aim is to generate a picture of the offender - likely characteristics, routine behaviour and social background - through systematic analysis of evidence at crime scene
profile is data driven - emerges as the investigator engages in deeper, more rigorous scrutiny of details of offence
more grounded in psychological theory
investigative psychology -
attempt to apply statistical procedures alongside psychological theory to the analysis of crime scene evidence - aim is to establish patterns of behaviour that are likely to occur
this is to develop a statistical database which then acts as a baseline for comparison
specific details of an offence can then be matched against this database to reveal important details about the offender (personal history, family background etc)
also may determine whether a series of offences are linked in that they are likely to have been committed by the same person
interpersonal coherence -
central to investigative psychology
the way offender behaves at scene - how they interact with the victim may reflect behaviour in everyday situations
some rapists want to maintain maximum control and humiliate victims, others are more apologetic
might tell police about how the offender relates to women more generally
significance of time and place is also a key variable (eg geographical profiling)
forensic awareness - individuals who've been subject to police investigation before - behaviour may denote how mindful they are of covering their tracks
geographical profiling -
uses information about the location of linked crime scenes to make inferences about the likely home or operational base of an offender - known as crime mapping
based on principle of spatial consistency - people commit crimes with a limited geographical space
assumption is that offenders will restrict work to geographical areas they're familiar with so understanding the spatial pattern of their behaviour provides investigators with a 'centre of gravity' which is likely to include the offenders base (often in middle of spatial pattern)
circle theory -
Canter and Larkin (1993) - pattern of offending forms a circle around the offenders home base - distribution leads to describing the offender in 1 of 2 ways:
the marauder - who operates in close proximity to their home base
the commuter - who is likely to have travelled a distance away from their usual residence
spatial decision making can offer the investigative team insight into the nature of the offence - planned or opportunistic, 'mental maps', mode of transport, employment status, approximate age etc