Stanley Howard

"Is it worse than you thought?"

Doctor Stanley Howard was a prolific psychiatrist-turned-serial killer who appeared in Season Three of Criminal Minds.

Background
Born in Portland, Oregon and raised by an abusive mother, Stan developed a severe fear of the dark in his childhood; his fear having presumably originated from his mother locking him in the closet as a means of punishing him. Stan grew up to be a psychiatrist, telling his wife Jane (who he adopted a daughter named Jessica with) that his mother was the inspiration for him taking up the profession, yet never elaborating on what he meant by that.

Stan's mother died in 2006 and he shut down his practice shortly after her death, not telling his family this and covering his tracks by continually renewing the lease on the building he once operated out of, even after the structure was demolished. Setting up an office in a property his wife's family owned, Stan made the empty building appear as if it was in use and began his killing spree, murdering fifteen people over several months by using their worst fears against them.

Scared to Death
Killing a claustrophobic woman named Jenny Whitman by sealing her in a box until she suffocated, Stan dumped her body in the same backwoods trail he put the rest of his victims. The mass grave was discovered by the authorities a short while later. After killing an aquaphobic patient by letting him drown in a lake, Stan returns to his office and hears a news broadcast about the discovery of his dump site. The same broadcast also warns potential victims (those new to town without friends and no strong ties to family) to be cautious.

Going home, Stan is nagged at by his wife for his lateness and throws a tantrum, briefly viewing Jane as his abusive mother. Going to see Jessica after the ordeal with his wife, Stan tucks her in and, against her wishes, turns out the lights, noticing the fear that flashes across his daughter's face when he does so.

The next day, Stan meets another patient, Missy Cassell, who has a fear of being buried alive. Stating that he can cure her anxiety in just one session, Stan tells Missy to come back in a few hours. Taking a shovel and several bags of dirt down to the basement of the building, Stan, when Missy returns, drugs her with some spiked tea, leads her downstairs, and pushes her into a pit, the fall knocking her out. Preparing to fill the hole, Stan suffers a flashback to his traumatic childhood and falls to the floor, muttering to himself, but is brought back to his senses moments later when Missy regains consciousness and starts begging him to let her go.

Completely covering Missy with dirt, Stan hears sirens approaching and calmly walks outside, where he is spotted by Hotch and Morgan. Chased to the top of the building, Stan stands on the ledge. Trying to talk Stan down, Hotch tells him that he will not be able to overcome his own fear by killing others and himself; ignoring Hotch's words, Stan tells him that most people join law enforcement to help others and says "I think your greatest fear is that you can't save everyone" before committing suicide by allowing himself to fall off the roof.

Profile
Stan's profile stated that he was a sadist who craved control, meaning he was likely abused in his childhood and, due to there being no sexual component to the murders, he may be impotent, possibly adopting a child to keep up appearances if he was married. As the victims had no defensive marks on them, it was apparent they willingly put themselves in the situations that killed them, meaning the unsub was probably a figure of authority. While the unsub would likely be a legitimate psychiatrist, his use of the outdated word "phobia" meant he probably received his training sometime in the 1980s. If caught, it was unlikely he would go quietly and would probably commit suicide rather than being arrested.

The profile was mostly correct, except Stan did not appear to be a sadist: he showed no emotion at all as he watched his victims die. He didn't seem to crave control either; his motivation for the killings appeared to be a delusion that killing people using their fears would somehow help him get over his own fears.

Modus Operandi
Stan set up an office in one of the empty buildings his wife's family owned and lured victims by creating a fake company which promised one hundred dollars for participating in a program that claimed to be able to cure phobias. Stan placed flyers advertising the program in public places and had those who called fill out a questionnaire which asked things like if they were close to their family and made friends easily; those who answered no were picked due to it likely taking longer for someone to notice they were missing. When his patients felt they were ready to face their fears, Stan would let them die in the scenario he had set up to test them, asking "Is it worse than you thought?" as they panicked and struggled to escape. After his victims died, Stan would write down their name, how they died, and how long it took them to die in his notebook, finishing by rating their anxiety level on a scale of one to ten (all were presumably ten). Stan disposed of the bodies in the Wildwood Trail deep in the woods and also sent fake going away messages to the families of his victims.

Known Victims

 * Twelve unnamed patients killed prior to Scared to Death
 * Unnamed man
 * Unnamed woman
 * Rick Holland
 * Jenny Whitman
 * Patrick Walker
 * Missy Cassell

Appearances

 * Season Three
 * "Scared to Death"