

Contact: ATF Public Affairs Division
March 2011
(202) 648-8500 www.atf.gov
ATF Criminal
and Geographic Profiling Program
Purpose
Since 1986, the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) has had special agent criminal profilers
assigned to the FBI National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime (NCAVC)
in Quantico, Va. The NCAVC is a law
enforcement-oriented, behavioral science and resource center that offers
investigative support, research and training to law enforcement agencies
throughout the world. Currently, one ATF
behavioral profiler and one geographic profiler are assigned to the NCAVC.
Authority
President Ronald Reagan authorized the
NCAVC in June 1984. ATF’s basic
investigative jurisdiction in arson is delineated in 18 U.S.C., Chapter 40,
Section 844 (Title XI of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, as amended by
the Anti-Arson Act of 1982) and Section 846, and 26 U.S.C., Chapter 53 (Title
II of the Gun Control Act of 1968, as amended).
Mission
The primary mission of the behavioral
profiler is to support arson and bombing investigations in the identification,
arrest and prosecution of the offender by analyzing the behavior of the
offender. The geographic profiler uses a
relatively new investigative methodology that analyzes the locations of
connected crimes in an attempt to pinpoint the most probable area where an
offender would live. ATF is the only
federal agency to have a geographic profiler.
The profilers offer the following
services to the field:
·
Crime Analysis: Linking serial crimes and accurately
identifying crime scene behavior through analysis and interpretation.
·
Profiling: Developing the behavioral, personality and
biographical characteristics of an unknown offender.
·
Geographic Profiling: Analyzing linked crime-site locations
to determine a base location for the offender, generally his or her residence.
·
Investigative Strategy: Using behavioral science to offer suggestions
on unsolved investigations.
·
Interviewing Techniques: Developing interview strategies to
emotionally or psychologically motivate a specific individual to cooperate or
confess.
·
Search Warrant Information: Offering language for the probable
cause section of an affidavit.
·
Prosecution and Trial Strategies: Assisting the prosecution
team with arranging the order of witnesses as to maximize prosecutorial impact,
case presentation, defendant cross-examination and jury selection.
·
Expert Witness Testimony: Educating the court and jury of their
interpretation of crime scene behavior and evidence.
·
Statement Analysis: Analyzing a subject’s language, be it
verbal or written, to identify possible areas of deception, hidden meanings and
motivations, and to develop interview themes.
·
Media Strategies: Purposefully crafting language for release
to media outlets to motivate the offender to communicate with authorities or
elicit the cooperation of unknown witnesses or co-conspirators.
·
Threat Assessment: Assessing the actual potential of a
known individual to act violently in a particular situation, or developing a
psycho/sociolinguistic profile of an anonymous subject to assess the risk of
the subject carrying out threats.
ATF profilers undergo an intensive
two-year training program in behavioral science principles, crime scene
analysis and interpretation, forensic science and pathology. Upon completion of their training, the
profilers are certified by an independent organization, the International
Criminal Investigative Analysis Fellowship; there are fewer than 100 full
fellows worldwide.
The profilers continue to enhance
their own skills and specialties though a continuing education program
consisting of presentations from visiting lecturers, attendance at advanced
seminars and programs, and maintaining contact with the arson, explosives and
profiling community through membership in professional organizations.
ATF profilers provide training and
presentations to thousands of police and fire personnel each year on behavioral
and geographic profiling techniques. They
routinely lecture at the ATF and FBI National Academies, the International
Association of Arson Investigators, the International Association of Bomb
Technicians and Investigators, and various regional training schools. ATF profilers also provide training and
on-site operational assistance in 18 foreign countries.
ATF profilers offer their services to
any bona fide law enforcement or fire service agency in the United States and
worldwide. The profilers work on
research projects at the NCAVC to publish articles designed to educate law
enforcement. ATF profilers have
published articles and studies on bombing and arson profiling and threat
assessment in various publications.
In addition to ATF’s resources, the
profilers have access to the NCAVC’s expertise and information on violent
crime. While at the NCAVC, the profilers
have participated in research involving serial arsonists, bombers, rapists,
school shooters, workplace and domestic violent offenders, serial murderers and
persons who engage in threatening communications.
Because of the cooperative nature of
this program, ATF profilers have become recognized experts and specialists of
international repute in the areas of arson, bombing and geographic profiling, statement analysis and threat assessment. Some notable cases in which their skills have
been used include the bombing of a power plant during the Winter Olympics in
Salt Lake City; the Washington, D.C., sniper attacks; the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks and the Washington, D.C., serial arsons.
For more information about the
Criminal and Geographic Profiling program, go to www.atf.gov.
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