Rob Kall: That's what he's been convicted of. He's now appealing that. What do you think of him?
M.E. Thomas: Right. I don't know the story, I didn't follow the story that well, what, the things that I think about when people sort of accuse these types of killers of being a sociopath, is I think. Yeah there's something about not, you know what, what is, there's sort of a joke, where a woman goes to a funeral and then she meets some guy that she likes, you know, sort of has a crush on this guy. But she loses his phone number, and so she kills her cousin, why does she kill her cousin? And the response is supposed to be, because she thought that if I met that guy at a funeral, and if I kill a cousin, good chances are I'm going to see him again. Chances are he's a relative, or some other friend, right?
So that, that sort of very objective unemotional thinking. Like your wife, you don't like your wife, and so just, the solution is to just get rid of her. I don't think that's so foreign with sociopaths. I always wonder, in this sense was it, he was angry, or it was carefully planned?
Rob Kall: My understanding is that, you know, there are, were two or three wives that had disappeared, and he was convicted of killing an earlier one. The other one, the recent one, is missing. And he's a cop.
M.E. Thomas: Oh really?
Rob Kall: Yeah.
M.E. Thomas: Yeah, I was reading some research that said that psychopaths, top ten careers for psychopaths, one of them is police officer.
Rob Kall: Oh really? So, Peterson is appealing his conviction, and it looks like the, his persona, the media exposure of him is going to be a significant part. If you were him, or if you were giving advice to his attorney, how would you advise the attorney?
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