Types of Criminal Profiling
According to Bartol & Bartol (2017), there are five broad categories of criminal profiling, but they are not mutually exclusive and are frequently used in tandem with one another to aid investigations. The first type of criminal profiling covered in the text is commonly referred to as psychological profiling: the profiling of known individuals like suspects. The goal of psychological profiling is risk or threat assessment: to determine how serious a person may be if they have threatened violence. Similarly, psychological profiling can be used on persons who have been flagged for violating social norms or who have acted out. As helpful as psychological profiling can be to investigators, it is important to note that the process can be misleading and even harmful to investigations (Sample, 2010). Psychological profiling methods are not necessarily grounded in research, and can lead to spurious results and prejudicial data.
The second type of profiling Bartol & Bartol (2017) cover is suspect-based. Also known as prospective profiling, suspect-based profiling uses acutorial methods and statistics to help narrow down a list of potential features or characteristics that would help investigators identify potential threats. Unfortunately, suspect-based profiling frequently involves racial profiling. As Kocsis &...
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