Building Profiles
Criminal profiling begins at the crime scene and in the interrogation room.
These moments reveal behaviour under pressure and provide critical insight into deception, motive, and personality or conflict of values. Usually, an interrogator, most often a detective or trained investigator, conducts the confrontation, while criminal profilers and behavioural analysts observe.
Setup of the Interrogation Room The environment is deliberately chosen based on what is known about the suspect. Sometimes the room is designed to make the suspect comfortable, encouraging openness and cooperation. Other times, a more intimidating environment is used to elicit stress responses. Observers capture subtle cues in behaviour, emotional shifts, and reactions, giving critical insight for profiling. Modern interrogations often use cameras instead of two-way mirrors, which prevents distractions and allows suspects to forget they are being observed, preserving authentic reactions.
The Reid Technique Developed in 1947 by John E. Reid and formalized in the 1950s, the Reid Technique is one of the most widely used interrogation methods, particularly in the United States. Its structured framework moves a suspect from denial toward admission while generating extensive behavioural data valuable for criminal profiling.
The technique relies on identifying behavioural and psychological stress, often referred to as hot spots: inconsistencies, emotional shifts, defensive reactions, or changes in speech, posture, and facial expression when sensitive topics arise. Criminal profilers observe these moments as indicators of pressure points, value conflicts, and motive.
The Reid Technique relies on nine steps, designed to gradually move a suspect from denial toward admission while revealing behavioural cues useful for profiling:
Positive Confrontation: The interrogator confidently states that the evidence indicates the suspect’s involvement.
Theme Development: Moral, emotional, or situational explanations are presented to make it easier for the suspect to rationalize the truth.
Handling Denials: Early denials are interrupted or discouraged to prevent the suspect from reinforcing a false narrative.
Overcoming Objections: Objections are reframed as reasons why the suspect may have committed the crime.
Procurement and Retention of Attention: The suspect’s focus is maintained through psychological and physical engagement.
Handling Passive Mood: Once resistance weakens, the interrogator gently guides the suspect toward admitting involvement.
Presenting an Alternative Question: The suspect is offered two options, both implying guilt but framed to encourage confession.
Developing the Details of the Admission: The suspect provides specific details about their involvement.
Converting the Admission to a Confession: The verbal admission is documented, recorded, or formalized in writing.
Profiler Observations During the Reid Technique: • Pressure points • Hot spots • Behavioural shifts under accusation • Value conflicts revealed during confrontation • Inconsistencies in narrative or detail • Attempts to control or redirect the narrative
Other Interrogation Techniques
PEACE Model: Rapport-based interview emphasizing preparation, engagement, open questioning, and evaluation. Observers assess baseline behaviour, emotional control, and cognitive effort.
Cognitive Interrogation: Helps suspects reconstruct events in detail. Inconsistencies and stress indicators highlight deception or rehearsed narratives.
Kinesic and Behavioural Analysis: Focuses on posture, gestures, facial expressions, eye movements, and speech patterns. Profilers compare these cues to baseline behaviour.
Strategic Use of Silence: Pauses create psychological pressure; how suspects fill gaps can reveal guilt, confidence, or fear of exposure.
Rapport-Based Interrogation: Highly trained interrogators build trust quickly, allowing natural responses, emotional cues, and moral reasoning to surface. Profilers observe both suspect and interrogator.
Theme Development and Narrative Framing: Presenting morally or emotionally justifiable narratives tests how suspects respond. Profilers observe rationalization, acceptance, rejection, or manipulation.
Baseline Comparison and Statement Analysis: Comparing neutral conversation to crime discussion shows shifts in language, tone, and detail, helping detect deception, distancing, or ownership of actions.
Manipulative Rapport and Strategic Disruption: Suspects may employ false rapport or intimate cues, such as feigned vulnerability or physical gestures, to influence an interrogator’s emotional alignment. Investigators counter this by introducing another officer or altering the interrogation dynamic, interrupting manipulative intimacy and restoring objective behavioural assessment.
Setting Motion in Profiling Observers watch both the suspect and the interrogator interaction, noting real-time reactions, emotional shifts, and any slips in values or conflict. Every verbal cue, pause, contradiction, and emotional reaction contributes to constructing a behavioural profile, anticipating future behaviour, and preparing evidence for the courtroom, including information relevant for the victim’s lawyer.
Later, the profiler may conduct an interview to clarify motives, gather context, or explore psychological patterns, while the interrogation remains led by the trained detective or investigator.
It's a pivot moment in the investigation, with skilled interrogators, behavioural analysts, and criminal profilers present, ensuring nothing is overlooked and creating a complete understanding of the crime and the criminal while guiding sentencing, parole decisions, and risk assessment.















