go make
her believe that if she complied that he would let her go is this some kind of tactic to make her
more compliant and and make the whole thing easier for him or was he just trying something else out
to see how it would affect her or I think potentially both we were talking before about
learning from previous crimes so he might have reflected back on the marie france komo murder
and said wow the way that I went about that was not smart I almost lost control of her so maybe
this sudden blitz attack without any without emphasis on the I'm just trying to do this
that's not going to work and also but we have different victims too I mean marie france komo
is military and Jessica Lloyd is civilian so that might have colored the way that he
thought that they may have reacted to him and thus has chosen ammo ammo is what we're talking
about here and how it differs from signature and I would say that he went from what we would call
more of a more of a reliance on a blitz attack approach in the marie france komo murder to using
ruse in the Jessica Lloyd murder so yeah he never thought that that he was going to let her go
that was never on the box he was just hoping to get her to be compliant so that he could use her
for as long as he wanted and for whatever he did wanted and the best way to do that is through
telling a lie look just give me what I want and you can go home so I'm always advising people
whenever someone pulls a gun on you or threatens you with violence and says if you simply do this
then everything will be okay you have to really take that with a grain of salt and you should be
wary of all the things that could potentially happen if you don't resist now I'm not saying
that that means you should resist but you should be cognizant of something like say somebody bursts
into your kitchen with a gun and points it at you and says I only want to rob you let me tie up you
and your family that that person could be instead of being just a criminal desperate for money it
could be someone who's just lying to you and that person would have been BTK killer Dennis Rader so
yeah I think he just said it so that Jessica would go along with it and as long as she
thought if I just keep giving him what he wants I'll get out of this situation
I mean that's that's pretty much it so he got to maximize his fantasy and pleasure with her
and then at the end of it just didn't live up to his promise
my next question is about the child porn that was found on the computer that he refused to
acknowledge it seemed to be revealed exclusively in a book called a new kind of monster by Timothy
Appleby and in the book the quote was technically he would not be classed as a pedophile despite the
child porn found on his computer because his sexual interests were much wider than that
I'm wondering if you can shed some light on what this means yeah I hate to be uncharitable to
Timothy Appleby but I don't think he has a very good understanding of criminals or whoever he was
consulting does not have a solid understanding of the type of murderer that Ross Williams is so
to begin it's called a new kind of monster and the premise of the book is he's a serial
killer but he's not a psychopath we have a new kind of monster it's like Tim there's a bunch
of them that aren't psychopaths just because the majority are it doesn't mean that they're all
psychopaths so even the title of his book the premise of that is flawed and that carries over to
the we can't call him a pedophile because he has other sexual interests quote that you just gave me
you can be a pedophile and have other sexual interests in fact it's known that people with
paraphernalia tend to have an average of four so it's not like I'm just a pedophile and nothing
else it's like no you can be a pedophile foot fetishist sexual sadist who isn't the balloons
and the sound they make when you rub on them I mean that's entirely possible so I would just say
that he doesn't really have a decent understanding or any understanding whatsoever of what paraphernalia
is and what people with paraphernalia are like so I don't want to throw shit at Tim but it is
what it is I'm sorry that's why I asked you I it didn't it didn't ring true to me can you explain
this psychopath thing that you're talking about so you don't think that Russell Williams was a
psychopath or a sociopath or am I reading that right Timothy Abelby said that Russell Williams
wasn't a psychopath and so before we had this talk tonight I decided I would check that myself
because I actually know how to administer the test and I have enough information on Williams
where I thought I could do so and get within a reasonable approximation of his psychopathy score
now going into this I was biased towards the thought that he probably isn't a psychopath now
what I mean by a psychopath is somebody who scores a 30 or higher on the psychopathic checklist
revised by Robert Hare and yeah I was pretty confident that Russell Williams would not hit
that score and he fell pretty short of it I would say he's about maybe two two and a half times
more psychopathic than the average person but I'm not sure that that explains his crimes
whatsoever so yeah definitely not a psychopath and not a sociopath either but one thing that we
have to understand about psychopathy is it's not categorical it's not you are a psychopath or you
are not a psychopath it's a gradient and if you look at it as something that happens at the brain
level you could almost pair this with the degree of non-functionality in those areas I talked about
