modern offender profiling began
with the FBI in the US in the '70s
Behavioural Science Unit began researching family
backgrounds, personalities, behaviours, crimes and
motives of serial killers with sexual aspects to their crimes
included in-depth interviews with 36 convicted murderers
however, not a representative
sample; murderers are
manipulative, so unrelieable
FBI developed a
classification system
for several serious
crimes, including
murder and rape
each 'type' of criminal
displayed a different set
of characteristics
however, Canter (2004)
found no such distinct
subsets of characteristics
classification was based on
offenders who had been
caught, who may differ from
those who are still at large
crime scene
analysis
analysis of the crime scene
indicates the type of offender
so the classification can be
used to determine the
characteristics they might have
limited to crimes which leave
significant evidence and are
multiple offences such as serial
murder, rape and arson
A top-down approach
crime reconstruction and
profile generation are
driven from 'above' by the
crime scene classification
far from guarantees
a conviction
however, Douglas (1981)
reviewed the costs and benefits
of profiling; profiling rarely led
directly to the offender (15 / 192
cases) but in 77% it helped to
focus the investigation
The British (bottom-up)
approach
Canter argues that people
behave consistently; their
criminal behaviour reflects their
normal behaviour
EG. a rapist who shows
controlling / abusive behaviour
towards his victims will show
this traits to people in general
the victim group can be
used to reveal something
about the criminal
EG. Ten Bundy killed
+30 students, whilst he
was a student
behaviour that is uncommon can
suggest that a number of crimes
might have been committed by
the same person
EG. apologising
after a rape
Smallest Space Analysis
(SSA) - based on data
from many incidents; can
identify the most useful
crime scene evidence
Santilla (2003) found consistent
patterns among juvenile fire-setters
"bottom-up" because the
emphasis is on piecing
together a profile from the
crime scene info
Britton (1992) - profiles were
neither accurate, nor
contributed to arrests
however, Copson (1995) found
that more than half of police officers
felt it provides something extra, an
80% said the info used was useful
however, he also found that 14%
said that it had assisted in solving a
case, and 3% said it resulted in the
identification of a suspect
British approach assumes that
criminals with similar
characteristics would show
similar crime scene behaviour
however, Mokros & Alison (2002)
found no significant correlations
between characteristics such as
age / previous convictions
however, they did find
important variables such
as the time of day