To analyse a trace or not? Evaluating the decision-making process in the criminal investigation
Autor: | Sonja Bitzer, Nicola Albertini, Olivier Ribaux, Olivier Delémont |
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Přispěvatelé: | Université de Lausanne - Ecole des Sciences Criminelles, UCL - SSH/JURI/PJES - Droit économique et social |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Forensic Science
Operations research Process (engineering) Computer science Decision Making Decision tree 01 natural sciences Criminal investigation Pathology and Forensic Medicine 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Humans 030216 legal & forensic medicine Decision-making Decision Trees Forensic Sciences 010401 analytical chemistry Evidential reasoning approach Data science 0104 chemical sciences Trace (semiology) Triage Suspect Law Decision analysis |
Zdroj: | Forensic Science International, Vol. 2016, no. 262, p. 1-10 |
ISSN: | 0379-0738 |
Popis: | In order to broaden our knowledge and understanding of the decision steps in the criminal investigation process, we started by evaluating the decision to analyse a trace and the factors involved in this decision step. This decision step is embedded in the complete criminal investigation process, involving multiple decision and triaging steps. Considering robbery cases occurring in a geographic region during a 2-year-period, we have studied the factors influencing the decision to submit biological traces, directly sampled on the scene of the robbery or on collected objects, for analysis. The factors were categorised into five knowledge dimensions: strategic, immediate, physical, criminal and utility and decision tree analysis was carried out. Factors in each category played a role in the decision to analyse a biological trace. Interestingly, factors involving information available prior to the analysis are of importance, such as the fact that a positive result (a profile suitable for comparison) is already available in the case, or that a suspect has been identified through traditional police work before analysis. One factor that was taken into account, but was not significant, is the matrix of the trace. Hence, the decision to analyse a trace is not influenced by this variable. The decision to analyse a trace first is very complex and many of the tested variables were taken into account. The decisions are often made on a case-by-case basis. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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