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Michelle Castillo /

CBS News/ July 25, 2012, 2:44 PM

What makes a person a psychopath?

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(CBS News) Ever since suspected gunman James Holmes' seemingly dazed televised court appearance Monday, speculation has run rampant on whether or not the man accused in the Aurora, Colo., massacre may have deeper psychological problems.

Chicago clinical psychologist Daniela Schreier told CBSNews.com that prior to Holmes' court appearance, some people thought he was a psychopath who used violence to make his mark on the world. However, after seeing him in court, she believes he may instead be suffering from a psychotic breakdown that happened as recently as this spring. Meanwhile, Marissa Randazzo, former chief research psychologist for the U.S. Secret Service and an expert in mass shootings, told Good Morning America that Holmes' previous behavior didn't suggest he was a psychopath or a sociopath.

The court of public opinion following the tragedy also included many voices judging Holmes to be a psychopath. These people may be right - but probably not for the reasons that they think. The psychopath label has been used so much, it has become a broad term that's real meaning has been lost among everyday citizens.

"It's like a 'nervous breakdown,'" Dr. Michael First, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University, told CBSNews.com. "It's all these words that people use with no precise meaning."

"The word has been borrowed from a technical term," First added. "If a psychologist or a psychiatrist says it, it probably has a specific meaning. If a member of the public says it, it normally means a very bad person."

What the word psychopath represents clinically is a person who has a lack of what we would consider a conscience, according to First. A psychopath is seen to suffer from a lack of empathy because of psychological, genetic and environmental factors (whereas another commonly used term, a sociopath, suggests a person suffers the same symptoms due to sociological factors). Psychopaths usually have no guilt or remorse and tend to be self-centered. However, the term itself is not listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) so it technically isn't considered a mental health disorder. Psychopathy does tend to be closely related to antisocial personality disorder, which is a listed condition.

As for Holmes himself, First - who is not involved in the suspect's care - said from past experience and what he's seen of the case, he believes Holmes is not a psychopath.

"Nothing I have read about Holmes' history suggests he is a psychopath other than the crime itself," he said.

While many psychopaths are criminals, not all of them are are murderers, First said. For example, a psychopath might work for a corporation making money for shareholders. Their ability to bend the rules and trick people for profit are signs of psychopathy. He also pointed out that people commit murders for all kinds of reasons, including crimes filled with emotion like passion or jealousy. A psychopath however, wouldn't get overly emotional about his or her crimes.

"Having psychopathy is a trait where you don't worry about hurting other people," First said.

That doesn't mean we're overdue to see a killing spree lead by a bunch of psychopathic CEOs, Jon Ronson, a Welsh journalist who explored what it means to be a psychopath in his book "The Psychopath Test," said to CBSNews.com. In his research, he realized that when you look at the traits listed on the "Psychopathy Checklist, Revised (PCL-R)" created by Dr. Robert Hare - otherwise known as the Hare Psychopathy Checklist, the diagnostic tool most commonly used to determine psychopathy - only a very few items would suggest the person may be violent. Most of the terms suggest malevolence and include behaviors such as promiscuity, pathological lying, failure to accept responsibility for one's actions and a grandiose sense of one's self-worth.

"Psychopaths aren't psychotic," Ronson said. "They aren't suffering from illusions or delusions. It's not a mental illness. It's what's been called a moral discrepancy."

"I think there's a huge number of psychopaths out there," Ronson added. "The vast majority are just walking around untreated and free, and that's just life. That's just the way things are. If they don't commit crimes, they'll most likely be lousy husbands and terrible husbands and philanderers, but that's just life."

In his research Ronson spoke to a woman, Mary Thompson Turner, who had been married to a man many people believed was a psychopath, Will Jordan. Jordan had told Turner that he was a CIA spy, but actually was a bigamist living multiple lives. Turner said that she didn't mind being married to a person who would never love her or care about her feelings.

"She thinks of herself as a wildebeast being chased by a lion," Ronson recalled. "It's the lion's nature, it's nothing personal. If you think that there are people like that out there, and you know that they're screwing you, you just have to be cautious."

Still, many psychologists told Ronson that they would advise against marrying a psychopath. First agrees.

"If you are with somebody so selfish or self-centered who puts their needs above somebody else - well I guess you're OK with that - but most people wouldn't consider that a reasonable marriage to be in," he stated.

