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JS 96GY The Real CSI

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The Silent Witness and CSI ' ... This is the real art of all CSI. ... CSI 4 basic steps- SSRR, 8 detailed steps- S, W, Sys, Doc, Coll, Submit, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: JS 96GY The Real CSI


1
JS 96GY The Real CSI
  • Outline
  • Announcements and Assignments
  • Review email lists
  • Reform Small Groups
  • Introduction to Criminalistics
  • Crime Scene Definition
  • Physical Evidence
  • Role of the Crime Scene Investigator
  • Goal of CSI
  • Physical Evidence- Locards Exchange Principle
  • Team CSI Exercise 1 and 2- Physical Evidence and
    Class
  • and individual characteristics
  • Some slides have been modified from Mary Junos
    JS112 course (SJSU)
  • and/or borrowed from Sgt Bruce Wiley (SJPD)

2
Office Hours Policies
  • Set up 15 minute appointments by email
    sblee999_at_gmail.com, steven.lee_at_sjsu.edu
  • Benefits (to you and me)
  • Review the course material.
  • Show me how hard you are working
  • Provide feedback
  • Ask specific questions or Ask for help
  • Extra credit may be provided for coming to
    discuss questions on the reading, exams, DNA,
    assignments, forensics, news articles,
    department, college and campus scholarshipsetc

3
Assignments (Collection and New assignments)
  • Collect Assignment 1 (folder with name) - Place
    into blue folder in the correct alphabetic order
  • Collect Individual assignment 3. Read the
    academic integrity policy and take the plagiarism
    tutorial.
  • Individual assignment 2. Read Introduction and
    Chapter 1 handout from Houde book (Due 09/03/08).
  • Find 1 article (newspaper, magazine, journal
    article) on a case (or cases) where crime scene
    investigation was not correctly performed. In
    your 1 paragraph summary, identify the incorrect
    procedure and how it impacted the case. Write 1
    critical thinking question and answer (Due
    09/03/08 hard copy)
  • Extra credit (2 points)
  • Read Crime Scene Investigation- A guide for law
    enforcement training http//www.ncjrs.org/pdffile
    s1/nij/200160.pdf
  • Summarize one section (A, B or C)
  • Write a 1 page summary and 3 critical thinking
    questions and answers

4
The Silent Witness and CSI
  • Wherever he steps, whatever he touches,
    whatever he leaves, even unconsciously, will
    serve as a silent witness against him. Not only
    his fingerprints or his footprints, but his hair,
    the fibers from his clothes, the glass he breaks,
    the tool mark he leaves, the paint he scratches,
    the blood or semen he deposits or collects. All
    of these and more, bear mute witness against him.
    This is evidence that does not forget. It is not
    confused by the excitement of the moment. It is
    not absent because human witnesses are. It is
    factual evidence. Physical evidence cannot be
    wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be
    wholly absent. Only human failure to find it,
    study and understand it, can diminish its value.
    Professor Edmond Locard

5
The Crime Scene
  • The crime scene is the area or areas that
    encompass all of the physical evidence of the
    crime scene (sometimes unknown)
  • Primary scene(s)
  • Secondary scene(s)
  • BTFU
  • Back the Feet UP!

6
What is Physical Evidence?Any object that can
establish that a crime has or has not been
committed.
  • Physical evidence usually has mass (See, feel,
    taste, touch, smell, hear).
  • When might physical evidence show that no crime
    has been committed?
  • What is the evidence?
  • Suicide note
  • GSR on hand of victim, suspect?
  • DNA from ?
  • What is the crime suspected to have occurred?

7
How does an item become physical evidence?
  • Before an object can become physical evidence, it
    must be recognized by the investigator as having
    a relationship to the crime committed.
  • This is harder than it seems!
  • This is the real art of all CSI. Technology
    plays a huge role, however, it cannot replace
    experience

8
Nature Value of Physical Evidence
  • Does evidence proof?
  • NO, but enough evidence, or evidence that is
    especially persuasive, can convince jurors beyond
    a reasonable doubt that a person committed a
    crime.
  • Not the same as proof
  • For DNA, understanding statistical significance
    is needed.

9
Nature Value of Physical Evidence
  • What can physical evidence do?
  • establish that a crime has been committed
  • establish key elements of a crime
  • place the suspect and/or victim at the crime
    scene
  • establish ID of suspects
  • exonerate the innocent
  • corroborate victims testimony
  • cause suspect to confess when confronted w
    evidence
  • can be more reliable than eye witness testimony

10
Recognizing Evidence at the Scene
  • You wont always know what is evidence
  • Depends on the crime
  • No hard, fast, inflexible rule
  • Apply common sense, logic, reason, knowledge of
    human behavior, skill and experience to determine
    what is or is not evidence
  • Need a preliminary hypothesis who, what, where,
    and how, do you think it happened- predict what
    you would find. (criminalistics vs
    criminology-why)
  • What is a hypothesis?

