“…As we have seen, during the trial phase, the role of the criminologist is fundamental because, during the psychiatric expertise stage, he or she may be called upon to express an opinion on various aspects of the criminal proceedings concerning the offender, such as imputability, social dangerousness, ability to stand trial, as well as the ability of a witness to testify. Once appointed as a consultant, the narrative criminologist, in order to draft the consultative paper, will need to collect not only the different pieces of information regarding the crime but also, and above all, the different factors that make up the life history of the offender and that have, in some way, contributed to a specific criminal behaviour (Schioppetto, Monzani, and Ciappi 2019). First of all, the narrative criminologist must identify the object of his or her research, the subject suspected of committing the crime or the victim, depending on the role played in the trial, and especially the individual, unique and unrepeatable model of interpretation derived from the narrative of the alleged perpetrator's life story.…”