Teens of Profiling
By Teens of Profiling
Teens of ProfilingAug 23, 2020
202: Trichology, the Study of Hair
201: What is Forensic Science? Observations and Eyewitnesses
by the end of this episode, you will have learned:
-What process our brains go through when we are taking in information
-How eyewitness accounts can be shaped
-Why witness accounts vary from person to person
-What forensic scientists do
-Why observation is important using a case study
107: Overview of the Criminal Justice System
by the end of this lesson, you will have learned:
-How crime is classified in the system
-The difference between a jail and a prison
-About the three branches of the system: enforcement, courts, and corrections
-About cash bail and how it affects the lower class
106: What is Criminology? Theories, Social Relativity, and Statitstics
By the end of this lesson, you will have learned:
-What crime is from law and social perspectives
-What criminologists do and why they're essential
-The two major types of criminal theories and how they're formed
-What social relativity is and why it is important
-How crimes are assessed, gathered, and reported
105: The Seven S's of Investigation
By the end of this lesson, you will have learned:
-Why the JonBenet Ramsey case remains unsolved
-Who actively partakes in the crime scene investigation
-The seven S's of crime scene analysis and why each is crucial to the investigation
104: What You Need to Know About Evidence
By the end of this lesson, you will have learned:
-How to classify evidence with the four major classifications (Physical vs. Nonphysical, Real vs. Demonstrative, Individual vs. Class, Known vs. Unknown)
-The importance of each classification in an investigation
-How investigators decide what is evidence
-How to use positive and negative controls when dealing with evidence
103: Crime Assessment: MO, Signature, and Staging
by the end of this lesson, you will have learned:
-What MO's are and why they are important in a crime
-What a signature is and why it is important in a crime
-What staging is and why it is important in a crime
-How to find the "red flags" of staging
-The key differences between an MO and a signature that can make-or-break a case
102: Input and Classification of Crime
by the end of the lesson, you will have learned:
-what happens and what is essential in the first stage of profiling
-how to classify murder cases
-how profilers determine risk level and motive early in a case
-what profilers are not allowed to have when creating a profile
-what makes a high and low-risk victim-
-the common motives for murder
101: What is Criminal Profiling?
by the end of the episode, you will have learned:
-Why a Criminal Profiler can be Essential to Investigations
-What a Criminal Profiler is
-The Difference Between a Psychological Profiler and a Criminal Profiler