Bottom Up (forensics) Flashcards
Strengths of bottom up
+ Canter and heritage - 66 sexual assault cases, satay examined using small space analysis, found common behaviours such as lack of reaction to victim - supporting investigate psychology that people are consistent in their behaviour
+ Lundrigan and Canter - 120 murder cases with serial killers in the USA, found spatial consistency in the behaviour of the offenders, more noticeable in marauders - spatial information is a key factor in identifying an offender
How is bottom up done
Uses analysis of the crime scene to generate a picture of the offender e.g characteristics, social background
- does NOT start with fixed typologies
Why is the profile data driven
Emerges as a result of an in depth and rigorous scrutiny of the crime scene
Weaknesses of bottom up
- Some significant failures - Copson surveyed 48 police forces –> advice provided by the profiler was useful in 13% of cases, but in only 3% did it lead to accurate identification of the offender.
- Geographical profiling may not be significant enough on its own –> its successes may be reliant on the quality of the data and the police provider, which isn’t always accurate as it is estimated that 75% of crimes aren’t always reported to the police.
What is the features of the bottom up approach?
1.) Investigative psychology
2.) Geographical profiling
What does investigative psychology involve?
- Working up from evidence collected at the crime scene
- Invesigative psychology = statistical analysis + psychological theory
- Aims to establish patterns
- Creation of a statistical database for comparisons
–> Matches up specific details against the database to reveal important details e.g. family background, and can also reveal if a series of offences are linked.
What does geographical profiling involve?
- Crime Mapping
- Canter circle theory
1.) The Marauders: the offender operates in close proximity to their home base.
2.) The Commuter: the offender is likely to have travelled a distance away from their residence.
What is crime mapping?
- An offenders operational base of possible future offences are revealed by the geographical location of their previous offences.
- Based on principle of spatial consistency (people commit crimes in limited geographical areas)
- Used in conjunction to psychological theory to create a hypotheses about how the offender is thinking and the MO
What is the canter circle theory?
- People operate within a limited spatial mind set that creates imagined boundaries which crimes are likely to be committed.