Smuggling Behavior: A Developmental Smuggling Model, and it was written by
Terrence G. Lichtenwald in 2003. There are many different factors that go into forensic psychology. There is a Developmental Smuggling Model (DSM). It includes behavioral characteristics about smuggling, and easily identifiable traits that aid examiners and prosecutors in predicting behavioral outcomes. The development of a smuggling profile is much more complex in comparison to profiles for perpetrators of other crimes. It is more complex due to the variability of smuggling behaviors and organizations.
Smuggling operations can also beat the multi-national …show more content…
The strengths of this are that the psychologists are able to place themselves in the minds of different types ofterrorists with different motives. This allows them to successfully predict what the perpetrator is going to do next, so that they can apprehend them and hopefully prevent a terror attack. The weaknesses are that it is very risky and very dangerous. The lives of millions of people depend on the forensic psychologists identifying the perpetrators so that law enforcement can then apprehend them Both articles relate to each other greatly. They are both about the psychology of two very different types of criminals. The psychology of drug smugglers and the psychology of terrorists are both two of the most complex types of criminal psychology. I find it very interesting how the psychologists put themselves in the mindset of the criminals in order to predict their next moves. The way that they use real drug smugglers to critique the
Developmental Smuggling Model is very interesting. Another very interesting thing