Fashion conscious burglars? Testing the principles of offender profiling with footwear impressions recovered at domestic burglaries

Authors: Tonkin, Matthew1; Bond, John2; Woodhams, Jessica3

Source: Psychology, Crime and Law, Volume 15, Number 4, May 2009 , pp. 327-345(19)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract:

Traditionally, research on offender profiling has investigated the relationships between offender behaviour and offender characteristics. However, evidence about offender behaviour is not the only evidence available at a crime scene. This study extends previous collaborative research between forensic scientists and psychologists (e.g. Bond & Sheridan, Journal of Forensic Science, 52, 1122-1128, 2007) to investigate how forensic science can assist in the psychological process of offender profiling. Specifically, the potential utility of footwear impression evidence in the task of offender profiling is investigated. Using 155 domestic burglaries, the consistency and homology assumptions underlying offender profiling were tested. Evidence supportive of both assumptions is reported. A multiple regression analysis identified significant relationships between cost of footwear and employment status, age of offender, and the relative deprivation of his/her residence.

Keywords: criminal investigative analysis; serial; offences; crimes; linkage

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/10683160802244108

Affiliations: 1: Rampton Hospital, Retford, Nottinghamshire, UK 2: Northamptonshire Police, Wootton Hall, Northampton, UK 3: Department of Natural and Social Sciences, University of Gloucestershire, Cheltenham

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