Name Micki Pistorius | Role Author | |
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Books Catch Me a Killer: Serial Mu, Fatal females, Profiling Serial Killers, Strangers on the Street, Profiling Serial Killers an |
Serial killer profiler dr micki pistorius in tortured souls film
Micki Pistorius (born 19 March 1961 in Pretoria) is a South African forensic or investigative psychologist and author. She was the first woman in her profession, and the first profiler in South Africa. She claims to have "cryptesthesia", an extra-sensory perception for killers. She has empathy for serial killers, whom she notes are "not monsters; they are human beings with tortured souls. I will never condone what they do, but I can understand them."
Contents
- Serial killer profiler dr micki pistorius in tortured souls film
- Leading Opinion Dr Micki Pistorius
- Early and personal life
- Career
- Books by Micki Pistorius
- Books about Micki Pistorius
- References

Leading Opinion - Dr. Micki Pistorius
Early and personal life
Pistorius grew up in Pretoria with several brothers and sisters. She worked as a journalist for eight years, before deciding to study psychology at the University of Pretoria, where she received a Masters in the subject, and also became a lecturer with a reputation for eccentricity. While doing her doctoral thesis on serial killers—the first in South Africa—she developed her theory linking Freudian psychosexual development with serial killing. She was married for eight years, but divorced as a result of work pressures after she became a profiler. She is a Catholic.
Career
Pistorius joined the South African Police Service (SAPS) in 1994, where she founded and headed the Investigative Psych Unit as Chief Investigative Psychologist, a rank equivalent to colonel; she also founded the Serious and Violent Crimes Component. By 1997, she had trained over 100 detectives to investigate serial criminals, and two successors, including Elmarie Myburgh.
She was involved in more than thirty serial killer cases while at SAPS. Among the people whose cases she worked on are Norman Simons, Moses Sithole, David Selepe, Stewart Wilken, Sipho Thwala, Velaphi Nadlangamandla, Cedric Maake, and David Mmbengwa.
She developed post-traumatic stress disorder and consequently retired in 2000 to join a private investigation company. Gerrard Labuschagne took over from her. After quitting, she wrote Catch me a killer in order to "purify" herself of her experiences while profiling. She still consults for South African government agencies, and appears in court cases as a clinical psychologist.
Pistorius is recognised as one of the world's foremost psychological profilers, by people such as FBI profiler Robert Ressler.
She participated in the training of nearly two hundred detectives in the investigation of serial homicides.