offender profiling: top down approach

    Cards (12)

    • Offender profiling
      A behavioural and analytical tool that is intended to help investigators accurately predict and profile the characteristics of unknown offenders
    • Top-down approach
      1. Profilers start with a pre-established typology
      2. Work down to lower levels
      3. Assign offenders to one of two categories
      4. Based on witness accounts and evidence from the crime scene
    • Organised offender
      • Shows evidence of planning
      • Targets a specific victim
      • Socially and sexually competent
      • Higher-than-average intelligence
    • Disorganised offender
      • Shows little evidence of planning
      • Leaves clues
      • Socially and sexually incompetent
      • Lower-than-average intelligence
    • Top-down approach -
      • American approach - FBI
      • FBI behaviour science unit - drew upon data from in-depth interviews with 36 sexually-motivated murderers
      • concluded the data could be categorised into organised or disorganised crimes
      • if data from a crime scene matched some characteristics of one category - predict other characteristics - to help find offender
    • top-down - organised and disorganised types of offender
      • serious offenders have certain signature ways of working - correlate with particular set of social and psychological characteristics that relate to individual
    • Organised offenders
      • evidence of having planned the crime in advance
      • victim deliberately targeted - 'type'
      • high degree of control during the crime
      • little evidence or clues left behind
      • tend to be above-average intelligence in a professional occupation
      • social and sexually competent
      • usually married
    • disorganised offenders
      • little evidence of planning
      • offences are spontaneous acts
      • crime scene - body still present, very little control from offender
      • lower-than-average IQ
      • unskilled work or unemployed
      • history of sexual dysfunction and failed relationships
      • live alone and close to where offence took place
    • top-down - FBI profile
      1. data assimilation - profiler reviews the evidence
      2. crime scene classification - organised or disorganised
      3. crime reconstruction - hypotheses in terms of sequence of events, behaviour of victim
      4. profile generation - hypotheses related to the likely offender e.g physical characteristic
    • AO3 - top-down - strenth
      P: there is research support for a distinct organised category of offender
      E: Canter - analysis of 100 US murders each committed by a different serial killer
      smallest space analysis - statistical technique that identifies correlations across different samples of behaviour
      • torture or restraint, concealment of body, murder weapon, cause of death
      revealed that there does seem to be a subset of features of many serial killing which matched the FBIs typology for organised offenders
      L: key component of the FBI typology has some validity
    • AO3 - top-down - strength
      P: can be adapted to other kinds of crime
      E: Meketa - top-down profiling has recently been applied to burglary - 85% rise in solved cases in US states
      The detection method retains the organised-disorganised distinction but adds two new categories - interpersonal and opportunistic
      L: suggests that top-down profiling has wider application then was originally assumed
    • AO3 - top-down - limitation
      P: the evidence in which it is based
      E: developed using interviews with 36 murders in the US (25 serial killers)
      24 = organised
      12 = disorganised
      Canter - sample was poor and did not include different kinds of offender
      no standard set of questions - every interview different so can't compare
      L: top-down profiling does not have a sound, scientific basis