Forensic Flashcards
1
Q
Explain the top down approach
A
- FBI
- also known as the typography approach
- profilers match what they know about the case to pre-existing templates that have been developed by the FBI
-Offenders are organised into two categories (organised and disorganised)
they look at:
- behaviour towards the victim
- crime scene detail
- characteristics of criminal
- background of criminal
2
Q
How to construct an FBI profile as part of the top down approach
A
- Data assimilation (profiler reviews the evidence)
- crime scene classification (organised or disorganised
- crime reconstruction (hypthese of sequence of event
- profile generation (hypotheses to likely offender)
3
Q
(A03) benefits of the top down approach
A
+ evidence to support the effectiveness (Copson 1995)
^Questioned 184 police - 82% agreed that the technique is useful and 90% agreed they would use it again (can prevent a wrongful conviction)
+
4
Q
(A03) drawbacks of the top down approach
A
- Could mislead investigations (Snooker et al 2008)
^top down profilers are little more than psychics, who have a wealth of experience in reading behaviour. The process has no basis in scientific theory and could lead to a wrongful conviction - classification is too simplistic
^behaviours of the two different types of murderers are not mutually exclusive, a variety of combinations could occur
(Goodwin 2002) - questioned how police would classify a murder where the killer would had high intelligence, sexually competent but commits a spontaneous murder where the victims body is left at the crime scene
(Holmes 1989) suggested that there are four types of serial killers (visionary, missionary, hedonistic and controlling) - this challenges the top down approach
5
Q
Explain the Bottom up approach
A
- British approach (David Canter)
- generate a picture of the offender through a systematic analysis of evidence at the crime scene (data driven approach)
- Investigative psychology: applying statistical procedures alongside psychological theory
>interpersonal coherence (links with elements of the crime and how people behave in everyday life)
>Forensic awareness (certain behaviours may reveal an awareness of police techniques and past experiences)
>Smallest space analysis (statistical technique developed by David Canter) - data correlated to find most common characteristics
Geographical profiling; concerned with the ‘where’ of the crime
6
Q
A