A Profile of Missing Persons: Some Key Findings for Police Officers

2.1 Introduction

The most publicised reminders of inaccurate risk classification by police officers dealing with missing person’s reports come from cases where the missing person was presumed to have runaway but was later found to have met with foul play. Fortunately, such occurrences are extremely rare. Despite this, there is still enormous pressure on the officer taking the initial missing persons report to ask the right questions, assess possible risk factors, make a judgement about what may have happened to the missing person and then allocate appropriate resources—all within a timely manner. For all police officers, and for every missing person report made, the task is complex (see Fyfe, Stevenson & Woolnough, 2014 for more on this). No research has been conducted in the area of misclassifications of risk when a new missing person report is received, so the true numbers remain unknown....

Read More!

Spatial And Social Profiling For Missing Person Investigations – Center For Evidence-based Crime Policy

Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy (CEBCP) – Scottish Institute for Police Research (SIPR) 2013 Joint Symposium and Congressional Briefing on Evidence-Based Policing

The CEBCP Symposium, Congressional Briefings and Special Meetings were held jointly with the Scottish Institute for Policing Research (SIPR) April 8-10, 2013 and was a major success! Over 250 people attended across the two days, representing over 100 different organizations. The focus was on translating police research into practice, and the Agenda and Presentations are listed below.

Additional Resource: Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy (CEBCP) – Scottish Institute for Police Research (SIPR)

Read More!

Profiling the Missing Person

“This is such an important area, there hasn’t been anything like it done in the world. There are no profiles of missing persons at all. Having a tool where there are strong indicators or markers for what’s happened to the missing person is a first.”

Dr Shaunagh Foy from Charles Sturt University (CSU) is talking about her ground breaking research into who goes missing and why. The NSW Police Force hope it will help solve missing persons cases more quickly.

Dr Foy divided a sample of missing persons into three categories; runaways, suicides and foul play. The amount of data varied enormously. “There were so many runaways but not much information. With the foul play and suicide cases there is a vast amount of information because they tended to be on-going investigations.”

Age and gender immediately emerged as obvious indicators. The under 18s tend to be runaways,...

Read More!