so we talked about the prefrontal cortex and how it blocks us from acting on impulses we don't want
to and we talked about the amygdala and how it allows us to empathize or sympathize and relate
to other people and know that they're feeling now it's not like those are just on or off they can
be sort of on you know think of it as a skill of one to one hundred of how much they can be damaged
and so yeah Williams is slightly psychopathic but not much and I think that you might see that
reflected in his brain scans you know there might be some white matter more so than average
in the prefrontal cortex and the amygdala but not really enough to be having that as the explanation
for his crimes certainly not a sociopath because sociopaths are defined by patterns of criminality
and they're essentially products of society and Williams came from a very privileged societal
position and he shows no other pattern of crime. So just to go off topic what would you say are
the main differences between Russell Williams and say Paul Bernardo who I've read was definitely
classified as a psychopath? Yeah Paul Bernardo is highly psychopathic I've actually run the test
on him too and yeah he's always got a score somewhere hovering around the mid 30s the maximum
score you can get is 40 so Bernardo if you look at his life before the arrest for the murders yeah
he wasn't necessarily convicted of any crimes but he was making his living off smuggling
cigarettes he was committing minor crimes all the time like stealing license plates to put on his
card to help with smuggling he raped and sexually assaulted countless women yeah I mean I think at
this point we're realistically looking at over 50 what I'm getting at here is that his criminality
is constant and it's versatile and with Williams the only type of crime he really seems to be focused on
are these sexual homicides unlike Bernardo so that is a main difference there too.
Also if you watch their affect in the interviews Bernardo is very much
stereotypical of a psychopath in that he seems bored like he's in hot water but
he's he's really not interested in being there anyways he's you know these cops are boring
and he's arrogant when he's speaking with them and he quickly takes control of the conversation
and that's exactly what you would expect of a psychopath that's right out of the playbook.
Russ Williams seems like a completely normal guy up until the point where it becomes obvious to him
that he's in deep trouble and not getting out of it and that's when we start to see him reluctantly
let his dark side out a bit but you can tell that whereas Bernardo doesn't really have a problem with
himself and what he did that Williams is very much ashamed of it and doesn't want to be viewed
as a criminal so that last part got a little bit off-topic there but I mean honestly I could
talk for an hour about the differences between them as a you know psychopath and non-psychopath
but I would say those are the strongest indicators and manifestations of the psychopathic serial
killer behavior versus the non-psychopathic serial killer behavior. So another question I had was
I was quite surprised by how upset Russell got about the divorce of his mother and his stepdad
and as we know it caused a huge family rift involving his brother and he barely spoke to his
mom or his brother for for the next seven years and they tried to make amends with him but it
didn't go anywhere. I noticed you know Russell was in his late 30s when they divorced and it seems
like his reaction and and the grudge that he held over the years was completely disproportionate
and weird for for a grown man who was married in his 30s to have. Do you have any insight into
that and did do you think it may have played a part in his his actions? I have a hypothesis but
before I say it I do want to put this on the table it's just very possible that he had a heat of the
moment argument with his mother and brother in which some things were said by both sides or one
side that he took umbrage with and just reacted by thinking well you know what if that's what you're
going to say or that's what you think or you know typical family arguments I'm just not going to have
anything to do with you. It could be something that simple you know they do have lives that are
comparable to our own however if you want to go back to the sort of mother theory my hypothesis
is that he likely had a cold mother an unaffectionate mother who didn't really have a lot of time
for him and probably not for his brother but certainly not for him and that actually this
interest in women's underwear might have been him going into his mother's space and because he
couldn't physically or emotionally get close to her maybe putting on some of her bras or panties or
lingerie and that being his way of dealing with the fact that he never actually felt close to his
own mother and then actually playing a part in the development of his sexuality so if he had these
sort of feelings towards his mother I think that later on in life he might have become very angry
at his mother and that the slightest thing could cause him to just want to expel her from his
experience and disown her maybe it's a way of saying like well you know you weren't there
for me you never showed love for me so I don't need you you know I'm gonna shut you out so that's
just a hypothesis but I think if you focus on the connection between mother and the dynamics in
childhood there and his penchant for women's clothing I think it's a pretty decent hypothesis
considering we're more or less otherwise fumbling around in the dark no pun intended
