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Signs of a Psychopath Season 10 Episode 3

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Transcript
00:00Good evening, a break today in a high profile cold case murder more than 30 years ago.
00:30In June of 1988, 21-year-old UNM student Althea Oakley was walking home from a party when she was attacked by a man with a knife near CNM, stabbed multiple times before her assailant ran off.
00:45Then in September of 1988, 13-year-old Stella Gonzalez was shot and killed.
00:52The following summer, July 16, 1989, 18-year-old UNM student Caitlin Arquette was shot to death as she was driving home.
01:15UNM police.
01:20Hi, this is hospital security.
01:22We have a gentleman outside.
01:25He is saying that he killed somebody.
01:27Okay, so Paul Apodaca, he's on probation.
01:33Probation violation, aggravated assault, police officer weapon, armed and dangerous.
01:38He is a sex offender.
01:40I would kill again.
01:49I'm dead.
01:50I'm alive.
01:51But I don't think it was wrong.
01:53The thing inside of me, it's like the appetite.
01:57Take a look, it's...
02:00Feeling...
02:02The hunger.
02:03The hunger.
02:1053-year-old Paul Apodaca showed up to the UNM police station claiming he had found God and wanted to confess to crimes he says he committed decades ago.
02:20So, the first one, you said a Caitlin or a Caitlin?
02:41Caitlin.
02:42Okay.
02:43Okay.
02:45Okay.
02:46And then, what was the second person?
02:50I think he said...
02:51I think he said...
02:52I think he'll come.
02:55Okay.
02:56Who else?
02:59There was a girl who was crossing the bridge on the central.
03:03I don't know.
03:04She said, I don't know how to stand.
03:06I don't know how to stand.
03:07I don't know how to do this.
03:09I don't know how to do this.
03:13This is not somebody who just sauntered into a police station and said, I've got to unburden myself.
03:20This is somebody who's picked up on a probation violation.
03:23He is homeless, has no money.
03:26He's disconnected from his family.
03:29And I think those were the driving forces behind Apodaca confessing.
03:33He has been in prison before.
03:35One of the things we see in individuals who are psychopaths is sometimes what we call a parasitic lifestyle, meaning that they're looking for ways to live off of other people.
03:47And his options, I think, outside of prison are very slim, if none.
03:53But it's a choice he's willing to make to not have to take care of himself anymore.
03:57What we know about Apodaca is that he has this long history of violent and sexual offenses.
04:04He raped a 13-year-old.
04:06So that early offense behavior, followed by more assaults and rapes, indicate that this is a person that has a history of predatory behavior, along with a lack of remorse for his actions.
04:17And in fact, he recently assaulted his aunt.
04:21He has a profound disregard for the well-being and rights of others.
04:24So, how many times did you stab her?
04:43Why did you do it?
04:56I had anger in my heart at this moment.
05:02Resent me.
05:04Because I've always seen an injury when I'm bad and they have over me.
05:07And I tried to be nice when I remember.
05:10I appreciate it.
05:11Where I consider the ultimate sin when I can love you.
05:17And I thought that I could do no more harm.
05:22After years and years of contemplating and researching this, I understand the whole pain that I've caused and I feel it.
05:33So, where did you shoot Caitlyn?
05:38In the head.
05:41So, we have Athea, and we have Caitlyn, and you said there was a girl crossing the bridge on Central.
05:54Central in what?
05:58Okay.
05:59He goes on this rant about how he's seen women treated badly, how he had anger in his heart.
06:18He had resentment towards women, but he's still putting on the mask.
06:23I don't think that that's the real reason why he committed these crimes.
06:27When we think of ritualistic killings, we think that someone has to do this particular behavior in this specific way in order to achieve whatever satisfaction they're looking for.
06:36We have assault histories, but then it graduates to a knife, and then it graduates to a rifle.
06:42He did this thing because he wanted to do it.
06:47Did something happen that prompted you to come in to talk today?
06:53Wait, what brought you to this point?
06:55I have no sense to be in this room, so I can't hold what I've done.
07:03I have no sense to be in this room, so I can't hold what I've done.
07:07I have no sense to be in this room, so I can't hold what I've done.
07:25I saw Althea walking south on one of these stuff.
07:31I saw that she was wearing a denim skirt, and I wanted to go and talk to her.
07:42But what happened was that I was sitting there, and when she walked up, she smiled at her.
07:49She said hi, and she smiled at her.
07:53This smile that Althea Oakley gives to Paul Badaka really triggers him.
08:19Now, he says that it's because of his hatred to women.
08:23How can you kill someone who smiles at you?
08:26But when we look at why sex offenders commit the acts that they commit,
08:30there's often a misinterpretation of behaviors being done by the victim.
08:37And I think that the smile gave Apodaka the belief that he was free to do whatever he wanted.
08:46When I thought about it, what made me do it, what made me attack her was all the hatred that I had for women.
08:58And I just released it on Althea.
09:01And I didn't think my short little knife would be able to do that much damage.
09:06I didn't think that I killed her.
09:11I used to think that as long as I had never killed anybody, that was the ultimate sin, everything else was okay.
09:18Once, once I did that, it seemed like nothing mattered anymore.
09:29And every once in a while, I don't know, when that angel would rise again, I'd go out.
09:35Just drive around with a raffle like a hunter.
09:40I think he was seeking revenge in his mind on all these women who had not been receptive to his overtures.
09:59This is somebody who has been, you know, exploiting women, raping women before.
