“…Psychopathy seems necessary, though not sufficient, for explaining the causal mechanisms associated with chronic, serious, and violent (CSV) offending trajectories. The articles in this special issue illustrate both strengths and weaknesses concerning psychopathy and (a) its integration into existing criminological theories (DeLisi & Vaughn, 2015;Fox, Jennings, & Farrington, 2015) and neuropsychological models of offending (Umbach, Berryessa, & Raine, 2015), (b) its use as a risk factor for the development of offending over time Walters, 2015), and (c) its use as a risk factor for specific types of offenders, including female offenders (Forouzan & Nicholls, 2015), institutional offenders (Shaffer, McCuish, Corrado, Behnken, & DeLisi, 2015), sexual offenders (Cale, Lussier, McCuish, & Corrado, 2015), and violent offenders . Given the research in this special issue and elsewhere (e.g., DeLisi, 2009;DeLisi & Piquero, 2011;Vaughn, Howard, & DeLisi, 2008), we believe that the construct is necessary, though not sufficient, for identifying causal mechanisms underlying CSV offending trajectories.…”