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CRIMINAL PROFILING: HOW IT GOT STARTED AND HOW IT IS USED
David Canter and Investigative Psychology


The methods employed by David Canter are similar to those employed by the FBI in that they are both largely statistical in nature. The main difference is that Canter is continually updating his database of offender populations on which to base his theories [Reference 11]. By statistical, I mean that known offender populations are studied, broad offender groups (known as typologies) are defined, and the crimes of an unknown offender compared to this group. This subsequently produces a list of characteristics likely to be possessed by the unknown offender by virtue of their similarity to the comparison (or known) offender group.

The origins of Investigative Psychology can be traced back to 1985, when David Canter was called to Scotland Yard to discuss the possibility of integrating investigation techniques with psychological concepts [Reference 12]. Canter was unsure whether this could be accomplished, but decided to apply some of the methods of environmental psychology to criminal investigation, most notably the Railway Rapist (John Duffy).

Canter developed a University program revolving around the methods he had adapted to criminal investigation and started teaching his approach to profiling while at the University of Surrey. He later moved to the University of Liverpool where he offers an Investigative Psychology program to students from around the world. Canter’s research focuses primarily on which of the established psychological principles can be adapted to, or used for, the development of profiles in the investigation of crime [Reference 11].

The application of Canter’s work is based on five aspects of the interaction between the victim and the offender, known as the five-factor model. This model includes interpersonal coherence, significance of time and place, criminal characteristics, criminal career, and forensic awareness.

Interpersonal Coherence: Refers to whether a variation in criminal activity will relate to variations in the way in which the offender deals with other people in non-criminal situations [Reference 11]. It is assumed that offenders will deal with their victims in similar ways that they deal with people in their day-to-day lives. It is further assumed that victims may represent significant people in the life of the offender outside of the criminal event, and Canter cites anecdotal evidence in support of this [Reference 13]. One such example would be Ted Bundy, whose victim selection was believed to represent his ex-girlfriend.

The Significance of Time and Place: May provide the analyst with information about offender mobility, and therefore guide inferences about likely residential location. As the time and place of the event is largely chosen by the offender, this is seen to be important as it may represent the way in which the offender views their surroundings, and may also be heavily influenced by how they view their own schedule. The time of an attack, for instance, may provide insight into their work or play schedule, and thus give clues about their personal life.

Criminal Characteristics: Used to allow researchers to develop subsystems for the classification of offender groups, which may be used to provide characteristics to investigators that are likely to be possessed by the perpetrator in the current crime. The FBI’s classification of the offender as ‘organised’ or disorganised’ is one such system used in identifying criminal characteristics, though Canter himself sees that this system is of little use considering there is so much overlap between the two classifications [Reference 7 and 14].

Criminal Career: Simply refers to an assessment that is made to determine whether the offender may have engaged in criminal activity in the past, and what kind of activity this is most likely to have been. It is closely related to the last concept, forensic awareness.

Forensic Awareness: Is any evidence that an offender has knowledge of, or may be privy to, police techniques and procedures relating to evidence collection. It may include, but is not limited to, the wearing of gloves, the use of a condom, or the removal of any items contaminated with the offender's bodily fluids.

An assessment of the criminal career may indicate the offender's skill in getting him onto the premises, which might be suggestive of previous offences in burglary, while the way in which he bathes the victim after the sexual assault might indicate this is not his first sexual assault. This information may be given to police, who take the information and compare it to known offenders, the suspects already generated, or by reducing the known suspect pool by excluding those with no prior offences in either of the two areas above.

Canter has also developed a model of offender behaviour known as the circle theory, which developed directly from environmental psychology. Two models of offender behaviour known as the "marauder" and "commuter" hypothesis were developed from the circle theory. The marauder model assumes that an offender will "strike out" from their home base in the commission of their crimes, whereas the commuter model assumes that an offender will travel a distance from their home base before engaging in criminal activity. A basic graphical model of this hypothesis is shown in the diagram below.

The "Marauder" (above) and the "Commuter" (below) models of offender behaviour.

There is little available to tell the practitioner how to apply this model to an actual investigation. The original study that was done to develop the model was retrospective, that is, used solved cases where both the location of the offender’s home and crimes were known. This must bring the practical application of this model into question, as it would be practically impossible to know whether you were dealing with a marauder or a commuter with an unknown offender. The distances defined by the criminal range and home range are also problematic, as there is no clear relationship between the size or location of the criminal range and the distance it is from the offender’s home [Reference 15, page 65].

It has also been stated that this work does not necessarily offer anything new, and that some of his theories simply seem to be adaptation of older [Reference 7], more widely used theories of the FBI and others. Also, as this method relies heavily on statistical procedures and references to typologies in the compilation of a profile, it may suffer from a similar problem as the FBI model when applying it in a setting other than that in which the statistics were gathered (in this case, the United Kingdom).



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

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