Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
Purchase Benefits
What is included with this book?
Introduction | p. ix |
Basic Concepts of Handwriting Profiling (a Fun Super-Condensed Mini Course) | |
Brainwriting 101 | p. 3 |
From the Erogenous Zone to the Twilight Zone | p. 14 |
The Private I | p. 32 |
How to Read a Signature | p. 48 |
Stop Reading and Start Running! | |
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels | p. 61 |
Sabotage in Their Script | p. 72 |
Cruel and Unusual Letters | p. 79 |
Crackups and Meltdowns | p. 93 |
The Dictator, the Mobster, and Me | p. 105 |
Is That a Phallic Symbol in Your Handwriting or Are You Just Happy to See Me? | p. 114 |
Crossing the Line | p. 121 |
Tick ... Tick ... Tick ... | p. 131 |
The Forensic Files | |
Bad to the Bone | p. 147 |
The Devil's in the Details | p. 156 |
Mad Doctors | p. 164 |
Busted by a Handwriting Detective | p. 178 |
Whodunits | |
Profile of an Axe Murderer | p. 191 |
Who Wrote the JonBenet Ramsey Ransom Note? | p. 197 |
The Letter from Hell | p. 220 |
Let's Get Personal | |
The Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing But ... | p. 257 |
Resources | p. 281 |
Acknowledgments | p. 283 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
At division headquarters, Commander Freeman had a stack of old case files involving handwriting piled on his desk. For hours, he showed me suicide notes, confessions, threatening letters, and other writing, and asked me questions like: "Is this person male or female? How old? Is the writer violent? Suicidal? Honest or dishonest? Straight or gay? Sane or insane? Smart or stupid? Healthy or sick? Go-getter or lazy bum?" After every answer, he smiled. Although he never said so, this was a test.
I must have passed, because a few days later, I got my first assignment: To profile an UNSUB (police lingo for unidentified subject) from a bank robbery note.
"This is a stick up," the note said. "Put $50's, $20's, $10's in bag."
After scanning the note for a few minutes, I turned to the detective in charge of the case. "You're not gonna find this guy's prints in your files, because he probably never committed a crime before. He's not a hardcore criminal. Under normal circumstances, he'd never rob a bank. But he's feeling really desperate." The detective nodded his head politely, but I could tell that he was skeptical.
A few days later, the bank robber was in police custody. As I had predicted, he was not a hardened criminal. In fact, he had no previous arrest record. He was a 52-year-old bus driver who tearfully confessed that he needed money to pay for his son's liver transplant. "Without the operation my son will die," he said.
One day, a woman walking her dog on Aylesboro Avenue in Pittsburgh found a mysterious note on the sidewalk. Printed in purple crayon were the words: Ples rascu me. Thinking it could be a desperate plea for help, the woman brought the note to a police station.
The detectives wondered if the note was a hoax. It appeared to be the writing of a child, but was it? And did the writer really need to be rescued?
"It's not the writing of an adult pretending to be a child," I told the lead detective. "It was written by a girl between the ages of five and seven. And I see absolutely no signs of stress or danger in the handwriting, so the writer is definitely not a kidnap victim." Then I added, "It's signed Kealsey."
But who was Kealsey? And why did Kealsey write the note? We turned to the news media, hoping that someone might recognize the handwriting, or something in the note, that could help us unravel the mystery.
That night when I turned on the six o'clock news, a reporter was interviewing another handwriting analyst who proclaimed that he could tell from the handwriting that the note's author was in "grave danger."
"What if I'm wrong?" I thought.
The next morning, a man and his daughter walked into the police station. They had seen a photograph of the note in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The 6-year-old daughter, Kealsey, timidly stated that she had written the message to her teddy bear. Her father explained that Kealsey often played detective with her teddy. Somehow the note must have blown out the window and landed on the sidewalk.
Copyright © 2006 by Michelle Dresbold and James Kwalwasser
Excerpted from Sex, Lies, and Handwriting: A Top Expert Reveals the Secrets Hidden in Your Handwriting by Michelle Dresbold, James Kwalwasser
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.