Science clearly shows that childhood maltreatment, abuse, and trauma contribute to antisocial personality disorder. It's
not an innate condition.
Here's an example from one of many papers you can find on Science Direct and other academic journals:
The etiology of antisocial personality disorder: The differential roles of adverse childhood experiences and childhood psychopathology
Using prospective longitudinal data, Fergusson, Boden, and Horwood [
33] examined the association between childhood sexual abuse, childhood physical abuse, and ASPD and found that the prevalence of ASPD at ages 18–21 and 21–25 was
two to four times greater among those that had been sexually abused compared to those who had not. Similarly,
those who experienced regular physical abuse or severe physical abuse had ASPD at a prevalence that was two to seven times higher than those who were not physically abused.