Forensic Psychology

Circle Of Insight Productions

Dr. Carlos is an adjunct Professor in Forensic Psychology and Criminal psychopathology. He discusses concepts in the world of forensic psychology. He discusses legal issues pertaining to forensic psychology, psychology disorders, the criminal justice system and more

  1. 22 hrs ago

    Narco-Terrorism and the Criminal Mind: What the 22nd MEU's Caribbean Campaign Reveals About Cartel Psychology, Organizational Violence, and

    The transnational narco-terrorist networks that the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit spent ten months hunting across the Caribbean under Operation Southern Spear are not simply criminal organizations that happen to carry weapons, they are hierarchically sophisticated, psychologically coercive institutions that have evolved deliberate organizational cultures built around controlled violence, paranoid loyalty enforcement, and the systematic psychological conditioning of members at every level to normalize lethality as a routine instrument of business and territorial control. This episode applies a forensic psychology lens to what the scale and military character of the 22nd MEU's counter-narcotics deployment tells us about how far cartel organizations have traveled from street-level drug trafficking toward something that more closely resembles a paramilitary state, examining the leadership psychology, coercive control structures, and collective identity mechanisms that allow these networks to absorb law enforcement and military pressure, reconstitute themselves, and continue operating across international boundaries with a level of organizational resilience that conventional criminal justice frameworks were never designed to confront. Drawing on the operational realities exposed by Southern Spear, this episode asks what forensic psychology, organizational behavior science, and the emerging literature on narco-terrorism can tell us about why these organizations are so difficult to permanently dismantle and what it would actually take to break the psychological and social infrastructure that keeps them alive. IAB Tags: Health/Medical/Mental Health, Crime/True Crime, Military/Defense, Law/Government/Legal, Society/Issues, Education, News/Politics Let me know if you want a narco or covert operations version added to complete the full set.   Sonnet 4.6 Low   

    5 min
  2. 24 June

    The Psychology of Sacred Betrayal: What Father Richard Storey's Alleged $160,000 Embezzlement Reveals About Moral Disengagement, Entitlement

    Father Richard Storey held one of the most psychologically powerful positions a person can occupy in a community — a trusted religious authority with unrestricted access to congregational finances, moral legitimacy, and the deeply human tendency of parishioners to extend unconditional deference to the cloth — and prosecutors allege he used every dimension of that position to systematically divert nearly $160,000 in church funds toward luxury cruises, international travel, casino withdrawals, and personal indulgences while his congregation continued to give in good faith. This episode applies a forensic psychology lens to the case, examining the cognitive and psychodynamic mechanisms behind white-collar religious fraud including moral disengagement, narcissistic entitlement, the compartmentalization of a public identity built on virtue alongside a private life built on exploitation, and how institutional trust structures in religious organizations create precisely the oversight gaps that predatory personalities are drawn to and depend on. The Storey case is not just a financial crime story, it is a case study in how authority, moral elevation, and systemic accountability failures combine to create conditions where betrayal can flourish undetected for years inside the very institutions people turn to for safety and meaning. IAB Tags: Health/Medical/Mental Health, Crime/True Crime, Law/Government/Legal, Religion/Spirituality, Society/Issues, Personal Finance/Financial Crime, Education Let me know if you want a true crime or crime watch version added to go alongside this one.

    4 min
3.6
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Dr. Carlos is an adjunct Professor in Forensic Psychology and Criminal psychopathology. He discusses concepts in the world of forensic psychology. He discusses legal issues pertaining to forensic psychology, psychology disorders, the criminal justice system and more

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