Tiger1 wrote:
Gunslinger wrote:
Too Late, you must be off your break now.
I have the information I need, David A Hein.....any criminal record?
I do not know what his background is, but I can tell you that he has been harrassing/stalking me for several years on various boards. When I used to do a weekly cable show, he used to drive by the studio, and then go on the old Times board, and post that I was there at the studio, and what kind of car I was driving. He has also somehow obtained personal financial information about me, and posted that on several boards.
Gunslinger, he is such a wuss, he doesn't have enough of a pair to confront me in person, even though he knows who I am, and I know who and what he is. I have him on ignore on the boards I am registered at. If he can't get a rise out of me, it takes away his fun. He is one sick b@$t@rd.
You know, you may want to read this one:
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/ ... ekey=50316Origins of Stalking
There's a line between the overzealous pursuer and the stalker. "Stalking is much more about inducing fear," says Brook Zitek, DO, a forensic psychiatrist at Temple University School of Medicine in Philadelphia. "It's repeated boxes of candy, clothing, showing up at your house, putting things through your mail slot, notes on your car -- even though you've asked them to stop," she tells WebMD.
The overwhelming majority of stalkers are men -- four to one, Zitek says. Psychiatrists have developed several stalker profiles:
The rejected stalker. This person was rejected in a relationship, and they perceive it as an insult, they feel wounded, and they are seeking vindication.
The resentful stalker. These are self-righteous, self-pitying people who may threaten, but they are the least likely to act on it.
The intimacy-seeking stalker. They believe they are loved or will be loved by the victim. Often they focus on someone of higher social status. This person is mentally ill and delusional.
The incompetent. This person is socially backward. He doesn't really understand the social rules involved in dating and romance. He doesn't mean any harm.
The predator. This is about sex gratification, control, and violence. The stalker doesn't necessarily know the victim. The victim may not know she is being stalked. But a predator plans their attack, rehearses it, has lots of sexual fantasies about it.
The rejected and predatory stalkers are most likely to assault their victims, says Zitek.