TESSIE, WHO HARBOURS NO EVIL THOUGHTS WHATSOEVER |
Many of us remember it. It was 1992.
The question of David Milgaard's responsibility for the rape and
murder of Gail Miller in an alley off Avenue O in Saskatoon was
reopened in the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC). Milgaard had spent 23
years in jail for that murder, but emerging new evidence seemed to
point to possible errors in his conviction.
The newly-developed ability to connect
perpetrators to their crimes through DNA evidence was finally a
clincher in proving that it was not David Milgaard but Larry Fisher
who was guilty of the brutal attack on Miller. Fisher was eventually
convicted of the crime, even though he had appeared before the SCC as
a witness only, and was sentenced to life in prison.
Fisher died in prison this week.
An abbreviated story of the dramatic
turn-around in which a witness became a suspect can be read HERE.
Under questioning by Milgaard's lawyer, Hersh Wolch, Fisher was led
to set the stage for his own conviction.
The same article on the CBC website
quotes Wolch in a later interview as saying: "My impression was
that [Fisher] was pure evil." My understanding of the comment is
that Wolch saw in Fisher only evil thought and action, uncontaminated
by any trace of goodness or kindness. Pure
in other words.
The
choice of that adjective is interesting, if odd.
It's
no accident that if you add a “d” before evil, you get “devil,”
the immortal, anti-god of religious tradition who is blamed for
urging humanity to undo what is good and replace it with hate and
violence. Anthropomorphised in mythology into a horned creature with
a lashing tail, the contradiction of his immortal nature technically
admitting to two gods in a monotheistic faith seems to have been
lost.
We're
generally past the time of diagnosing pathological mental illness as
“demon possession,” although for some strains of Christian
religion, that view of evil persists in part because scriptures
reinforce it. (eg. Gaderene swine episode; for a dark painting by
Briton Riviere of this event in Mark
5:1-13, click HERE.)
The treatment of sociopathy and psychopathy could never have
developed until that mythology had been abandoned. That Larry Fisher
suffered from psychopathy is hardly in doubt; that it was not
suspected and diagnosed before he went on his rampage of rape and
violence is the weak link in our understanding of what goes wrong in
the minds of men and women.
Evil
obviously conjures images of a leering Satan when used as a noun. As
an adjective, it has its place. Larry Fisher was not “pure evil”;
had he been raised attentively and with an eye to his developing
exploitative, cruel behaviour, Gail Miller's life might have been
saved. A number of women would not have experienced his brutal
attacks.
Some
would urge treatment of people like Fisher with exorcism, some with
drugs or other therapies. Our current government thinks the correct
treatment is severe punishment, the problem with that being that
punishment always follows
the evil act, contributes nothing to prevention.
For
Milgaard, Miller and now Fisher, all the potential options have gone
under the bridge. Sad beyond belief.
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