1 / 9

OFFENDER PROFILING

OFFENDER PROFILING. DEFINITIONS, APPROACHES & DEVELOPING A PROFILE BIASES & PITFALLS APPLIED PROFILING. * DEFINITIONS *. NO CLEAR DEFINITION - varies between profilers and their approach

gilles
Download Presentation

OFFENDER PROFILING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OFFENDER PROFILING DEFINITIONS, APPROACHES & DEVELOPING A PROFILE BIASES & PITFALLS APPLIED PROFILING

  2. * DEFINITIONS * • NO CLEAR DEFINITION - varies between profilers and their approach • BLAU (1994) - ‘A method of helping to identify the perpetrator of a crime based on the nature of the offence and the manner in which it was committed’ • TURCO (1993) - ‘The preparation of a biological sketch gathered from info taken at a crime scene, from the personal history and habits of a victim and integrating this with known psychological theory’ • COPSON (1995) - Police need 4 types of information from profilers; • Type of person who committed crime • How great a threat they pose in the future • The possibility that the case is linked to others • How the police should interview suspects • Only certain crimes for which a profile is useful - usually serious offences • Profiling doesn’t SOLVE the crime, but offers an INDICATION of the type of person who did - narrows the field of investigation • Based on two approaches - Scientific or Clinical; • SCIENTIFIC - Statistical analysis of types of offence, r.ship between characteristics of the offence and the geographical distribution • CLINICAL - Personality theories, underlying psychological processes

  3. * THE FBI APPROACH * • 1978, developed systematic profiling technique in USA, alongside their ability to analyse forensic evidence • Based on a study carried out on 36 convicted serial murderers - sexually orientated crimes. Interviewed then categorised as either organised or disorganised; • Began developing theoretical models • RESSLER (1998) - Crime Classification Manual - assists investigators identifying whether a series of offences was committed by the same offender, and estimating the likelihood of a repeat offence

  4. * The BRITISH APPROACH * • Investigative Psychology, dominated by work of DAVID CANTER, after his involvement in the case of John Duffy - Railway Rapist • Uses similar techniques to FBI - builds up database of previous offenders - 66 sexual assaults by 27 offenders, found 33 common offence characteristics, e.g. Blindfolding, gagging, use of a disguise, aggression etc • CANTER argues these associated activities shed light on how criminal behaves in everyday life - can build a picture of a wide range of factors • Duffy originally 1505th in a list of 2000 suspects but Canter’s profile enabled a prompt police response • Convicted in 1988 for 2 murders and 5 rapes

  5. * DEVELOPING A PROFILE * • HOLMES & HOLMES (1996) - 3 goals that influence how a profile is developed • Social and psychological assessment of offender • Psychological evaluation of possessions found with suspected offenders • Consultation with officials on strategies for interviewing techniques • Forensics and Scene of Crime Officers (SOCOs) collect physical evidence from crime scene; psychologists examine these to determine clues of offender’s personality characteristics etc. They also look at… • The offence - nature of it, multiple victims? More complex = more intelligent offender • Timing - Significant in terms of employment - shift pattern? • Offending site - Where? Opportunistic or planned? Majority of offences close to home • Body deposition site - Where was body left? Visible or hidden? • Pattern of Injuries - Directions of wounds can indicate whether left or right handed • Capture style - How did victim end up with offender? • Sex - Significance of sexual acts performed? • Pattern of Victims - Particular type of person? Was victim known? • Trophies/Souvenirs - What was taken?

  6. * BIASES & PITFALLS * • Only used in a number of crimes - not GENERALISABLE to all crimes • Hard to evaluate the EFFECTIVENESS - few crimes to use/evaluate • If profile is wrong, police will be looking for wrong person - wastes valuable time COPSON (1995) - Evaluating Potential for Profiling • Detectives from 48 UK police forces given questionnaire to determine their attitudes to profiling - covered 184 individual cases - 105 solved, 79 unsolved. Most involved murder, the rest rape, serious sexual assault, arson, abduction • Profiling had been sought in ALL cases for various reasons • RESULTS - Only 14% said profiling helped solve the case • Only 16% directly acted on advice received from profiler • Only 3% said advice led to identification of offender • However, 83% found advice useful to understand the case or confirm own their own opinions • 69% would use profiling again • CONCLUSIONS - Profiling seems to be useful to help understand the case, but not necessarily in terms of catching the offender

  7. * BIASES & PITFALLS * • DOUGLAS (1981) - Reviewed costs and benefits of profiling in USA • Although profiling didn’t lead to apprehension of criminals, the benefits in terms of focusing the investigation, saving time etc outweighed the costs • FINKEL et al (1990) - Compared five groups on their ability to compose a profile • Expert profilers • Detectives with no profiling experience • Detectives with profiling experience • Clinical Psychologist • Undergraduates • Results showed profilers were more accurate than others in the sex offence cases, but detectives without experience were more successful in homicide cases • Suggests police experience is more important than psychological training in certain cases

  8. * APPLIED PROFILING * The Rachel Nickell murder • July 1992, 23yr old Rachel sexually assaulted and battered to death whilst walking dog and 2yr old son on Wimbledon Common in broad daylight • She parked car around 10am and seen 20mins later walking towards the woods. Attack occurred 500 yards from car park. Rachel’s body found 4m from path • Little boy will have witnessed event, but was not harmed • Little forensic evidence, just a shoe print • Out of 100 people in area at time, only 2 saw a man washing hands in stream about 150m from crime scene • Called profiler PAUL BRITTON - interviewed friends, family to find out type of person Rachel was. • First thoughts - As son was unharmed, likely to be unknown to Rachel; unlikely to be a domestic. Nature of attack pointed towards a violent sexual psychopath • Based on past contacts, BRITTON drew profile… • Aged between 20 & 30 • Inability to relate to women in conversation • Sexually dysfunctional • Average intelligence • Singe, isolated lifestyle • Live within walking distance of Wimbledon Common

  9. The Rachel Nickell murder ctd. • The profile was broadcast on Crimewatch and within 4 hrs, 300 calls were received and the name Colin Stagg came up 4 times. He fitted BRITTON’s profile exactly • A witness who saw him a few hrs after the murder said he looked ‘strangely excited’ and he’d told her he’d been on Wimbledon Common • He was arrested immediately but consistently denied his involvement. However, his responses to questions strengthened his match to the police • He was released later as there was no hard evidence • A month later they received a letter written to a woman by Stagg describing a fantasy of having sex with a stranger in a public park • An undercover operation was set up - an undercover policewoman going as Lizzie James claimed she was a friend of the woman who passed on the letter and found his fantasies interesting • Stagg did not admit to the murder but revealed things only the murderer could know • Stagg was arrested and charged with Rachel’s murder • However, the case was thrown out of court as the police had used deceptive techniques to incriminate the suspect, and that the prosecution was based almost entirely on BRITTON’s profile • Stagg was released and Rachel’s killer has since not been found EVALUATIVE ISSUES • ETHICS - The way the police handled the case was unthical - deceptive • VALIDITY - The judge questioned the validity of the profile as it was based almost entirely on intuition • EFFECTIVENESS - Although profiles may be accurate, they don’t always lead to the apprehension of a suspect

More Related