Task: Investigating a Crime: Phase II – Concepts Related to the Offense
What does the Assessment of proof inform us about the basic nature of the crime, the offender’s information of the location of the crime, the danger degree for the offender, the degree of danger of the sufferer, and the relationship between the sufferer and offender? The Assessment of the ideas associated to the offense will help decide if the crime was organized or disorganized. It will probably additionally decide motive and intent.
On this Task you begin Phase II of the prison investigative Assessment course of by analyzing the proof of the prison report from the perspective of the offense.
To arrange for the Task:
Assessment the proof in the prison report from the perspective of the offense.
By Day 7
In a 2- to Three-page Assessment of the offense:
Summarize
The sufferer’s motion throughout the offense
The offender’s motion throughout the offense
Any sufferer/offender interplay earlier than, throughout, and after the offense
Clarify any
Motive
Staging
Modus operandi
Intent
Premeditation
Affective violence
Predatory violence
Expressive/instrumental violence
So, what does the investigation and Assessment of proof inform us about the basic nature of the crime, whether or not the offender knew the place she or he dedicated the crime, what degree of danger the offender was uncovered to, what degree of danger the sufferer was uncovered to, and what relationship the sufferer and offender had? If the ideas related to the offense are examined, it could be attainable to inform if the crime was organized or disordered. Additionally it is able to figuring out motive and intent.
Signature/ritual
Lastly, clarify whether or not the crime was organized or disorganized. Help your conclusion with references to the particular proof.
unknown.svg
CriminalInvestigativeAnalysisCase.docx
READING MATERIAL
Bartol, C. R. & Bartol, A. M. (2010). Legal & behavioral profiling. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Chapter 5, “Profiling Utilized to Particular Crimes” (pp. 129–170)
Turvey, B. E. (2012). Legal profiling: An introduction to behavioral proof Assessment (4th ed.). San Diego, CA: Tutorial Press.
Chapter 6, “An Introduction to Crime Scene Assessment” (pp. 141–162)
Chapter 11, “An Introduction to Crime Reconstruction” (pp. 253–286)
Chapter 12, “Crime Scene Traits” (pp. 287–310)
Chapter 18, “Psychopathy and Sadism: Decoding Psychopathic and Sadistic Habits in the Crime Scene” (pp. 447–480)
Schlesinger, L. B. (2009). Psychological profiling: Investigative implications from crime scene Assessment. Journal of Psychiatry & Legislation, 37(1), 73–84.