What is the personality type of Krystian Bala? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Krystian Bala from Criminals and what is the personality traits.
Krystian Bala personality type is INFJ, an Introverted Intuitive Feeling Judging type. This personality type is the rarest, with only 25% of the population belonging to it.
ENTP personality type. Image Credit: Shutterstock
ENTP personality type tends to focus on understanding the world around them and how they can improve it or change it. They are driven by curiosity and driven to learn, both from a personal and a professional perspective. They make great innovators and great managers, but can struggle to communicate their ideas and vision because of a difficulty with coming up with clear and concise ideas. ENTPs make great leaders because they are driven by a vision and can inspire others to follow them because of their drive and vision. ENTPs make great leaders because they are driven by a vision and can inspire others to follow them because of their drive and vision. ENTPs make great innovators because of their ability to come up with new solutions to problems they face, but can struggle to communicate their ideas and vision to others because of a difficulty with coming up with clear and concise ideas.
Krystian Bala (born 1973) is a Polish writer, photographer, and a convicted murderer. In 2007, Bala was sentenced to jail for 25 years for planning and committing the murder of Dariusz Janiszewski, a Polish small business owner, in Wrocław in 2000. Janiszewski's dead body was discovered floating in a lake. For three years the Wrocław police had failed to solve the murder, until a detective found some physical clues linking the murder to Bala. More sensationally, clues to the killing were found in Bala's first novel Amok (2003), published three years after Janiszewski's death. It was as if Bala had written a "fictional" version of the real-life killing into his novel, using information only the murderer could have known. The case drew widespread media coverage in Poland and resulted in increased sales of the novel as readers looked for clues in the novel to the real-life events of Janiszewski's death.