Results 201 to 210 of about 35,179 (253)
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Hypnosis in criminal investigation

International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 1979
Abstract Hypnosis has been of value in providing investigative direction and, in the cases described, has led to the solutions of major crimes. The present authors have described the methodology of our team approach which was used in 23 cases comprised of 53 witnesses.
W S, Kroger, R G, Doucé
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Criminal Profiling and Criminal Investigation

Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 2010
A review of the development of criminal profiling demonstrates that profiling has never been a scientific process. It is essentially based on a compendium of common sense intuitions and faulty theoretical assumptions, and in practice appears to consist of little more than educated guesses and wishful thinking.
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Criminal Investigation

The Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles, 1966
Pseudonyms have been used for the victim and the thief in this ...
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Criminal Investigation

2018
The chapter explores the role of the public in discovering and investigating criminal offences in the Victorian city. It reveals that civilians (rather than the police) were responsible for discovering most offences, through practices of everyday surveillance in communities, homes, and workplaces. By contrast, the balance of initiative in investigating
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Criminal Investigation

2022
This chapter looks into the process and principles of a criminal investigation. It defines criminal investigation as an investigation conducted by police officers to ascertain whether a person should be charged with an offence. Central to the investigative process is the collection, collation, and evaluation of various categories of information ...
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Criminal Investigation

2016
Causality is not often disputed in criminal prosecutions because the nature of the exposure (eg, gunshot, knife, blunt trauma) is strongly associated with the injury outcome (penetrating wound, skull fracture, etc.) such that causality is determined as a matter of common sense.
Freeman, Michael D., Franklin, F.
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Criminal Investigation

The Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science, 1952
G. W. Wilton, Hans Gross, Robert Howe
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Criminal Investigation

The American Journal of Police Science, 1931
Adloph O. Knoll, Charles W. Fricke
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