enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Reid technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reid_technique

    The Reid technique consists of a three-phase process beginning with fact analysis, followed by the behavior analysis interview (a non-accusatory interview designed to develop investigative and behavioral information), [9] followed, when appropriate, by the Reid nine steps of interrogation. According to process guidelines, individuals should be ...

  3. PEACE method of interrogation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEACE_method_of_interrogation

    The PEACE method of investigative interviewing is a five stage [1] [2] process in which investigators try to build rapport and allow a criminal suspect to provide their account of events uninterrupted, before presenting the suspect with any evidence of inconsistencies or contradictions.

  4. Cognitive interview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_interview

    The cognitive interview (CI) is a method of interviewing eyewitnesses and victims about what they remember from a crime scene.Using four retrievals, the primary focus of the cognitive interview is to make witnesses and victims of a situation aware of all the events that transpired.

  5. Investigative interviewing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investigative_interviewing

    Thus, investigative interviewing contrasts pervasive interrogations techniques aimed at making the suspect break down and confess. [4] The stark difference between these two approaches to police interviewing has led some authors to argue that the term "interrogation" should be scrapped altogether as it is inherently coercive and aimed at ...

  6. Interrogation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interrogation

    A police interrogation room in Switzerland. Interrogation (also called questioning) is interviewing as commonly employed by law enforcement officers, military personnel, intelligence agencies, organized crime syndicates, and terrorist organizations with the goal of eliciting useful information, particularly information related to suspected crime.

  7. Forensic psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_psychology

    Forensic psychology is the application of scientific knowledge and methods (in relation to psychology) to assist in answering legal questions that may arise in criminal, civil, contractual, or other judicial proceedings.

  8. Investigative psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investigative_psychology

    Investigative Psychology stresses that the results of scientific psychology can contribute to many aspects of civilian and criminal investigation, including the full range of crimes from burglary to terrorism, not just those extreme crimes of violence that have an obvious psychopathic component.

  9. FBI method of profiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBI_method_of_profiling

    One of the first American profilers was FBI agent John E. Douglas, who was also instrumental in developing the behavioral science method of law enforcement. [3]The ancestor of modern profiling, R. Ressler (FBI), considered profiling as a process of identifying all the psychological characteristics of an individual, forming a general description of the personality, based on the analysis of the ...