Very often, criminal profiling methods are grouped together as one collection
of techniques, all relying on the same methods, following one set of procedures,
and practiced by individuals from the same background.
It has been illustrated in this paper though, that criminal
profiling methods are not all the same, and that the backgrounds of those who
practice these methods are equally dissimilar. The FBI’s method involves
comparing the behaviour of the current offender with those offenders the
profiler has encountered in the past and the broad offender groups developed
through studying similar crimes and criminals.
Investigative Psychology relies heavily on the methods of
environmental psychology, along with some new investigative tools that have been
developed since the institution of the formal Investigative Psychology program.
The driving discipline behind IP is psychology, though Canter has taken the
method beyond the more basic psychological principles.
The main difference between the FBI, IP, and BEA methods is
that Turvey’s BEA does not utilise statistics on broad offender groups, and
relies primarily on forensic science for the reconstruction of the criminal
event, then on forensic science, psychology and psychiatry for an interpretation
of the offender’s behaviour. Of all of the techniques available, BEA is the
latest in a series of new and evolving schools of thought.
While it is not necessary for any one practitioner to
strictly adhere to one method, individuals are warned not to “spread
themselves to thin”. The best advice that can be given is to adopt the method
that makes most sense, learn as much as you can about it, and then adapt it for
use in the cultural, social, psychological and physical settings in which one
operates. On a strictly fundamental level, it is necessary for the general
reader to know where each method hails from, and even more important to
acknowledge that all profiling methods are not created equal.
The ability of some of the methods to be applied in settings other than those
in which the statistics were developed is severely limited, and so caution
should be employed by anyone attempting to practically apply those methods. It
is hoped that through this paper a greater understanding of the history of
profiling has been developed, but more importantly, that the recognition of
distinct differences between the methods has been shown.
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