offender profiling Flashcards

criminal minds profiling

1
Q

what idea is offender profiling based upon ?

A
  • based upon the idea that the characteristics of an offender can be deduced from the characteristics of the offense and info from the crime scene
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2
Q

what is offender profiling intended to do ?

A
  • the tool is intended to help investigators accurately predict and profile the characteristics of an offender
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3
Q

when does the use of offender profiling date back to ?

A

the use of this may date back as far as jack the ripper (1888)

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4
Q

What will the profiler do when offender profiling ?

A
  • study the crime scene
  • analyse the evidence
  • generate hypotheses about the characteristics of the offender (age, background, occupation)
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5
Q

What is the top-down approach described as ?

A
  • it is described as a qualitative approach to offender profiling due to looking at the overall picture and using typologies (categories)
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6
Q

what is the top-down approach based upon ?

A
  • based on police experience and case studies rather than psychological theory
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7
Q

what is the top-down approach suitable for ?

A
  • it is suitable for the more extreme / unusual crimes such as murder, rape and ritualistic crimes
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8
Q

AO3
if its suitable for only extreme crimes, why can this be a limitation ?

A
  • used for only a small percentage of crimes
  • so low levels of generalisability
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9
Q

How did offender profiling begin ?

A
  • began with the FBI
  • when the behavioural science unit began researching the family backgrounds, personalities, crimes and motives of serial killers in the 1970’s
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10
Q

What did the FBI do when starting to offender profile ?

A
  • they interviewed imprisoned serial killers
  • from the insights they gained and a thorough analysis of the crime details, combined with the intuition of experienced police, they created a classification system for various crimes
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11
Q

what were the 2 categories established by the FBI ?

A
  • organised
  • disorganised
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12
Q

features of an organised crime ?

A
  • well educated criminal
  • crime scene is cleared of forensic evidence
  • body is moved or hidden
  • targeted victim
  • intelligent criminal
  • crime is planned and controlled
  • inconsistent discipline as a child
  • older sibling
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13
Q

features of a disorganised crime

A
  • random victim
  • impulsive crime
  • body + weapon left at the crime scene
  • socially immature criminal
  • poor work history
  • lives alone and close to the crime scene
  • youngest sibling
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14
Q

FBI profiling process

A

1) data assimilation
2) crime classification
3) crime reconstruction
4) profile generation

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15
Q

data assimilation

A

data compiled from police reports, post mortems, crime scene photos

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16
Q

crime classification

A

decide whether it is organised or disorganised

17
Q

crime reconstruction

A

hypotheses about crime sequence, offender + victim behaviour

18
Q

profile generation

A

offender’s physical, demographic and behavioural characteristics are generated

19
Q

AO3
- research evidence
- does not support organised/ disorganised categories

A
  • Canter used info from 100 murders by 100 serial killers in USA to assess the presence of the categories
  • found that organised characteristics were typical of most serial killers
  • disorganised characteristics were much rarer
  • showed that categories have no clear distinction and suggests being organised is a core aspect of all serial killers
  • categories not valid
20
Q

AO3 top-down LIMITATION
- only applies to certain types of crime

A
  • issue because most common offences such as burglary and destruction of property do not lend themselves to profiling as the crime reveals too little about the offender
  • so limited approach
21
Q

AO3 top-down LIMITATION
- classification is too simplistic

A
  • behaviours that describe each of the types are not mutually exclusive
  • a variety of combinations can occur in any given murder scene
    -Grover Godwin asks how police investigators would classify a killer with high intelligence and sexual competence who commits a spontaneous murder in which victims body is left at the crime scene
  • prompted other researchers to propose more detailed typological models