|
Saturday, October 31, 2009 - 4:21 PM
Browne was the son of a sheriff's deputy and brother to a
former state trooper. His was a family that cared about public safety
and the law. However, Browne developed differently. He was the youngest
of nine children in Coushatta, La., dropping out of high school to go
into the Army. In 1976, he was dishonorably discharged for using drugs.
If he's telling the truth about one of his murders, he used a position
as handyman at an apartment complex owned by his brother to kill at
least one of the tenants. He had no shame or sense of family loyalty.  Robert Charles Browne
The fourth of his five ex-wives, Rita Morgan, gave an interview to The Charlotte Observer,
providing details about the kind of man Browne is. For one thing, he
often flew into rages and made frightening threats. He would tell her
how easy it would be to kill her with no one the wiser. Yet when he had
wooed her before they were married, he'd been compassionate, even
"doting." Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire This behavior is called compartmentalization, something
psychopaths are good at. They morph into whatever they need to be to
gain their ends, and once they have it, they let their true
personalities show. "Before, he held the car door open for her," wrote
one reporter about Rita, "after, he smashed her to the floor for a
misplaced set of keys." Most of his marriages lasted
three years or less, and several wives alleged abuse. Rita said she'd
had "no inkling" of what Browne might be like. They met when he was on
leave from the service and she was just a teenager. They took up a
brief correspondence, and when they encountered each other a few years
later, she had married and divorced another man. He began to show up
where she worked as a waitress and finally they went out. He came with
flowers. They got married, and, within a week, Browne had become a
bully. He was already yelling at her that he could kill her. She was
stunned. But then he apologized and assured her this behavior would not
be repeated. He lied. Almost anything could set him off, and he seemed
to go into a trance before he started beating her. He
believed he could treat his wife like property. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire He once put a gun to
her head and pulled the trigger, but the gun was unloaded. He also
choked her once so badly she had to go to the hospital. But once he
actually asked her to shoot him, as if he knew he was bad and he wanted
someone to kill him. He said he knew he had a problem, but when she got
him to a clinic, the psychiatrist was so confrontational it ended any
hope she had of intervention. Browne was furious. Another
woman with whom Browne was involved said he enjoyed thinking of himself
as a master, with her the slave, and that he watched a lot of
pornography. His final wife filed for divorce and went into therapy for
victimization issues. She was reportedly afraid of him.
|