Criminal Profiling 2012
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-385243-4.00001-0
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A History of Criminal Profiling

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Cited by 18 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…the use of a disguise, the same weapon and so on). Yet, MO may evolve as the offender learns more about his own capacities and may adapt to circumstances but the underlying motivations tend to remain the same (Turvey 2002). The MOs for all three cases are similar but in the context of his reconstructed behaviour have the further element of escalation or challenge in the last event.…”
Section: Motivation Mental Health and Dangerousnessmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…the use of a disguise, the same weapon and so on). Yet, MO may evolve as the offender learns more about his own capacities and may adapt to circumstances but the underlying motivations tend to remain the same (Turvey 2002). The MOs for all three cases are similar but in the context of his reconstructed behaviour have the further element of escalation or challenge in the last event.…”
Section: Motivation Mental Health and Dangerousnessmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Criminal profiling process creates an offender profile using three general forms of illative reasoning, namely, deductive, inductive, and abductive. Deductive profiling (Turvey, 2012) follows a case-based approach. It crafts a profile of the characteristics of the possible offender by examining behavioural evidence from the criminal case in question.…”
Section: Criminal Profilingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It inspects particular criminal cases to detect specific behavioural or personal traits of the suspect. BEA involves four types of analysis (Turvey, 2016) comprising Equivocal forensic analysis (Al Mutawa, Bryce, Franqueira, & Marrington, 2015), forensic victimology (Petherick, 2019;Petherick & Ferguson, 2015), identification of crime scene characteristics (Almond et al, 2017;Wang et al, 2018) and identification of offender traits (Turvey, 2012).…”
Section: Behavioural Evidence Analysis and Its Role In Digital Crime Investigationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cela reste un comportement appris qui se dé veloppe, s'affine et se sophistique dans le temps avec l'expé rience et la confiance. Toutefois, la qualité du mode opé ratoire peut dé cliner (excè s de confiance, dé té rioration mentale, influence toxique), dans ce cas il faut parler de dé sorganisation criminelle [28]. Concrè tement, ce mode opé ratoire permet à l'auteur de proté ger son identité .…”
Section: Le Modus Operandiunclassified