Offender profilin Flashcards

1
Q

What is offender profiling?

A

A behavioural and analytical tool that is intended to help investigators accurately predict and profile the characteristics of unknown criminals.

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2
Q

What is the aim of offender profiling?

A

it is an investigative tool used by the police when solving crimes. The aim is to narrow the field of enquiry and the list of likely suspects

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3
Q

What is the general process of offender profiling?

A
  • Scrutiny of the crime scene
  • Analysis of the evidence – including witness reports
  • in order to generate a hypothesis about the possible characteristics of the offender such as age, background, occupation etc…
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4
Q

What are the 2 types of offender profiling?

A
  • The top down approach (American approach) including organised and disorganised type of offender
  • Bottum up approach (British approach) including investigative psychology and geographical profiling
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5
Q

Who is the top down approach used by?

A

American - Used by FBI
Developed in the US in 1970s

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6
Q

Explain top down approach

A

Profilers start with a pre-established typology and work down in order to assign offenders to one of two categories based on witness accounts and evidence from the crime scene. It is possible to categorise murderers as ‘disorganised’ or ‘organised’ killers.

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7
Q

What do organised and disorganised offenders mean?

A

This is based on the idea that serious offenders have certain signature ‘ways of working’ and these generally correlate with a particular set of social and psychological characteristics that relate to the individual.

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8
Q

What is an organised offender?

A
  1. Shows evidence of having planned the crime in advance
  2. The victim is deliberately targeted and will often reflect that the killer or rapist has a type.
  3. High degree of control
  4. Little evidence left at the crime scene
  5. Above average intelligence
  6. Skilled, professional, social and sexually competent
  7. May be married and have children
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9
Q

What is a disorganised offender?

A
  1. Show little evidence of planning – suggesting that the offence may have been a spontaneous, spur of the moment
  2. Tends to reflect the impulsive nature of the attack – body left at the crime scene and appears to have been very little control
  3. They tend to have lower that average IQ, in unskilled work or unemployed
  4. History of sexual dysfunction and failed relationships
  5. Tend to live alone and often relatively close to where the offence took place
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10
Q

What are the 4 main stages of constructing an FBI profile?

A

Data assimilation
Crime scene classification
Crime reconstruction
Profile generation

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11
Q

What is Data assimilation?

A

Data compiled from police reports, post mortems, crime scene photos etc.

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12
Q

What is Crime scene classification?

A

Profilers decide whether the crime scene is organised or disorganised

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13
Q

What is Crime reconstruction?

A

Hypotheses about crime sequence, offender & victim behaviour etc

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14
Q

What is Profile generation?

A

Offender’s physical, demographic and behavioural characteristics

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15
Q

What is the aim of the bottom up approach?

A

To generate a picture of the offender, including their likely characteristics, routine behaviour and social background. This is through systematic analysis of evidence at the crime scene
The profile is data driven and emerges as the investigator engages in deeper and more rigorous scrutiny of the details of the offence.

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16
Q

Explain the bottom up approach

A

Profilers work up from evidence collected from the crime scene to develop hypotheses about the likely characteristics, motivation and social background of the offender.

17
Q

What is included in bottom up approach?

A

Investigative profiling + geographical profiling

18
Q

What is the difference between top-down and bottom-up

A

Unlike the US top down, the British bottom up model doesn’t begin with fixed typologies. Instead, the profile is ‘data driven’ and emerges as the investigator emerges in deeper and more rigorous scrutiny of the details of the offence. Bottom-up is also much more grounded in psychological theory than top-down approach.

19
Q

What is investigative profiling?

A

A form of bottom-up profiling that matches details from the crime scence with statistical analysis of typical offender behaviour patterns based on psychological theory.
- Patterns of behaviour that occur across crime scenes are used to develop a statistical database, which acts as a baseline for comparison (including Interpersonal Coherence, forensic awareness, significance of time and place)

20
Q

Aim of investigative profiling

A
  • To establish patterns of behaviour that are likely to occur to co-exist among crime scenes.
  • To do this, they develop a statistical database which then acts as a baseline for comparison.
  • Specific details of an offence or related offence can then be matched against this database to reveal important characteristics about the offender.
21
Q

What is interpersonal coherence?

A

That the way an offender behaves at the scene, including how they interact with the victim, may reflect their behaviour in more everyday situations. E.g. some rapists want to maintain maximum control whereas other are more apologetic – this could reflect how they are in everyday life.

22
Q

What is forensic awareness?

A

This is when offenders have been subject to police investigation before and their behaviour may denote how mindful they are at ‘covering their tracks’

23
Q

Significance of time and place

A

This is a key variable as it may indicate where the offender is living

24
Q

What is geographical profiling?

A

A form of bottom up profiling based on the principle of spatial consistency - that an offenders operational base and possible future offences are revealed by the geographical location of their previous crimes. Inferences are made about the likely home/base of an offender known as crime-mapping.

25
Q

Importance of geographical profiling

A

Understanding the spatial pattern of their behaviour provides investigators with a ‘centre of gravity’ which is likely to include the offender’s base (often in the middle)
This helps to make educated guesses about where the offender is likely to strike next – jeopardy surface

26
Q

What does Canter’s circle theory do?

A

proposed two models of offender behaviour
Marauder + Commuter

27
Q

Marauder

A

operates close to their home base

28
Q

Commuter

A

travelled a distance away from home

29
Q

What does the pattern of offending do?

A

The pattern of offending is likely to form a circle around their usual residence – becomes more and more obvious the more offences there are.
This helps to decipher whether it is opportunistic or planned as well as mode of transport, employment, status, age etc.