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  • At the core of criminal profiling is the belief that you can tell something about the offender,

  • their characteristics if you like, by a careful and considered examination of the offence.

  • So after a crime has been committed you use all the information that you can gather about

  • the crime. For example, details about the crime: what occurred, where it occurred

  • and information either from or about the victim. And you use this to draw up a profile of the

  • characteristics of the person who most likely committed the crime.

  • This may include information on demographic features, so their age, their gender, their ethnicity.

  • And, depending on your approach, this profile might include information on the perpetrator's

  • likely motivation. Why are they engaging in this behaviour, and why did the crime take

  • place when and where it did?

  • Offender profiling is typically used in serious crimes like murder and in serial crimes, and

  • also when it is difficult to identify the offender using standard methods.

  • So when described like this, criminal profiling sounds very straightforward. But, although

  • pretty much everyone agrees on the basic principle, there is actually a lot of debate about how

  • to do this in practice, and different approaches have emerged.

  • So if we think about how a profile of an offender is created we can see there are a few different

  • approaches. These include the FBI's Criminal Investigative Analysis and the

  • Investigative Psychology approach, which is most commonly associated with David Canter. There is also

  • diagnostic evaluation and the recently developed crime action profiling.

  • And within these approaches you also have specialities if you like, that focus on one

  • element. So geographical profiling, for example, is often used in an attempt to locate

  • where the offender is based given his or her offending locations. So what we're going

  • to do is consider just a few of these. Those where more has been written about the approaches

  • that they take.

  • Now probably the most famous approach to criminal profiling is Criminal Investigative Analysis.

  • This approach was initially developed at the FBI Academy in Virginia and then later in

  • the Behavioral Science Unit.

  • It came about through an increasing awareness amongst investigators that apprehended offenders,

  • who had been identified using traditional investigation techniques, appeared to share

  • characteristics and exhibit particular patterns of behaviour at their crime scenes.

  • So that led to the question: is it possible to get clues from the crime scene and the surviving

  • victims that would give the investigators the most probable personality and demographic

  • characteristics of the offender?

  • Now obviously this would be useful, as it would allow the investigators to focus their

  • attention on the most likely offenders rather than having to investigate a very large pool

  • of suspects.

  • So they started by drawing on their own officers experience in the investigation of serious

  • sexual assault and murder, and they also carried out in-depth interviews with a small number

  • of convicted sexual murderers who volunteered. But bearing in mind that these murderers

  • memories for their crimes were unlikely to be perfect, and that convicted volunteers

  • may not be representative of the broader category of murderers.

  • However, the aim of these activities was to identify the major personality and behavioural

  • characteristics that this type of offender had. And, critically, how the personality

  • seen in this type of offender differed from that typically seen in the general population.

  • Now this analysis led FBI investigators to propose typologies of offenders, such that,

  • for example, an offender could be categorised as organised or disorganised, or in some instances

  • a mixture or combination of both.

  • So, and if we stick with the crime of murder,

  • an organised offender would be someone who led an orderly life and this is reflected in the

  • way that they commit their crime.

  • The organised offender is claimed to be of average to high intelligence, socially competent,

  • and more likely than the disorganised offender to have skilled employment.

  • He typically plans his offences, he uses restraints on his victim, brings a weapon with him to

  • commit the murder and then takes it away with him from the crime scene.

  • Now this organised behaviour at the crime scene allows some inference of likely behavioural

  • and motivational characteristics. So, for example, the likelihood that there was some

  • situational stress that precipitated the assault.

  • Now in contrast the disorganised offender commits crimes that appear to have had little

  • preparation or planning. So, the crime scene might show evidence of almost random, unplanned

  • or disorganised behaviour. The offender may use whatever is at hand as a weapon,

  • and that weapon may then be left at the scene. Also there may be little attempt to conceal other

  • evidence at the crime scene.

  • Now typically this type of offender was thought to be socially incompetent and to have below

  • average intelligence, and to be more likely to be living alone and to live and work near

  • the crime scene.

  • Now although not a direct product of the original in-depth interviews with offenders,

  • later, a 'mixed' offender classification was added in. Now this occurs when some elements

  • of the crime look organised but other bits seem disorganised. This might occur when elements

  • of the situation when the crime took place took the offender by surprise.

  • So maybe there was more than one person present at the scene, when the offender thought there

  • would only be one. Maybe the person was stronger than the offender thought, so when they fought

  • back it was actually a real fight. Another possibility is that the offender's method of

  • offending has evolved since the last crime they committed. So, in the case of murder,

  • because the offender's new method is partially untested it might not go quite to plan.

  • As Hazelwood and Warren in 2001 noted, 'in fantasy everything works out perfectly'.

  • However in reality and in acting out this fantasy, this rarely occurs. So maybe the

  • method of killing wasn't as efficient as the offender thought it would be, and so a

  • real struggle occurred while the offender was trying to kill.

  • So these things would be surprising to the offender, who might otherwise be quite organised,

  • and that would lead to elements of the offence looking quite disorganised.

  • Now, key in this approach is the classification of the crime by the motive.

  • That is why the crime was committed. However, of course, at the point where the

  • crime has just occurred, you don't know this. So you start with what you do know.

  • That is you look to the behavioural features that are present in the crime.

  • Using a multi stage process, the investigator needs to consider all the available information

  • about the victim, the crime scene or crime scenes and the details of the interpersonal

  • transaction - maybe through using a detailed reconstruction.

  • The investigator also needs to consider all the available forensic information, and make

  • some judgements in relation to the crime scene. Does it look organised or disorganised, do

  • elements of it look inconsistent and therefore possibly staged; that is, deliberately altered

  • in an attempt to mislead the investigators? They need to determine how the crime committed,

  • that is - what is the modus operandi?

  • Also is there a signature present? That is an individualised or specific way in which

  • the crime has been committed that tells you about the personality of the offender and

  • may be able to help you link this crime to other crimes.

  • Now the signature can often be a seemingly unnecessary part of the crime. It serves

  • no obvious purpose, like helping the offender to escape. Rather it is serving another purpose

  • for the offender. For example, the offender may take an object from the crime scene,

  • like the victim's house keys, to fulfil some psychological or emotional desire.

  • So as an investigator you get the material or details from the crime; the WHAT, then

  • you try and determine the WHY of the crime, that is the motivation for each crime scene

  • detail and for the crime, before moving to the WHO of the crime.

  • Now the resulting profile will contain hypotheses about the likely demographic and physical

  • characteristics of the offender. So things like their ethnicity, their age, their type

  • of occupation, some comment on their marital status and on their family characteristics,

  • and also whether they own or have access to a vehicle and its most likely age and type.

  • Also typically there will be some hypotheses as to the offenders behavioural habits. So

  • whether they have any previous convictions and if so, for what type of offence.

  • Or whether they've ever served in the military.

  • Comments will also be made as to their likely social interests and personality dynamics.

  • So their intelligence, their likely educational level, and whether there may be any evidence

  • of psychopathology. Now that profile might also include information on their pre- offence

  • behaviour leading to the crime and also what they've done since - their post offence

  • behaviour. It may also include recommendations for identifying, apprehending and interviewing

  • the offender.

At the core of criminal profiling is the belief that you can tell something about the offender,

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B1 中級

1.2 犯罪者プロファイリングの方法 (1.2 Criminal Profiling Methods)

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    kismet に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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