Vote For Your Favorite Cop Thriller

When I’m not busy writing, promoting, or researching my next novel, I love to watch cop thrillers.  It’s a great escape and you never know where your next idea will come from.   

I’ve put together some of my favorite cop thrillers and I would love to find out if you agree.  I made sure there were some old as well as new films included.  Like, The Departed (photo above) of Leonardo DiCaprio and Jack Nicholson.  Great scene! 

Vote for your favorite! 

If you don’t like any of them, then leave a comment with your favorite picks. 

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Offender’s Signature vs. Modus Operandi

Sometimes it’s confusing for people to differentiate between a criminal’s signature versus the criminal’s modus operandi when they commit a specific crime. 

Are they the same?

No, they are distinctly different because one feeds on emotional needs, while the other is a procedure. 

Modus operandi is the method that is used to commit the crime and signature behavior is what helps to serve the criminal’s emotional and psychological needs.

A modus operandi or MO refers to the method or procedure that a criminal uses when committing a crime.  It comes from the Latin phrase meaning “mode of operation”.  Basically, all criminals have a method of operation that encompasses the habits, techniques, and any peculiarities of behavior.  The method can stay the same, but it will often grow and change over time as the criminal becomes more skillful at committing a specific crime. 

If an investigator or detective establishes the MO in a homicide case, they would refer to the forensic analysis of the crime scene. 

Here are a few examples of a criminal’s MO:

  • The type of restraints used on the victim, wound patterns, and type of fiber of the restraints.
  • Type of weapon used, such as knife, blunt object, or gun.
  • Tape found on victim that was used to bind hands and cover mouth.
  • Tools used to gain entry to victim’s home.
  • Attack could be from when the victim exits their vehicle or walks through a dark parking garage.
  • Time of day that the offender chooses to commit the crime, such as nighttime or early morning. 
  • Lack of fingerprints that would indicate the offender used gloves.

All of these examples constitute a criminal’s MO in committing a crime.

A signature refers to the distinctive behaviors that help to serve the criminal’s psychological and emotional needs.  Physical evidence helps to establish the signature behaviors of the criminal who committed the specific crime. 

Again, the investigator or detective for a homicide case would refer to the forensic analysis for this type of evidence in regard to the signature behaviors at the crime scene. 

Here are a few examples of criminal signatures:

  • Level of injury to the victim, minimal or excessive.
  • Specific location or sequence to the criminal act.
  • Ejaculation, urination, and/or defecation at the crime scene.
  • Specific type of weapon used.
  • Personal items taken from victim.
  • Specific type of victim targeted that refers to age, race, occupation, or other physical characteristics. 
  • Anything specifically left at the crime scene, such as a note or object.

An easy way to remember the difference is that a criminal’s MO refers to the way the crime is committed and the signature is what is beyond that it takes to commit the specific crime. 

To read more about criminal modus operandi or signature behaviors, check out these books:

Crime Classification Manual

By John E. Douglas, Ann W. Burgess, Allen G. Burgess and Robert K. Ressler

Crime Reconstruction

By Jerry Chisum & Brent E. Turvey

Criminal Profiling

By Brent Turvey

The Anatomy of Motive

By John Douglas and Mark Olshaker

Blog: www.authorjenniferchase.com/
Website: www.jenniferchase.vpweb.com/
Crime Watch Blog: www.emilystonecrimewatch.wordpress.com/
Book & Crime Talk: www.blogtalkradio.com/jennifer-chase/
Books: Compulsion = Dead Game = Silent Partner = Screenwriting

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Award Winning Thriller Dead Game Visited Some Great Blogs Today

Synopsis:

In this Video Game, ‘Game Over’ Means You’re Dead

In her independent efforts to catch child killers, Emily Stone discovers the evidence that the cops can’t—or won’t—uncover. Now, this covert investigator is back on the hunt for the world’s most sick and twisted murderers. But even with help from ex-police detective Rick Lopez, this time she’s facing her most dangerous opponent yet.

The headlines in the San Jose Mercury News blare updates on a serial killer who seems able to slaughter with impunity. Men, women—it doesn’t matter; the victims serve only to satisfy a perverted need to kill.  The killer watches the moment of death on multiple computer screens, over and over again. The only connection is that they’re all devotees of the latest video-game craze—a sophisticated brain-puzzler called EagleEye.

When the killer goes after Lopez’s law-enforcement mentor, Lopez and Stone decide to give the cops a little extra, unsolicited help. What follows takes them deep inside a shocking high-tech world, a kind of social-networking community for serial killers. But when they start getting too close to the truth, all hell’s going to break loose.

Now, Stone and Lopez become the killer’s next target as Stone must make a difficult decision to leave the ones she loves in an all-or-nothing effort for survival. Can they stay alive long enough to blow the whistle on this unlikely perpetrator?

 

Available in paperback and ebook (99 cents) formats at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, and most book retailers.

