Fires are set in patterns of three (e.g., the first on March 3rd at 3:00 PM), and the unsub performs ritualistic actions in threes, such as turning doorknobs or repeating words.
The team struggles because the perpetrator doesn't fit the standard profile of a male arsonist motivated by power or revenge. Dr. Spencer Reid eventually identifies the motive as —a form of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) involving religious or moral obsession.
The investigation leads to , a chemistry student who survived a traumatic house fire as a child. She believes she is testing her victims' purity through fire.
Fires are set in patterns of three (e.g., the first on March 3rd at 3:00 PM), and the unsub performs ritualistic actions in threes, such as turning doorknobs or repeating words.
The team struggles because the perpetrator doesn't fit the standard profile of a male arsonist motivated by power or revenge. Dr. Spencer Reid eventually identifies the motive as —a form of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) involving religious or moral obsession.
The investigation leads to , a chemistry student who survived a traumatic house fire as a child. She believes she is testing her victims' purity through fire.