This excerpt of “The Consult” podcast (Profiling Concepts -11/12/21) three former FBI Profilers discuss the idea of staging/moving a body. It relates to the theories posted over the past week -whether the remains got there via misadventure or were intentionally placed there by an unknown person.
“Staging often occurs when the offender believes that if the true nature of the crime were discovered, they'd be prioritized as a suspect. And staging is really high risk.
As an offender, you're spending more time at a crime scene, which is counterintuitive. You know, your contact with a crime scene, both in duration and in amount, it puts you at a rising level of risk. The longer you spend at a crime scene and the more that you're in physical contact with the crime scene, the more likely it is that you'll be apprehended.
Yet an individual who engages in staging has decided that if they don't take this extra time to put things in place that will create a different impression than what really occurred. If they don't do this, they're going to be caught. They have to increase their risk and go against what would normally be good common sense for a criminal is to minimize your contact with a crime scene.
They have to have a little bit more involvement with the crime scene with the hope that investigators or whoever comes upon this crime scene will not see the real motive […]”
“If the offender has no connection to the victim, they would most likely flee immediately and avoid having continued contact with the crime scene. Moving a body.
Think about it. You've killed someone and then you're going to spend extra time putting them into the trunk of your car and driving. I mean, imagine the feeling of doing something like that.
You wouldn't do it if you didn't need to. If you didn't think there was going to be a connection made if the police saw the scene for what it was.
There is a term called no body homicide where someone is thought to be missing and lo and behold, it turns out that they're actually the victims of a homicide. And just as you said, Julia, if the body is obscured, then someone had an extreme interest in either preventing or delaying the discovery of the murder and would rather have the impression that this victim disappeared. And if they disappeared, then there are more suspects or countless suspects that it could have been if they were foul play.
“When these things happen and it's discovered that, in fact, that it is a murder, almost in any case I can think of, it is someone who is intimately involved with this victim and knows that the discovery of their status as a murdered person will prioritize them as a suspect.”
From The Consult: Real FBI Profilers: Profiling Concepts, Nov 12, 2021
Podcast Episode · The Consult: Real FBI Profilers · 11/12/2021 · 51m
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