Modus Operandi, Law, and Solvability
The importance of Modus Operandi in investigating violent
crimes and property crimes
Modus Operandi (MO) describes the pattern in which a
crime was committed. It is used by the investigators to link criminal cases
through understanding criminals learned MO behaviors, which gain sophistication
through experience (Douglas et al., 1992). Law enforcement agencies analyze MO
behaviors to investigate and link crimes to a particular offender or criminal
hence helping solve a case.
Modus Operandi is essential in the investigation of
violent crimes and property crimes. Investigators can connect different cases
by use of the similarities of the methods used by a criminal. In violent crimes
like burglary, some criminals use the same weapons to attack. Other criminals
have the same way to invade a house. During the investigation of a property
crime, investigators can use MO behavior to know the criminal who invaded a
particular home or place to steal property (Douglas et al., 1992).
Solvability factors are not under the control of the
investigators but can influence the course of the case. These factors prove
that not all cases can be solved. Some important details of investigation like
threats through emails can be deleted and thus destroying evidence. Solvability
factors have a significant impact on an investigation as these significant
details can help solve a case, or the loss of them before or during the
investigation may make it difficult to solve a case; thus, investigators ought
to use all case screening to get as much information as possible from the scene
of the crime(Coupe et al.,2019).
References
Douglas, J. E., & Munn, C. (1992). Violent crime
scene analysis: Modus operandi, signature, and staging. FBI L. Enforcement Bull., 61, 1.
Douglas, J. E., & Munn, C. (1992). Modus operandi and
the signature aspects of violent crime. Crime classification manual, 259-268.
Coupe, R. T., Ariel, B., & Mueller-Johnson, K.
(Eds.). (, 2019). Crime
solvability factors: Police resources and crime detection. Springer Nature.