offender profiling : the bottom-up approach

    Cards (9)

    • interpersonal coherence
      how the offender acts during the crime relates to how they act in non-criminal situations (scene is neat - the offender is neat in everyday life)
    • the british approach
      david canter
      • generate a profile from only the available evidence
    • investigative psychology
      use statistical procedures to create a prediction of behaviour
    • forensic awareness
      attempted to cover up their tracks - may have been questioned before
    • geographical profiling pt 1
      • what offender are thinking, how they operate or where they live (centre of gravity)
      • where they are next likely to commit a crime (jeopardy surface)
    • geographical profiling pt 2 - circle theory
      • the marauder - operates near home
      • the commuter - travels away from home
    • strength
      evidence for investigative psychology
      • canter (1990) - analysis of 66 sexual assault cases
      • each had the same characteristic (speaking to the victim like they are a thing)
      • criminal behaviour is consistent proving the theory is valid and reliable
    • strength
      support for geographical profiling
      • canter (2001) - 120 murder cases with serial killers
      • disposed of bodies in different locations which formed centres of gravity and their base was always in the middle of this
      • helps determine killers' base
    • weakness
      geographical profiling is not always sufficient on its own
      • crimes recorded differently between police departments (75% of crimes go unreported)
      • the quality of prior evidence hinders investigative psychology (lacks usefulness)
      • Ainsworth said geographical information is not enough to identify the offender
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