Society's Child
A criminal complaint was filed against Ronald Avers, 68, who appeared in court Thursday on seven counts of tampering with meat products, each punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Avery was ordered jailed pending a scheduled detention hearing Monday.
The court complaint provided testimony from customers of a Shop 'n Save store in the suburbs of St. Louis, with one saying he bit into one of the needles that was inserted into a piece of boneless chuck roast.
SuperValu Inc., the corporate parent of the Shop 'n Save franchise, said that none of the cases resulted in serious injury, and that the alleged tampering was confined to only the meat department of one chain.
"With every customer that brought it to our attention, none reported needing medical attention as a result of the tampering," AP quoted Jeff Swanson, a SuperValu spokesman, as saying. "We have no reason to believe any tampering occurred outside of that one store."
In an affidavit filed with the criminal complaint, FBI Special Agent Daniel Cook wrote that Shop 'n Save reported the tampering on July 9. However, the first case occurred in May of last year when a customer first discovered a needle in a package of ground beef. About four months later, according to Cook's complaint, a store worker found a needle protruding from a package of pork chops.
Customers later were surprised to find needles in everything from ground beef to hamburger patties.
Shop 'n Save's security officials, using surveillance camera footage, spotted the suspect manipulating meat products without purchasing them. When the man was seen entering the store Tuesday, security notified the FBI.
The suspect was approached by investigators outside the store and allowed them to search his vehicles, where an open package of sewing needles was found. Originally saying the needles were for mending his pants, Avery finally acknowledged the true purpose of the needles.
"'Every now and then I would stick one in a hamburger,'" Cook quoted Avers as saying. "'Mostly hamburger, a couple of times I did it with a roast, maybe a pork chop every now and then.'"
Avers insisted the suspect had no clear motive for the tampering.
"Avers said during the interview two times he inserted sewing needles into packaged meat products, 'just for the hell of it.'" the FBI agent wrote, adding that Avers continued: "It was stupidity. I didn't want to hurt nobody."
Court records show that Avers has a history of traffic offenses but no previous criminal history.
Shop 'n Save said any customer who bought fresh meat from the store before July 12 is entitled to a full refund.
Comment: From THE PSYCHOPATH - The Mask of Sanity: Special Research Project of the Quantum Future School
Harrington goes so far as to say that the psychopath is the new man being produced by the evolutionary pressures of modern life. Other researchers criticize this view, pointing out the real disabilities that the clinical psychopath also suffers.Also watch the following video to learn more on the topic of psychopathy
The study of "ambulatory" psychopaths - what we call "The Garden Variety Psychopath" - has, however, hardly begun. Very little is known about subcriminal psychopathy. However, some researchers have begun to seriously consider the idea that it is important to study psychopathy not as an artificial clinical category but as a general personality trait in the community at large. In other words, psychopathy is being recognized as a more or less a different type of human.
One very interesting aspect of the psychopath is his "hidden life" that is sometimes not too well hidden. It seems that the psychopath has a regular need to take a "vacation into filth and degradation" the same way normal people may take a vacation to a resort where they enjoy beautiful surroundings and culture. To get a full feeling for this strange "need" of the psychopath - a need that seems to be evidence that "acting human" is very stressful to the psychopath - read more of The Mask of Sanity, chapters 25 and 26.
Also, read Cleckley's speculations on what was "really wrong" with these people. He comes very close to suggesting that they are human in every respect - but that they lack a soul. This lack of "soul quality" makes them very efficient "machines." They can be brilliant, write scholarly works, imitate the wordsof emotion, but over time, it becomes clear that their words do not match their actions. They are the type of person who can claim that they are devastated by grief who then attend a party "to forget." The problem is: they really DO forget.






Monkey do. How many others, just reading the story, will now pick up where he left off?