Under the skin of Offender Profiling

This is the first of two books that Britton has written giving an autobiographical view on his journery through his career as a Clinical Psychologist and how he got involved with offender profiling.
This book gives a fantastic incite into Offender Profiling and some of the things that are taken into consideration when creating a profile of an offender. Also Paul Britton allows us to glimpse at some of the cases that he’s had in his consultation room over the years.
A fantastic book for anyone interesting in Offender Profiling. It’s not required reading for any of the course, and in some places can give quite graphic details about murders and rapes so reader-beware!
From the back of the book:
The autobiography of Paul Britton, one of the foremost offender profilers in the world. What he searches for at the scene of a crime are not fingerprints, fibres or blood stains, he looks for the “mind trace” left behind by those responsible, the psychological characteristics that can help the police to identify and understand the nature of the perpetrator. Over the past dozen years, Britton has assisted the police in over 100 cases involving murder, rape, arson, extortion and kidnapping. Among them were the murder of Jamie Bulger on a lonely railway line in Liverpool, the abduction of baby Abbie Humphries, the brutal slaying of Rachel Nickell on Wimbledon Common and the notorious “House of Horror” in Gloucester. He has helped to solve some of Britain’s most baffling cases, and has also advised the FBI and the Russian Ministry of the Interior.
All-in-all a great read and a bit of a page turner, but nothing here that really relates too much to the profiling of today… more in brief history of Profiling in the UK from Paul Brittons own perspective. A superb book to stretch the more able students or for those who want to know a little more about clinical / forensic psychology and the origiains of offender profiling. Available from Amazon for £5.99.
Psychology in a nutshell?