Is Russell Williams still grasping for control?
Colonel tried suicide and has stopped eating. Forensic experts attempt to explain why
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Many years ago, a young Russell Williams found himself locked in his dorm room at Upper Canada College, the victim of a prank by younger students who had used pennies to jam the door.
Williams, who lived on an upper floor, could have simply opened his window and called for help. Instead, he used sheets to make a rope, anchored it to an old radiator and scaled down through the open window.
He escaped – on his terms.
The story, recalled recently by a former UCC student who asked not to be named, may shed light on Williams' recent suicide attempt, and his current hunger strike.
The former commander of CFB Trenton is a man accustomed to being in control of many things. Now in jail accused of serial murders and sexual assaults, he has lost control of almost everything.
As he sits in Quinte Detention Centre in Napanee, down the highway from his old base, he seems to be trying to control what little he has left, suggests Stephen Raffle, a California forensic psychiatrist.
"I think the major thing is loss of control and trying to remain in control of an out-of-control situation," says Raffle, who has interviewed serial killers and gives expert testimony in criminal cases.
If Williams were to kill himself, a public airing of the alleged crimes would be greatly diminished. There would be no trial and no plea option, which would eliminate the need for an agreed statement of facts that would become public.
Williams, who has made two video court appearances since he was charged in February, carefully executed a suicide plan over Easter weekend, according to a story in the Kingston Whig-Standard.
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