Intelligence Technology Helps Maximize Resources in Murder
Investigation
Police in Warwickshire, England, used Watson® from Xanalys,
to track down the killer of 15-year-old Naomi Smith, found
dead on Aynsley Common, Nuneaton, England. It enabled police
to prioritize suspects and from a potential list of 800, find
a DNA match within the first 15 samples to be taken.
Watson was used to analyze data from the force's major investigations
database, HOLMES (Home Office Large Major Enquiry System),
apply offender profiles, prioritize suspects and designate
resources. This resulted not only in the conviction of Naomi's
killer, but in large savings in manpower and cost.
Naomi's body was discovered by her father and her best friend
under a children's slide in a recreation ground near her home.
They had gone out to search for her when she failed to return
home from posting a letter. She had been viciously attacked;
her throat had been cut and there were bite-marks on her body.
The offender profile was completed by a forensic psychologist
who compiled a series of attributes that would point to potential
suspects. He concluded that the killer would probably be male
and living within half a mile of the murder scene. It was
determined that he was likely to be aged between 15 and 29,
and probably knew the victim by sight. The psychologist also
anticipated he would be a regular visitor to the recreation
ground, would have no steady girlfriend and was likely to
be known to police in connection with crimes of a sexual or
violent nature.
Warwickshire's Intelligence Research Unit had already fixed
on an area within a half-mile radius of the scene, and set
out to identify every male aged between 15 and 25, together
with anyone outside this radius who frequented the Aynsley
Common area. House-to-house teams used special questionnaires
to identify and cross-check between households. The information
gathered was fed back into the Intelligence Unit and then
entered into specially created categories in the HOLMES database.
This data was then analyzed by Watson, with the offender profile
in mind, aligning 'scores' for potential suspects: the higher
the number of attributes matching the offender profile, the
higher the suspect appeared on the police list.
Further matching attributes gathered during the investigation
were added to Watson to develop a visual representation. As
well as highlighting links and graphically displaying information,
Watson also enabled police analysts to question the data and
identify links otherwise unseen, thereby uncovering the information
needed to find Naomi's killer. Heading up the Intelligence
Unit, Detective Sergeant Jez Grew said: "This is the
best approach I've yet encountered, because everything was
inclusive and nothing was exclusive. Traditionally, you might
have had the same list of 17 attributes, selected one of those
attributes as a start-point for the search and, as a result,
passed over a culprit who had all the other attributes except
the start-point attribute. Watson information is far more
relevant to eliminating suspects according to all the co-ordinates
set for the investigation."
The real break in the case came when the Forensic Science
Service successfully obtained a third-party DNA profile —
a DNA trace that could be used to identify the killer - from
the bite marks found on Naomi's body. Police would have been
faced with the task of obtaining DNA mouth-swab samples from
some 800 young men. And at a significant cost per sample,
plus the cost in resources, time and manpower required to
collect the samples, the expense would have been prohibitive.
However, using the Watson analysis results from the offender
profile; police were able to determine which potential suspects
they should test first, i.e. those with the highest number
of matching attributes. The killer's DNA was identified in
the first 15 swabs to be taken.
Detective Superintendent Bayliss said: "Watson is unique
in its capability to analyze bulk information — imported
from HOLMES — in terms of relevant lines of enquiry.
In this case, it eliminated those lines of enquiry using less
manpower and in a shorter timescale than previously required.
We have found no other software that achieves this so effectively.
In short, Watson saved us time, money and resources."
|