offender profiling Flashcards
criminal minds profiling
what idea is offender profiling based upon ?
- 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
what is offender profiling intended to do ?
- the tool is intended to help investigators accurately predict and profile the characteristics of an offender
when does the use of offender profiling date back to ?
the use of this may date back as far as jack the ripper (1888)
What will the profiler do when offender profiling ?
- study the crime scene
- analyse the evidence
- generate hypotheses about the characteristics of the offender (age, background, occupation)
What is the top-down approach described as ?
- it is described as a qualitative approach to offender profiling due to looking at the overall picture and using typologies (categories)
what is the top-down approach based upon ?
- based on police experience and case studies rather than psychological theory
what is the top-down approach suitable for ?
- it is suitable for the more extreme / unusual crimes such as murder, rape and ritualistic crimes
AO3
if its suitable for only extreme crimes, why can this be a limitation ?
- used for only a small percentage of crimes
- so low levels of generalisability
How did offender profiling begin ?
- 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
What did the FBI do when starting to offender profile ?
- 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
what were the 2 categories established by the FBI ?
- organised
- disorganised
features of an organised crime ?
- 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
features of a disorganised crime
- 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
FBI profiling process
1) data assimilation
2) crime classification
3) crime reconstruction
4) profile generation
data assimilation
data compiled from police reports, post mortems, crime scene photos