2 research outputs found
Linking serial sexual offences: Moving towards an ecologically valid test of the principles of crime linkage
Purpose
To conduct a test of the principles underpinning crime linkage (behavioural consistency and distinctiveness) with a sample more closely reflecting the volume and nature of sexual crimes with which practitioners work, and to assess whether solved series are characterized by greater behavioural similarity than unsolved series.
Method
A sample of 3,364 sexual crimes (including 668 series) was collated from five countries. For the first time, the sample included solved and unsolved but linkedâbyâDNA sexual offence series, as well as solved oneâoff offences. All possible crime pairings in the data set were created, and the degree of similarity in crime scene behaviour shared by the crimes in each pair was quantified using Jaccard's coefficient. The ability to distinguish sameâoffender and differentâoffender pairs using similarity in crime scene behaviour was assessed using Receiver Operating Characteristic analysis. The relative amount of behavioural similarity and distinctiveness seen in solved and unsolved crime pairs was assessed.
Results
An Area Under the Curve of .86 was found, which represents an excellent level of discrimination accuracy. This decreased to .85 when using a data set that contained oneâoff offences, and both oneâoff offences and unsolved crime series. Discrimination accuracy also decreased when using a sample composed solely of unsolved but linkedâbyâDNA series (AUC = .79).
Conclusions
Crime linkage is practised by police forces globally, and its use in legal proceedings requires demonstration that its underlying principles are reliable. Support was found for its two underpinning principles with a more ecologically valid sample
White paper on forensic child interviewing: research-based recommendations by the European Association of Psychology and Law
White paper on forensic child interviewing: research-based recommendations by the European Association of Psychology and La