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Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 10 B 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 10 B 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   In the spring of 2005, the juvenile, using a portable wireless Internet access device, arranged with one or more associates to place a bomb threat to a school in Massachusetts and local emergency services, requiring the response of several emergency response units to the school on two occasions and the school’s evacuation on one.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 10 A 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 10 A 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Investigative Considerations The targeted computers’ logs should be analyzed in an attempt to determine the Internet Protocol addresses of the sending computers.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 B 42

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    Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 B 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Caleb’s father took him to day care and at that time noticed the marking on the face looked like a handprint. The father called the pediatrician, who told him to take the child to the hospital. At the hospital, the father told the doctor that Caleb was walking and falling a lot, but he had never noticed him having bruises in the past.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 B 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 B 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   In 1955 he joined the U.S. Army. While in the army, he fell in love with a fellow soldier and suffered another nervous breakdown. He was sent to Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, D.C., for psychiatric treatment. While in the hospital, he was given a weekend pass in honor of his twenty-first birthday in 1956. Jackson spent his birthday going to New York, where he attempted suicide with an overdose of sleeping pills.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 A 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 9 A 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   One woman wrote to a hospital that bad medicine she received as a patient caused her to get sicker at home. The hospital wrote back denying her claim. When she retaliated by writing to a U.S. senator, he responded by siding with the hospital.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 E42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 E42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Crime Scene Indicators Frequently Noted. The crime scene can be the of- fenders’ residence, vehicle, group meeting hall, or a hotel or motel. There are usually many locations. The pornographic material is usually hidden in the residences of the offenders. The most recent crime scene will usually have the camera needed to create the pornography as well as props, collateral material, and goods used to bribe the victims.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 D42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 D42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Offender Characteristics Joe, bright and charming, had a long history of nonsexual crimes including breaking and entering, larcenies, and motor vehicle offenses. He grew up in the inner city.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 C42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 C42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Eugene’s childhood, juvenile, and young adult history of instability, low frustration tolerance, acting out, and delinquent behavior underscores his impulsive lifestyle.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 B42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 B42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Outcome Just prior to trial, the offender plea-bargained the charges. He received five years’ probation.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 A42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 8 A42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Blood is drawn into a sterile test tube for blood grouping purposes. A minimum of 5 milliliters is recommended, preferably without the inclusion of a chemical anticoagulant or preservative.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 C 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 C 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   Outcome The suspected arsonist confessed to the police during an initial interview and was convicted of twelve of the twenty-three counts of arson. He was sentenced to thirty years in prison.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 B 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 B 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITIO N   If evidence of fuel or air explosion (gasoline vapor and ambient air mixture at sufficient temperature) at the scene, check emergency rooms for patients with burn injuries (this type of explosion does not occur in accidental fires). Determine condition of utilities (gas, electric) as soon as possible (eliminate gas, the common accidental cause of fires).

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 A 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 7 A 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   Crime Scene Indicators Frequently Noted. The targeted properties are often adjacent to outdoor areas that have a reputation as a hangout or place of frequent parties. The offender often will use materials on hand. If incendiary devices are used, they usually have a time-delay mechanism. Offenders in the eighteen to thirty age group are more prone to use accelerants. Matches and cigarettes are frequently used to ignite vegetation fires.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 I 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 I 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   Socioeconomic. This murder results from an intense hostility and aversion toward another individual or group who represents a certain ethnic, social, economic, or religious group. This category includes hate groups such as the neo-Nazi skinheads, the KKK, and groups that prey on gays and lesbians. Extremist group murder can rarely be isolated to a single typology. Classification is based on the predominant motive.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 H 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 H 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   The majority are drug users and abusers. Because the majority are unemployed, they typically re- side with someone on whom they are financially dependent. Nearly three- quarters are unmarried, and nearly half live with family members. Their average is twenty-seven.  

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 G 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 G 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION Defining Characteristics Victimology. Sadistic murder victimology has some similarities to the victimology described in classification 131. Sexual sadists focus on victims who are white, female adults who are strangers. The victimology of this crime may include males, and multiple offenders have been known to prey on both women and men and may also tar- get children, but exclusive victimization of children is less frequent. Blacks are preyed on to a much lesser extent.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 F 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 F 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   Evidence presented at the trial showed that Jones had ordered three more bottles of succinylcholine from the Kerrville Pharmacy and had signed Dr. Holland’s name to receipts. In addition, Chelsea’s babysitter testified that she observed Jones injecting something into the intravenous line as the child was being loaded into the ambulance for the trip to San Antonio. When she questioned Jones about it, Jones replied it was simply something to relax Chelsea. This struck the babysitter as odd, since Chelsea was already resting quietly. This alleged relaxant had not been ordered by either Dr. Holland or the emergency department physician.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 E 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 E 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   Most of the injuries were chest wounds that damaged the heart, lungs, liver, and large thoracic blood vessels. Several of the victims were killed with one shot. This precise targeting of the vital organs (which in some cases, necessitated the use of scope) was another factor that revealed a proficient and experienced offender. There were a few cases of multiple wounds, especially when racially mixed victims were involved; Franklin kept shooting until they did not move. The accuracy was faultless; thirty-two bullets were fired at these victims without one miss.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 D 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 D 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   Victimology Wesbecker’s victims were all secondary targets since the primary targets of his aggression were the company’s administrators, who were not in their offices at the time of the assault. His victims were fellow employees, yet on that particular day, Wesbecker considered them to be enemies because they symbolized the corporation’s organizational structure.

Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 C 42

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  Crime Classification Manual Part II Chapter 6 C 42 A STANDARD SYSTEM FOR INVESTIGATING AND CLASSIFYING VIOLENT CRIMES SECOND EDITION   There are often indicators of undoing. This is the killer’s way of expressing remorse or the desire to undo the murder. Undoing is demonstrated by the offender’s washing of the victim and the weapon. The body may be covered up, but it is not for concealment purposes. Washing or redressing the body, moving the body from the death scene, and positioning it on a sofa or bed with the head on a pillow are all expressions of undoing. The attitude and emotional state of the family members present at the crime scene can offer insight into the victim-offender relationship. The offender is often at the scene when law enforcement or emergency medical personnel arrive and often makes incriminating statements.