PY4 - Offender Profiling Flashcards
What type of crimes can offender profiling help to prevent?
Serial killing, serial rape and serial arson
Rather than solving crimes, what does a profile help law enforcement do?
Can help with the detection of suspects and predictions of further offenses.
What is the FBI approach known as and why?
The face-down approach as it starts with predetermined ideas of the criminal.
When was the FBI approach developed and by who?
1970’s by the behavioral science unit of the FBI
Who were the main people involved in the research to build an offender profile in the FBI approach?
Ressler, Burgess and Douglas
How was the original offender profile created for the FBI approach?
Interviewed 36 serial killers with sexual aspects to their crimes and conducted further research into their personalities, backgrounds and other aspects of their lives.
What are the 4 stages to create an offender profile in the FBI approach?
- Data assimilation (available data e.g. from the crime scene or autopsy). 2. Crime scene classification (evidence is used to put the crime into a typology) 3. Crime reconstruction (reconstructing the events of the offender and victim to reach a hypothesis) 4. Profile generation (a profile is developed including age, ethnicity and social class)
Describe an organised criminal
Intelligent, socially competent, plans the crime
Describe an disorganized criminal.
Low intelligence, socially incompetent, unplanned crime
Give 3 supporting factors for the FBI approach to criminal profiling.
Useful applications (lots of countries have taken on this approach to profiling criminals e.g. NCID unit in the Netherlands) Important in challenging stereotypes that investigators may hold about offenders that could mislead investigations Ainsworth (2001) - Useful in allowing offenses to be linked and to make predictions about the time frame of the next crime and how the offenses will develop.
Give 3 contradicting factors for the FBI approach to offender profiling.
Original data: small group of offenders, may have a distorted memory of their crimes and are known for being manipulative.- issue of validity
May have an inaccurate view on how helpful it is because more likely to report successes than failures.
Assumes that offenders are one thing or the other and that this is stable over time. Wilson et al (1997) may shift from organised to disorganised limiting the usefulness of profiles.
When was the British approach developed and who by?
1980’s by David Canter
Who did Canter build a profile on when developing the British approach?
John Duffy (the railway rapist)
What does the British approach assume about individuals?
That they are consistent and that there are identifiable differences in criminal behaviour
What is this approach known as and why?
The bottoms up approach as it starts with no presumptions about the crime