Profilers work up from evidence collected from the crime scene to develop hypotheses about the likely characteristics, motivations, and social background of the offender
Where was the bottom-up approach created?
In Britain
How is the bottom-up approach different to the top-down approach?
It doesn't begin with fixed typologies - profile is data-driven and emerges as the investigator engages in deeper and more rigorousscrutiny and analysis of the details of the offense
It is also much more grounded in psychologicaltheory
Investigative psychology
Matchesdetails from the crime scene with statistical analysis of typical offenderbehaviourpatterns based on psychologicaltheory - aims to establish patterns of behaviour that are likely to occur, or coexist, across crime scenes
What is the purpose of investigative psychology?
To develop a statistical database which acts as a baseline for comparison - specific details of an offense, or related offenses, can be matched against the database to reveal important details about the offender, their personal history, family background, and can determine whether a series of offenses are linked in that they are likely to have been committed by the sameperson
3 central concepts of investigative psychology
Interpersonal coherence
Significance of time and place
Forensic awareness
Interpersonal coherence
The way an offender behaves at the scene, including how they interact with the victim, may reflect their behaviour in more everyday situations
Significance of time and place
May indicate where the offender is living
Forensic awareness
Describes individuals who have been the subject of policeinterrogation before, so their 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 operationalbase of an offender - crime mapping
Can be used in conjunction with psychological theory (like investigative psychology) to create hypotheses about how the offender is thinking and their modus operandi
What principle is geographical profiling based on?
Spatial consistency
Spatial consistency
People commit crimes within a limited geographical space - serial offenders will restrict their work to areas they are familiar with, so understanding the spatial pattern of their behaviour provides investigators with a centre of gravity which is likely to include the offender's base (often in the middle)
Canter's circle theory
The pattern of offending forms a circle around the offender's home base, and the distribution of offenses can lead to 2 offender descriptions
2 offender descriptions according to Canter's circle theory
Marauder and commuter
Marauder
Operates in close proximity to their home base
Commuter
Likely to have travelled a distance away from their usual residence