Desperately
Seeking DNA
By
Charlotte Laws
Maybe
the recent Connecticut home invasion didn’t mesmerize us for months like the
cable news soap operas I affectionately call “The Guiding Light of Anna Nicole
Smith” and “As the World Turns around Natalee Holloway,” but it still got
entangled in the media’s “news flash” net and held our collective
attention for a full 48 hours. In the end, two men were arrested and charged
with robbing, raping, and killing a suburban family as well as torching their
home.
I
was not overly surprised by the villainous events of that day. A 2005 U.S.
Department of Justice report reveals there is one rape for every 1,000 Americans
per year and six murders for every 100,000.
I
was also not shocked when the story became the centerpiece on the marketplace of
ideas dinner table that night. A review conducted by the Project for Excellence
found that media outlets tend to replay the same select news pieces. This gives
the stories a life of their own.
What
perked my ears about the home invasion crime was the media’s obsession with a
particular, seemingly out-of-place detail: one of the alleged perpetrators,
Joshua Komisarjevsky, had been adopted. One newspaper went so far as to title
its story, “Alleged Connecticut Killer Adopted as Baby.”
Why
not title the story “Alleged Connecticut Killer Ate Lima Beans for Lunch?”
Is it because lima beans rarely cause an average Joe to explode into a lawless
rampage? Can “defective” genes be a precursor to crime?
Clearly,
the adoptive family, the press, or both, accepted the premise that biological
factors can trigger violence. It’s possible the family, hoping to distance
themselves from the heinous act and convey that they have “good DNA,”
pitched the “he’s not related to us” angle to reporters. It’s equally
possible that members of the press decided this detail was somehow meaningful.
Whatever the case, the idea was embedded in multiple articles, although there
was no outward mention of a possible link between hereditary factors and
criminal behavior.
Newspaper
pieces and Internet blogs revealed how Komisarjevsky’s family struggled for
years to straighten out the wayward boy, who became a burglar at the age of 14.
Attempts to make him feel like part of the family were futile.
This
reminded me of a disturbingly similar story from a 1999 60 Minutes
segment, which described the case of Jeff Landrigan, a young man who was adopted
at birth by a law-abiding family, but who now sits on death row for murder.
Landrigan’s adoptive sister speculated that her brother had bad genes, adding,
“I personally think that the day by brother was born, his fate was probably
sealed…”
While
on death row, Landrigan found out his birthfather was imprisoned on death row in
another state and that his family tree was peppered with felons. He told 60
Minutes he believed crime was passed down in his family “like cancer or
heart disease.”
A
body of evidence supports Landrigan’s theory, although environmental
influences are likewise powerful and should not be discounted. In Change Your
Brain /Change Your Life, psychiatrist Daniel Amen states that the cingulate
gyrus, curving through the center of the brain is hyperactive in murderers.
Other researchers have determined that violent males have low levels of
serotonin, a condition that has a high rate of heritability. The National
Institute of Health conducted a study on the serotonin levels of prison inmates
and determined with an 84 percent accuracy which ones would return to crime upon
their release.
Dr.
Sarnoff A. Mednick’s study of 14,427 adopted children, as discussed in the New
York Times, reveals how a propensity to chronic criminal behavior may be
passed through the genes. Although Mednick does not believe criminal behavior is
directly passed down, he holds that certain biological factors that might be
associated with crime can be inherited. He cites a biological predisposition
towards substance abuse as an example.
What
does this theory mean for the person looking to adopt? And what are the chances
a newly acquired child will have gene-related difficulties? Although there do
not seem to be any studies on this topic, it is possible there are a greater
percentage of adoptees today with problematic tendencies. In the more
puritanical past, a woman was more likely to give up her child simply to avoid
stigma and social ostracism. She may have become pregnant while unmarried or
involved in an affair, but beyond that was law-abiding and well adjusted. A
woman who puts a child up for adoption today is arguably more likely to do so
for pressing reasons, i.e. due to problems with illegal substances, imprisonment
or family abuse, factors that could be hereditable. In addition, celebrities,
such as Madonna and Angelina Jolie, make it fashionable and more common to adopt
infants from foreign lands whose biological predispositions are unscreened and
unknown.
On
the other hand, it is possible there are a smaller number of adoptees today with
so-called genetic flaws. Abortion is now an option for “troubled” women. In Freakonomics,
Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner say crime has declined over the past twenty
years because “the pool of potential criminals (has) dramatically shrunk,” a
fact they attribute to Roe vs. Wade. Although these authors are not arguing for
biological connections to crime, they say women in adverse family environments
are more likely to have children who grow up to be criminals, and these are
typically the women who get the abortions.
In
addition, adoptions have become more open and cooperative. According to the LA
Times, adoptive and natural parents meet at least once in 90% of all infant
adoptions, and 25% of these adoptions are completely open. This means an
increasing number of birth parents and adoptive parents come together in some
way, review each other’s physical and personal history and stay in contact.
Genetic secrets are less likely to be locked away in bureaucratic clinics;
problems can be confronted and resolved to some degree through positive
environmental reinforcement.
Most
scientists and psychologists will tell you the nature vs. nurture debate is
complex and by no means resolved. Landrigan promoted the “my genes made me do
it” argument in several court appeals. In the end, he lost. The US Supreme
Court made the final ruling against him three months ago, and he is likely to be
executed soon.
Komisarjevsky’s
case is next and inquiring minds want to know: Will he desperately seek his DNA,
or do what most defendants do and blame it on his “nurture” resume?
Unfortunately,
the “lima beans defense” rarely works.