10:05And for him, it's just the next step.
10:07He's followed the path that so many other sexual psychopaths have followed in the past,
10:11which is starting out with sex crimes and progressing to murder.
10:14How did you first make contact with her, and then where did you stab her?
10:20What kind of service were you on?
10:26She walked past me, and I came up behind her and stabbed her from behind me.
10:31And then I think I circled back because I don't think she turned around.
10:37And then I stabbed her on the side.
10:40She didn't really have time to try to defend herself.
10:49And then after you stabbed her, did you see what she did?
10:53She told me, I don't have anyone.
10:55She said, I don't have anyone.
10:57And she just started to walk up the side, the pathway.
11:03And what was your intent?
11:12The psychology of it is kind of complex.
11:18My intention was just to take her at my point to rape her.
11:24I haven't been thinking about doing anything exactly like that, no.
11:31I have raped women before, but never, never like playing an ambush or anything like that before.
11:41He says the psychology of why he did what he did is complex and that he had never actually thought about engaging in this behavior.
11:51But when we look at him, arms crossed, sitting back, he's comfortable with describing what it is that he did.
12:00He wants us to believe that it is more complex because he believes that it's more complex.
12:06But the notion that he hadn't considered doing this and that this is the first time he has ever done this without ever having fantasized about this,
12:17I think is just another lie because the psychopath refuses to ever tell the truth about anything.
12:42Let's go to Kaitlyn's case.
12:46It was late at night.
12:48I had been driving around the whole city with a rifle just looking for a target of opportunity.
12:58I was a sick man.
13:03Kaitlyn pulled up next to me.
13:05There was a red light.
13:09And I raised the rifle and I shot at her.
13:14She crossed the median, came back and hit a light pole.
13:24So I hid the rifle under the seat and I drove back.
13:28I parked in front of her and I began to go see what condition she was in.
13:36And as bright as I approached the window and looked in, I saw that her head had begun to swell.
13:45A vehicle pulled up in front of me and an officer came and asked what had happened.
13:54I told him that I had seen the car there and that I was going to investigate.
14:10And we both looked in, I took my license plate on the car, took my name and number, and then I drove away.
14:22When Apodaca's talking about the murder of Kaitlyn Arquette, he's describing himself going back to see his own handiwork.
14:31By doing that, that just gives him more of a sense of power and control.
14:36Like he's seeing the actual damage he's done to somebody after the fact.
14:40And I think that really highlights his ability as a psychopath to camouflage himself and sort of put on this mask of an innocent person and be somebody he's not.
14:50And that in turn could also be feeding his ego.
14:52Do you remember what phone number you gave to the officer at the time?
15:01Did you give him the correct house phone number to the best of your palate?
15:04Yes.
15:05I saw that some people have turned themselves in.
15:09And then I remember seeing that three people have been confessed to the crime.
15:17The idea that someone would give false confession is about notoriety.
15:31He's trying to escape notoriety.
15:33He's a psychopath that doesn't want his name in the paper.
15:36I think in the moment, he's just doing whatever feels right.
15:40So he gives the number thinking that eventually they're going to come get me.
15:44And when they never do, well, I guess I got away with it.
15:47You had mentioned something about a girl that you had shot on the bridge.
16:14You want to tell me about it?
16:17Okay.
16:18There's a central street bridge that crosses the street to Tingley.
16:24There's a bike path underneath the bridge.
16:27There were two girls walking eastbound on the bridge.
16:33And I had seen them walking.
16:36I must have been doing the same thing I had done before.
16:41And I parked.
16:45And I shot at them.
16:48And one of them fell to the ground.
16:52And the other one screamed.
16:54And I threw the right back in the trunk and drove away.
16:58In combination to the other cases that we talked about already, was this after or before?
17:01It was that the same thing.
17:07Yes.
17:08And he actually heard in the meeting.
17:10You tell me I said the pain was broken.
17:11It was broken.
17:12I was broken.
17:13And I was broken.
17:14And I was broken.
17:17And I was broken.
17:19And I couldn't explain it.
17:21And I took my car to me.
17:23to the other cases that we talked about already was this after or before this was after alphia
17:38apodaca's second murder isn't as great of a story for him to tell you know he shot her from a
17:44distance he didn't really have the details in mind so he can't really relive that experience
17:50which when a psychopath is confessing to a murder to police part of the excitement there is just them
17:57reliving the event in their mind as they're going through it with detectives and he can't do that
18:01with stella it's hard it's hard to just accept everything it's not so much about relieving
18:17myself of that as it is to bring closure to the people at home so last year i was in jail for a
18:25year for assaulting my auntie i was living with my grandma and my auntie got all my nerves and i was
18:32i was on drugs and i had a booster
18:38i don't blame the drugs but i they do have a lowering effect on your threshold for
18:44for cognitive control and all that but i spent the last year in jail and just
18:52crying and crying over all the things i've done
18:54i think this is the element of positive impression management that we often see with psychopathy
19:17he wants to come across as someone who's you know shame and guilt for everything that they did right
19:22it's finally come to fruition and they're here for uh for penance i don't think so but if this really
19:30was about accepting responsibility for what you did you wouldn't have waited until after you abused your
19:41auntie to get to that point from strangers to family members it's not a far leap for the psychopath
19:51because they only see the relationship in which they can get something because of the parasitic
19:56lifestyle that the psychopath leads when anyone in this case women somehow challenge apodaca
20:04he'll do what he has to do to maintain his masculinity
20:17you

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