by all accounts Russell seemed to be quite remorseful he he was seen to cry he issued what
appeared to be a sincere apology to the families of the victims but then it came out that he had
not paid the $8,800 that he owed in victim surcharge fines and then a debt collection
agency pursued him for those I feel like if he was sincerely remorseful then he would have paid
those fines at least what what do you have to say about his expressions of remorse and the
sincerity of those Russell Williams didn't have remorse Russell Williams had regret and when he
cried he cried for himself potentially for his wife a little bit but mostly he was crying for
the fact that his reputation had been soiled and that all his dirty secrets would be coming out
and that he'd be spending the rest of his life behind bars now he might have channeled that
in a way which made it appear that it was remorse but as you said there's like actually
walking the walk and talking the talk and so he talked the talk reasonably well I never did believe
him but afterwards when he asked to walk it it becomes pretty evident that yeah I was confirmed
in my suspicions that it's regret that he felt not remorse do you feel that his wife there was
a chance that she had an inkling that anything was happening there like she she said that she
had no idea and she was devastated and destroyed by by the revelation of what he'd done but I feel
like she surely must have seen or known something about about any of this that's very difficult to
say it is hard to imagine her having no inkling she might have had a kind of cognitive dissonance
and looked past certain behaviors and then forgot about them you know her not wanting to address
there's something up with my husband so I'll just put it out of my mind
and and dealing with it like that but it's also possible that he used his career in the military
at a very high level to obfuscate some of the telltale signs so I'll give you a concrete example
when they went and searched his garage I believe it was they found all kinds of underwear that he
had taken from these fetish burglaries in boxes in the garage that's if I remember it correctly
it could be the basement or something but yeah whatever he had yeah like hundreds of pairs
of underwear that he'd stolen and you're thinking well how come she didn't know about that that's
really strange that you'd be able to keep all that well if he pulled the don't go into the garage
or don't look into here because it's top secret classified confidential Canadian military stuff
on her then she would have a reason to respect that especially someone who is pretty I would say
pretty married to a straight-laced place in the system type of life so yeah all he needs to say
is that and then she thinks okay well I can't go in there because it's secret documents and
I don't want to get russ in trouble and I wouldn't understand them anyways I'm not really interested
and in reality it's underwear from fetish burglaries or photographs that he'd taken you know you can't
use this computer because this is the one for my military stuff I think that he very much would
have used that to cover for the criminal activities that he was doing yeah so with all of the questions
that I've asked and your knowledge on this case and your qualifications is there anything else that
you think my listeners might want to know about this that I haven't asked okay yeah there's something
that really disturbs me about this case that seems to indicate that Williams has a more disturbing
pathology than perhaps Bernardo and that's hard for us to believe but Bernardo recorded the sexual
assaults of his victims but he never recorded the murders of them and so I think when we look at the
Bernardo case we can look at somebody who is a sexually sadistic rapist and we can say well look
he's creating porn of himself with his victims for himself but it is about the torturous and violent
sexual assault but it is about the sex ultimately even though that has a heavy dominance aspect
what Russell Williams recorded with Marie France Como was her death slowly suffocating on duct tape
why would he record her death why would he do that I mean you can assume that Bernardo recorded
it because he didn't need it to get off maybe it was just a chore to be done later and maybe he
thought well this will really get me in trouble if anybody ever finds this so it's just smart not
to record it but for Williams he found it necessary to record her slowly dying and because I believe
he was using all of this media as pornography we then have to ask was Russell Williams actually
aroused by watching Marie France Como die to the point where he wanted to record it
and later watch it and masturbate to it because it was so arousing to him I think that's a really
sinister thought but the evidence certainly seems to point in that direction I mean why not just
turn off the camera at that point well that's that's like super interesting and terrifying thanks
again to Lee Mella for giving up his time to answer my questions definitely a lot to unpack in this
case if you'd like to hear more insights from Lee and his special guests go and check out his
podcast murder was the case one thing that might be of interest is his recent interview with Rodney
Stafford the father of Victoria Stafford which was actually recorded in a small office at the
royal cinema right before our live show in Toronto this summer so I'll sign off now and I'll be
seeing you again in just a few days with the next scheduled episode
you
you