Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The typology Approach
- Indicated a broad distinction between Organised
and disorganised offenders
- Based on inteviews and case details of 36
sex offenders who volunteered to be
interviewed about their crimes
- It involves: collecting data from police records and crime scene,
classifying the crime scene as organised/disorganised, looking into the
victim behaviour to create a hypothesis and creating a profile or the
likely criminal
- Organised offenders:
- Hide the body
- Planned the attack
- Unknown victim
- Use of restraints
- High intelligence
- Sexually competent - live with partner
- Experiencing anger/depression at time of attack
- Disorganised offender:
- Leave evidence and body in sight
- Victim known
- Sexually incompetent
- Not planned
- Live alone
- severe mental illness
- Canter et al - evidene against the typology
approach
- Although the
organised/disorganised distinction is
widely cited - validity not been
established
- Interviews conducted to establish the two types
were limited sample
- Distinction is an oversimplification and
the addition of a third category questions
the notion of only two types of offender
- Other classification systems-
- Jenkins (1988) - suggested the respectable and predictable
type categories of murder
- Holmes and de Burges- suggested 6 types that
could be defined according to the 14 characteristics