Dead Game visited these two great blogs today:

Indie Snippets

1st Author Interviews

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Obsessed with Books at an Early Age

Many of my early childhood memories involve all of the great books that I had the opportunity to read.  I was a typical kid who loved to be outdoors whenever I could, but I loved my weekly visits to the local library.  I would grab books, stack them high, and take them up to the librarian.  They would be books about animals, adventures, mysteries, and anything else that grabbed my attention.  I loved books!

 As I got a little bit older, my book choices were always about solving mysteries and going on great adventures.  The Adventures of Pippi Longstocking, Nancy Drew Mysteries, and The Secret Garden definitely made a lasting impression on me.  From that point, I read The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, The Hobbit, The Count of Monte Cristo, and many other timeless classics.      

I had always dreamed of one day writing a book of my own and it was in the back of my mind as I ventured through the ups and downs of life.  There were so many thriller and suspense authors that inspired and influenced me to write my first novel, such as Dean Koontz, Stephen King, Jeffrey Deaver, John Connelly, John Grisham, and many others.  You could say that all of these experiences with books in my life paved the way for me to become an author. 

Reading at an early age and being read to has some amazing benefits for children and for the continuing development that will affect the rest of their lives.  It has been established that just reading 20 minutes a day aloud to young children can help to strengthen relationships, promotes curiosity, encourages better listening and language skills, and overall helps to establish a strong reading foundation.  Just by reading aloud together, a child’s reading skill can be mastered over time.

“The magic of this process is the simplicity of action”, stated by The Children’s Reading Foundation.  They also suggest making the reading time together an important and happy part of life.  A child’s brain develops faster during the early years and acts like a sponge that soaks up information with enthusiasm and the willingness to learn.  Build upon and nurture that wonderful gift of reading.  

It has been suggested that the best time for children to start learning to read is when they are very young, generally at the preschool level.

Here are some tips for laying a strong reading foundation for children:

  • Build a new vocabulary through books, experiences, and interactions.
  • Observe others reading and enjoying books.
  • Recognize that words are made up of sounds.
  • Experience and pretend to read familiar books, poems, and alphabet books.
  • Enjoy and discuss a variety of books that are read aloud by others.

I have to wonder if I didn’t love books and reading at an early age if I would be so curious and enthusiastic about forensic science and criminal psychology.  Makes you wonder?

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Blog Author Interview — Wise Words

I was featured today on a wonderful book blog: Wise Words   This blog features authors in the spotlight, interviews, and guest posts.  It’s all about books!

You can read my interview here: Author Jennifer Chase 

 

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What Makes a Terrifying Villain?

Why serial killers? 

I’ve been asked this question many times about my thrillers.  Why write about serial killers?  The very words “serial killer” scares me.  It conjures up images of a madman wielding an ax coming after me in the dead of night and help is nowhere to be found.  Or, running out of gas on a deserted country road and the nearest town is twenty miles away and there’s no signal for my cell phone… 

Seriously, images like this run through my mind as I begin to create a serial killer for any of my stories.  I have to dig deep into my own psyche to find what scares me most and incorporate that image and feeling onto the page of a thriller novel.

For Dead Game, I wanted to create a villain or serial killer that hunts for his unsuspecting victims because of the type of technology that they used and the video games they played.  I found that to be frightening.  We all feel safe when we’re on the computer or using our cell phone. 

I wanted to leave that lingering question for readers… What if someone was watching or stalking me because of the technology I’m using?

What makes for a terrifying villain in a thriller?  For me, it’s the unknown.  Fear is in the darkness, the loneliness, and the unfamiliar.  It’s also the thought that there are people lurking out there searching for victims right now. 

Here’s a brief excerpt of Samuel’s psychopathic mind from Dead Game:

The mornings were easier to fight the uncontrollable urge to run and hide, not being seen by the enemy that was always lurking just out of view. 

The evenings were all together different and were the time that posed the impulse to torture and kill.  The menacing shadow that  relentlessly followed him during the day was finally resting and content with his dark thoughts. 

It was still only in the midmorning hours and the urges that possessed Samuel were real and immediate.  He hated the feeling of not being in control, or frightened about the prospect of being a potential victim himself. 

He tried to push the memories of his childhood from his unbalanced mind.  He was extremely poor growing up, but that wasn’t by his choice.  His father drank and would wallow in his self-pity and then pump up his own ego by beating only Samuel, never his brothers or younger sister.  He was the family chosen victim and there was nothing he could do about it.  He suffered unspeakable savage beatings, broken bones, and numerous head injuries.  He finally gathered enough strength and ran away from home and joined the Army, he lied about his age and soon found himself deep in the jungles of the Vietnam War.

It was the only time in Samuel’s life that he felt closeness to anyone.  He soon found that the group of men he spent every hour with had the same urges to kill that he did.  They developed a strong bond that connected them even today.  That bond could never be broken.

 

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Photography Sunday — Big Sarge in Charge

Two of my favorite things is Sarge (my 14 month old black Labrador) and the beach.  The beach is a great place for me to unwind, breathe in fresh air to recharge my writing battery, and to watch my favorite Lab chase his favorite ball in and out of the waves.

Take some time out with your favorite buddy and enjoy your weekend.

Happy Father’s Day to all those great dads out there!

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