ABSTRACT

The best way to grasp the essence of death scene investigation (DSI) is to witness its application, called the psychological autopsy, by an expert forensic scientist/clinician. This remarkable book affords the opportunity to delve into the challenges that the forensic mental health specialist and public safety professional confront in DSI. Suicides, and often death, are complex, multidetermined events. People, whether police investigators or mental health professionals, are generally perplexed, and even confused, when they are confronted by the equivocal case. Was it a suicide? Homicide? Accident? These are critical questions. Dr. Leenaars shows that DSI is, however, not mysterious; the reader can learn the generally accepted, evidence-based protocols of the psychological autopsy. Illuminated by individual (idiographic) case studies and general (nomothetic) research, this definitive guide allows the investigator to uncover the bare bones of a suicide or death.

part One|95 pages

Nomothetic Study

part Two|77 pages

Methods

chapter 3|20 pages

The Nomothetic and Idiographic Approaches

chapter 4|20 pages

The Psychological Autopsy

chapter 6|10 pages

Problems with the PA

chapter 7|10 pages

How Many Informants are Needed?

chapter 8|7 pages

Benefits for Informants

part Three|128 pages

Idiographic Study

chapter 9|52 pages

A PA: A Barren Bones Investigation

chapter 10|22 pages

Documents in the Courtroom

chapter 11|52 pages

The PA in the Courtroom

part Four|30 pages

Discussion

chapter 12|18 pages

What I Have Learned

chapter 13|10 pages

Final Forgetting