But, it's those very traits that can make a psychopath so dangerous, First explained. People who know right from wrong feel pain from the families of their victims, but psychopaths don't really care what they are doing. In fact, they don't realize what they are doing could have lasting effects that would hurt other people because they are lacking certain aspects of humanity.

"If I found out that one of my friends was a psychopath, I wouldn't want to be friends with them," First said, "Not because of the diagnosis, but because they were probably exploiting me the whole time. Then again, why am I friends with a person like that?"

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
13 Comments Add a Comment
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Interlineal_Peruser says:
Everyone needs to have a serious look at "The Rosenhan Experiment" and then decide exactly just what amount of credence, if any, they should place on any person's having being diagnosed with but a putative mental disorder by a so-called medical expert! And just remember that it was only some of the so-called mentally ill patients already in hospital in "The Rosenhan Experiment" who were wise to the experiment's trick of undercover pseudopatients[impostors] being interned amongst them, and not even a single one of the medical staff did! How embarrassing and diploma-degrading for a supposedly highly-qualified bunch of doctors and cohorted nursing staff to lack the acumen of being able to pick an impostor!

If one of Dr First's friends was suspected of being a psychopath, it might be simply because he[the friend] first suspected First of being a psychopath himself. It's not only those with a medical degree that have the capacity/audacity to, errantly or otherwise, label other people, even suspect persons with but alleged medical degrees. Remember the crazed (Dr?) Valery Fabrikant and his psychopathic murderous spree a few years ago? Perhaps First's hypothesized friend might have deemed that it was in his[the friend's] best interests to get in first[pun intended] with a deftly-decided diagnosis...especially if he felt that First had been exploiting him the whole time of their friendship and thought it thespian-therapeutic to start mirroring First's behaviour in the hope that First might eventually begin to see the error[iatrogenicity] of his ways!

Charity does, after all's said and d_one'rously...begin at home_s'pun!
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wildkid007 says:
Sociopath: expecting everyone else to pay your way! James Holmes was on food stamps, unemployment, federal grants!
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pfizerman11 says:
glenn beck and ted nugent are both psychopaths and i have proof
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AAnnie52 says:
I cannot and will not comment on James Holmes mental status except to say from what very little we know, he does not appear to be a psychopath or sociopath as traditionally defined. That said, if you have ever been up close and personal for an extended time with such a person, you will recognize the signs very easily. They lie about anything, whether it matters or not. The world revolves around them. They don't bother making appointments because, of course, people will accommodate them. If there's a problem, any problem, it's YOUR fault, not theirs, never theirs. They can turn on a dime on you in their conversations. They are entitled to whatever they want and if you have a problem with that, YOU are the problem. They are master manipulators and can convince even your own family that YOU'RE nuts, not them. They are fundamentally lazy, using others to do their work and claiming it as their own, unless, of course, something goes wrong - then it all rains down on you. Get the picture? The one we used to have in the family is now an ex, but there are still children in the picture so he's forever in the background, yanking the rug out from under us at unexpected moments - tough we have learned to expect the unexpected. And when he does something nice, it's for a reason, generally known only to him until after the fact.
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viewupclose says:
Good lord. If only the news media would stop having so-called mental health professionals comment on people and cases they have no direct involvement or knowledge about. They are such a waste of time and airwaves! Plus, they mislead the public into thinking they actually know about the accused or offenders (biasing us one way or another) when they don't!
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you_MAY_be_right says:
What makes a person a psychopath?

Depends on who you talk to.

Freud would say it is your id and the lack of $3x from your nuturing mother when you were young.
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varigdc10 says:
Mitt Romney and the Chicago Cubs ! These two can drive anyone mad.
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credibility2 says:
I wish all of this arm chair psychoanalysis and Monday night quarterbacking would stop...it's getting to be ridiculous and stupid.
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hypnotoad72 says:
Nature and/or nurture.

Stress can bring a person to a breaking point, and our society - all too often - mistakes the bad forms of stress as being good forms.

Brain chemistry imbalance can be a factor, either ingrained with stress or independent of.

One doesn't need a Master's degree to understand that, but one might if they needed to know precise specifics...
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sbarr10 says:
"If they don't commit crimes, they'll most likely be lousy husbands and terrible husbands and philanderers, but that's just life."

Or perhaps win political office with their charm.
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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Or lobby such elected officials for personal gain at our expense...

A lot of people tend to forget about the "macro" in macroeconomics and its effect on societies.
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