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Offender Profiling

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The body of a young woman has been found strangled. ... Included Charles Manson and Ted Bundy. Categorised as organised or disorganised killers. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Offender Profiling


1
Offender Profiling
2
Your murder case.You need to make psychological
inferences to help the police
  • The body of a young woman has been found
    strangled.
  • This was done very effectively, apparently with
    bare hands.
  • There is no murder weapon.
  • There are no eye witnesses to a likely suspect.
  • The body has been left in the centre of the path
    and is visible from a road looking into the
    alleyway

The murder scene.
3
The police are very worried because this is the
third murder in the West London area.
The similarities are that the victim was female,
efficiently strangled and the bodies found in the
centre of alleyways within sight of busy roads.
4
All the bodies had been carefully placed on their
backs and the arms carefully folded on their
chests. The victims face was carefully covered
with their own jacket. There was no forensic
evidence of sexual assault. There was no signs
of defence injuries. There had not been a
struggle. It was likely that all victims had
been murdered in the early evening.
5
All the women were well dressed. They came from
a middle class professional background. All had
personal I.D. removed but no money or valuables
were taken.
There is a complete lack of forensic evidence.
6
The Profile
  • Strangulation ex army/security/martial arts.
  • Strong feelings of rejection. Only chose women of
    a certain type. Perhaps been rejected by this
    class of women. His mother?
  • Lived in West London. Grew up in the area. Knew
    alleys.
  • Controlled, organised personality. Meticulous
    planning. Victims always alone and no witnesses.
  • Asexual. A loner. A stranger to the victims. Is
    a serial killer, as bodies have a signature (all
    placed in the same way). The work of one man.
  • Wants publicity. Bodies not hidden. Maybe
    collects cuttings of murders.
  • Has hoard of souvenirs. Personal I.D./Credit
    Cards.
  • Knows about forensic evidence. Knows justice
    system.

7
OFFENDER PROFILING
  • Does this information make it any easier to
    arrest the killer?
  • David Canter. Investigative psychology. ..often
    little more than, at best, subjective opinion,
    common sense.
  • John Duffy the railway rapist. Was low on the
    police suspect list however with the advice of
    Canter he was re-arrested, convicted and
    confessed to a series of murders and rapes

8
  • Blau (1994) defines offender profiling as a
    .method of helping to identify the criminal
    based on the nature of the offence and the manner
    in which it was committed.
  • Copson (1995) argues the police need 4 types of
    information.
  • The type of person who committed the crime.
  • Are they likely to offend again?
  • Is the offence linked to others?
  • What sort of strategies should they use in
    interview?
  • One of the first to use profilers was the FBI as
    it is most useful in serious offences such as
    rape, murder, arson and kidnapping.
  • It is either based on a scientific approach based
    on statistical analysis of the offence and area
    or a clinical approach which uses personality
    theory. Often these approaches are used together.

9
Different Approaches
FBI Approach
  • The Top Down Approach
  • Set up the Behaviour Science Unit
  • Interviewed 36 convicted serial killers. Included
    Charles Manson and Ted Bundy.
  • Categorised as organised or disorganised killers.

10
Investigative Psychological Approach
  • The Bottom up Approach
  • Adopted by Prof. Canter of Liverpool University.
    Famously helped identify John Duffy The
    Railway Rapist.
  • Built up a database of convicted killers.
  • Canter and Heritage (1990) studied 66 sexual
    assault cases committed by 27 offenders. Built up
    33 characteristics that were common to these
    cases.
  • They use multivariate analysis. They correlated
    data and found patterns of behaviour.
  • Canter identified 5 characteristics
  • Criminal history
  • Domestic and social characteristics
  • Residential location
  • Personal characteristics
  • A history of occupation and education.

11
The Clinical Approach
  • Boon (1997). Describes using theoretical models
    such as personality theory to advise police
    investigations.
  • Britton (1997) looks at each case in isolation
    rather than using statistical analysis of
    previous cases.
  • Copson et.al (1997) argues what is needed is a
    motive from the evidence combined with a
    theoretical understanding that explains offender
    behaviour.

Note - Geographic Profiling in Booklet Offender
Profiling
12
Evaluation
Negative
Positive
  • Overall studies suggest offender profiling is
    useful to aid police however not to actually
    catch offender.
  • Jackson et.al. (1993) interviewed 20 police
    officers in Holland and found a high level of
    satisfaction with profilers.
  • Douglas (1981) in the USA found the FBI said that
    profilers focussed their work, saved time and
    gave detail. The benefits outweighed the cost.
  • Only can be used for specific crimes. These
    crimes are rare, therefore difficult to evaluate.
  • Only can be used in limited number of cases
    therefore difficult to generalise.
  • Little research as to whether profiling is
    universal, as most work has been carried out in
    western societies. It has an ethnocentric bias.

13
Evaluation
  • Finkel et. al. (1990) compared 5 groups who were
    asked to develop
  • a profile in a murder and a sex case.
  • Expert profilers
  • Detectives with profiling experience
  • Detectives without profiling experience
  • Clinical psychologists
  • Undergraduates
  • The most accurate were the detectives. Police
    experience seemed
  • to be more useful in these type of cases.

Careful read the 2 case studies - John Duffy and
Rachel Nickell
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