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On the record ... with Angel Reyes

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MW: Are your interviewing skills as important as your drawing skills?
AR: Oh definitely. It’s called cognitive interviewing. When you talk to a person you get details out of them by bringing them back to that moment, and they start recalling more features and more stuff about the subject matter, whatever you are drawing. It’s sweet – if you do a proper interview, you’re going to get a composite that’s the best that they can remember, and that’s a fairly close likeness to the person you are looking for.

MW: How long do you have to keep the person calm and focused to finish a drawing?
AR: It typically takes me two to two and a half hours to finish a drawing. Most times, by the time they get to me, they have calmed down. It may be a day later, and we can sit down in a more controlled environment to do the composite.

MW: Do you take pride in doing things the old-fashioned way?
AR: (Laughs) Are we just talking about sketching? Because when it comes to report writing, I’m all for using computers. I don’t want to do that on a typewriter or hand-write a report. But when it comes to sketching, I’m more comfortable with a pen and paper in my hand. We did have a software program a long time ago but it was never used.

MW: I read that there only two FBI-trained sketch artists left in the Chicago area. Does that make you feel like part of a dying breed?
AR: You’re right, there aren't that many full-time forensic artists and that’s the key. Chicago has a full-time forensic artist. Houston has a full-time forensic artist. The last I heard there were maybe 10 to 12 full-time artists in the United States, but there are a lot of us who are part-time forensic artists. I think that’s around 300 to 400 of us.

MW: I read about one sketch artist in Cook County who said that for every 10 sketches he produces, three lead to apprehension of a suspect. Is that about the success rate you have?
AR: I do track my results, and nationally our average is about 33 percent of the drawings contribute to the apprehension of someone. We haven’t done a lot of sketches lately, but the first few years I was right about at 33 percent. We had some pretty interesting cases.


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