Home
You are in: CRIMINAL MIND/FORENSICS & INVESTIGATION 
CRIMINAL PROFILING: HOW IT GOT STARTED AND HOW IT IS USED
The FBI's Crime Scene Analysis


As previously stated, origins of the FBI’s profiling unit can be traced back to the work of two men: Howard Teten and Pat Mullany. It was not until some years later that the now widely known names of John Douglas and Robert Ressler came to the Behavioral Sciences Unit (BSU). In 1978, after Howard Teten left the BSU, Douglas and Ressler changed the profiling process to the organised/disorganised method, which is still in use today [see Reference 1].

As much more is known about the FBI’s current method, mainly through the proliferation of published material, I shall cover the main assumptions of what is most commonly referred to as the organised/disorganised dichotomy. The original method, referred to as Applied Criminology and taught by Howard Teten and Pat Mullany, will most closely resemble the work of Brent Turvey with Behavioural Evidence Analysis, so the reader will get a feel for this in a later section.

Between 1979 and 1983, agents of the BSU undertook a large study in which they entered into correctional facilities and interviewed offenders about their backgrounds, crimes, crime scenes, and victims. They also used more official sources of information such as court transcripts, police reports and psychiatric and criminal records. The data they collected in this period served as the basis for the profiling method they developed and is still in use in many jurisdictions today [Reference 9].

The FBI’s Crime Scene Analysis involves six steps that collectively make up their profiling process (the following information is adapted from Reference 9 should the reader desire further information). These steps include Profiling Inputs, Decision Process Models, Crime Assessment, The Criminal Profile, The Investigation and The Apprehension. A brief explanation of each step shall be discussed below.

Profiling Inputs: This involves the collection and assessment of all of the materials relating to the specific case. This would typically involve any photographs taken of the crime scene and victim, a comprehensive background check of the victim, autopsy protocols, other forensic examinations relating to the crime, and any relevant information that is necessary to establish an accurate picture about what occurred before, during or after the crime. This stage serves as the basis for all others, and should incorrect or poor information be provided, the subsequent analysis will be affected.

Decision Process Models: This stage simply involves arranging all of the information gathered in the previous stage (Profiling Inputs) into a logical and coherent pattern. This might also include establishing how many victims were involved, for example, with the purpose of establishing whether the crime was the result of a serial offender.

Crime Assessment: This stage would typically involve the reconstruction of the sequence of events and the specific behaviours of both the victim and perpetrator. This will aid the analyst in understanding the "role" each individual has in the crime and should assist in developing the subsequent profile of the criminal.

The Criminal Profile: This is the process of providing a list of background, physical, and behavioural characteristics of the perpetrator. In the FBI model, this stage may also involve providing the requesting agency with directions on how to most appropriately interview the individual. This stage would also inform investigators how to identify and apprehend the perpetrator.

The Investigation: Here, the actual profile is provided to requesting agencies and incorporated into their investigation. If no suspects are generated, or if new evidence comes to light, the profile is reassessed.

The Apprehension: It is stated that the purpose of this stage is to cross check the profile produced with the characteristics of the offender once they are apprehended. This would occasionally be extremely difficult as the offender may never be apprehended, apprehended in another jurisdiction and not available for cross checking, arrested on some other charge, or simply cease criminal activity. As will be illustrated shortly, the rate of solved cases represents less than 50% of cases profiled and so this stage may never be tested.

The primary foundation of the FBI’s system lies within the organised and disorganised offender dichotomy. The table below illustrates the differences between the organised and disorganised offender [Reference 4].

Organised Offender Disorganised Offender
Average to above average intelligence Below average intelligence
Socially competent Socially inadequate
Skilled work preferred Unskilled work
Sexually competent Sexually incompetent
High birth order status Low birth order status
Father’s work stable Father’s work unstable
Inconsistent childhood discipline Harsh discipline as a child
Controlled mood during crime Anxious mood during crime
Use of alcohol with crime Minimal use of alcohol
Precipitating situational stress Minimal situational stress
Living with partner Living alone
Mobility with car in good condition Lives/works near the crime scene
Follows crime in news media Minimal interest in news media
May change jobs or leave town Significant behaviour change (e.g. drug or alcohol use)

Other individuals are highly critical of the FBI’s methods also. It is argued that federal agencies have little experience in actually investigating murder cases, and that it would be better for local agencies to train their own officers in the intricacies of such investigations [Reference 10]. It is further stated that there are a number of conditions by which an organised offender may leave a disorganised crime scene, including (but not limited to) offenders who are acting out of retaliation, domestic violence related offenders, interrupted offences, and offences involving controlled substances (drugs etc.,) [Reference 6]. This would lead the analyst to incorrectly provide the characteristics of one group of offenders as the profile, when the perpetrator actually possesses the characteristics of the other group.

Despite these criticisms, the FBI’s method remains one of the most widely taught methods in the world today. It is common practice for agents from various police forces around the world to travel overseas and take part in the Bureau’s Fellowship Program, where they are taught this profiling method, amongst other training in areas such as criminal investigation.



CHAPTERS
1. Introduction

2. Historical Overview

3. The FBI's Crime Scene Analysis

4. Investigative Psychology

5. Behavorial Evidence Analysis

6. Conclusion

7. References

8. The Author

- Return to Boston Strangler Full Case Coverage
<< Previous Chapter 1 - 2 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 >> Next Chapter
COURT TV SHOWS
Murder by the Book
The Investigators
Forensic Files



©2007 Turner Entertainment Digital Network, Inc. A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms & Privacy Guidelines
 
advertisement