Lord777
Professional
- Messages
- 2,579
- Reaction score
- 1,513
- Points
- 113
Searchers should take into account that in the manufacture of caches and various storage facilities, criminals in some cases take into account a number of psychological factors. These include the following:
1. calculation for the appearance of the factor of fatigue and automatism. For example, the document you are looking for is often placed in a book in the middle of the bookshelf. The calculation in this case is based on the fact that the books will be examined from one or the other edge of the shelf, and by the middle of the shelf there will already be a certain automatism, fatigue, in which every page will not turn over.
2. calculation of disgust (objects are buried in manure, lowered into a latrine, etc.).
3. expectation of tact and other noble motives on the part of the person conducting the search (hiding objects in the bed of a seriously ill patient, in the bed of a small child, in the grave of close relatives, etc.).
4. deliberate negligence of concealing the object (leaving it in plain sight).
5. distraction of attention by making double caches. The expectation is that when the first empty cache is found, the rest of the same cache will not be examined.
6. calculating on the organization of a conflict during a search in order to divert attention to hide the desired object.
To conduct a search, it is advisable to install lighting that creates better conditions for the perception of the situation than that which is usually used by the person whose apartment is being searched. This makes it possible to detect signs and traces that the searched person did not see when hiding the object under normal lighting.
The searcher's attention is negatively affected by his fatigue. When searches are lengthy and physically demanding, rest breaks should be taken. It should be borne in mind that the searched are often deliberately calculating fatigue.
Often, the items you are looking for are found at the very last moment. Therefore, it is important to keep the "creative enthusiasm" until the end of the search. Lack of confidence in success has an extremely negative effect on search activity. Having lost hope, it is easy to slip into a superficial and formal search.
1. calculation for the appearance of the factor of fatigue and automatism. For example, the document you are looking for is often placed in a book in the middle of the bookshelf. The calculation in this case is based on the fact that the books will be examined from one or the other edge of the shelf, and by the middle of the shelf there will already be a certain automatism, fatigue, in which every page will not turn over.
2. calculation of disgust (objects are buried in manure, lowered into a latrine, etc.).
3. expectation of tact and other noble motives on the part of the person conducting the search (hiding objects in the bed of a seriously ill patient, in the bed of a small child, in the grave of close relatives, etc.).
4. deliberate negligence of concealing the object (leaving it in plain sight).
5. distraction of attention by making double caches. The expectation is that when the first empty cache is found, the rest of the same cache will not be examined.
6. calculating on the organization of a conflict during a search in order to divert attention to hide the desired object.
To conduct a search, it is advisable to install lighting that creates better conditions for the perception of the situation than that which is usually used by the person whose apartment is being searched. This makes it possible to detect signs and traces that the searched person did not see when hiding the object under normal lighting.
The searcher's attention is negatively affected by his fatigue. When searches are lengthy and physically demanding, rest breaks should be taken. It should be borne in mind that the searched are often deliberately calculating fatigue.
Often, the items you are looking for are found at the very last moment. Therefore, it is important to keep the "creative enthusiasm" until the end of the search. Lack of confidence in success has an extremely negative effect on search activity. Having lost hope, it is easy to slip into a superficial and formal search.