"I never give perpetrators nicknames. People who commit murder are murderers, not celebrities. But that's my point-of-view." Megs Carleton is a consulting inspector and very good at her job. She brooks no nonsense with those who break the law. She sees her job as taking lawbreakers off the street. She was once asked about profiling and she replied: "That's not my job. Personally I don't spend a lot of time profiling. I actually don't care if they had a rough home life. To me the 'nature or nurture' debate belongs to ...
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"I never give perpetrators nicknames. People who commit murder are murderers, not celebrities. But that's my point-of-view." Megs Carleton is a consulting inspector and very good at her job. She brooks no nonsense with those who break the law. She sees her job as taking lawbreakers off the street. She was once asked about profiling and she replied: "That's not my job. Personally I don't spend a lot of time profiling. I actually don't care if they had a rough home life. To me the 'nature or nurture' debate belongs to philosophers." But in THE BURNT TATTOO MURDERS Inspector Caroleton just may need to rethink her position on profiling. She joins Mike James, a chief inspector with the San Francisco Police Department's Major Crimes division on a case involving five victims, dismemberment, ancient tattoo rituals and the overall specter of the wolf. For this perpetrator is one who will test her basic assumptions about the nature of crime.
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