11
Hypotheses and the Scientific Method
  • Define the question The suspect is innocent
  • Gather information and resources (observe) Find
    semen left on the underwear of a female victim
    and foreign shoe prints in blood found at the
    scene.
  • Form hypothesis- a testable explanation for
    observations. The suspect did not leave the semen
    and shoeprints and therefore when reference
    samples are analyzed will be excluded
    (prediction)
  • Perform experiment(s) and collect data
  • Analyze data- statistical significance (CODIS,
    SICAR)
  • Interpret data and draw conclusions that serve as
    a starting point for new hypothesis-
    Publish/present results
  • Retest (frequently done by other
    scientists-defense)
  • Crawford S, Stucki L (1990), "Peer review and the
    changing research record", "J Am Soc Info
    Science", vol. 41, pp 223-228

12
Recognizing Evidenceat the Scene
  • It may be visible or invisible
  • Its up to the CSI to find it, document it,
    collect and preserve it
  • When in doubt, collect it!
  • Dont forget to look up
  • BTFU!
  • Review data and reformulate hypotheses
  • Entry/exit routes?

13
CSI 10 minute Team Exercise 1
  • In your teams name and document (in a list on
    your team color paper) as many different types of
    evidence that might be useful in reconstruction
    of a crime
  • For each example, provide how you would collect
    and package the evidence.
  • Once you are done, provide the list to the
    instructor.
  • Each of you should sign and date the document
    with the name CSI team exercise 1 and list your
    team name

14
Overview of the types of Physical evidence
  • Blood, semen, saliva
  • Bedding, clothing, fabric
  • Sexual Assault kit
  • Cigarettes
  • Documents
  • Drugs
  • Explosives, accelerants
  • Fibers, Hair, Paint
  • Fingerprints
  • Glass
  • Organs and physiological fluids
  • Impressions (shoes, tires, tools, teeth)
  • Rope, Tape other binding material
  • Weapons
  • Tools
  • Bodies
  • Vehicles
  • Plastic bags
  • Rubber, other polymers
  • Firearms and ammo
  • Bullets, casings, slugs
  • Powder residues
  • Serial numbers
  • Soil and minerals
  • Bottles
  • Vehicle lights
  • Wood and other
  • vegetative matter-
  • pollen, seeds
  • Environmental
  • contaminants

15
Locards Exchange Principle
  • 1910 Edmund Locard, successor to Lacassagne as
    professor of forensic medicine at the University
    of Lyons, France, established the first police
    crime laboratory.
  • Locards Exchange Principle states
  • Contact results in a cross-transfer of evidence
  • Every contact leaves a trace
  • "with contact between two items, there will be an
    exchange"

suspect
scene
victim
16
Crime Scene InvestigationGoal- reconstruct the
crimehttp//www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/200160.pd
f
17
Role of the Crime Scene Investigator
  • Crucial step in investigation
  • Four Basic Fundamental Concepts
  • Secure- preserve evidence, safety
  • Search Critical v Supporting v Property
  • Record sketching, measuring, photography,
    videography etc
  • Reconstruct- final goal
  • From the analysis of the crime, an experienced
    CSI will determine what type of physical
    evidence, where and how to recognize it, how best
    to collect, preserve and process the evidence and
    combined with laboratory examinations,
    reconstruct the crime

18
Processing the SceneStep by Step
  • 1. Secure scene
  • 2. Conduct walkthrough
  • 3. Systematic search
  • 4. Document the scene
  • 5. Collect package evidence
  • 6. Submit evidence to lab- results? Need to
    resample, retest
  • 7. Maintain chain of custody
  • 8. Reconstruct

19
Processing the Scene
  • Processing the scene correctly is absolutely
    critical to the rest of the case
  • You dont get a second chance
  • Evidence cannot be analyzed and interpreted if
    its not found! (leave no stone unturned,
    approach from every angle)
  • Evidence cannot be used if its not protected,
    documented, and properly preserved (PIP)
  • Evidence cannot be used if its not gathered
    legally!
  • (The Chain Of Custody COC)
  • There is no justice without evidence!

20
Crime Scene Considerations
  • SAFETY
  • Biohazards
  • needles, blood, bodily fluids, airborne
    diseases, smoke, fumes, unknown hazards
  • protective clothing gear
  • appropriate handling packaging methods
  • no eating, drinking or smoking on scene
  • change gloves frequently
  • People
  • suspect, crowd, victims or suspects family and
    friends
  • sufficient of police oficers on scene
  • be aware of your surroundings at all times
  • Scene
  • highway, active (shooting), fire, unstable
    foundation/footing/land, bomb (chemical hazards
    in Clan labs)

21
Crime Scene Considerations
  • LEGALITY
  • Chain of custody must be maintained
  • Evidence must be gathered with search warrant
  • Justification for a warrantless search
  • - Exigent circumstances
  • - Prevent immediate loss or destruction of
  • evidence
  • - Immediate area of control of a person,
    incident to a lawful arrest
  • - Consent of parties involved

22
The Fourth Amendment
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon
    probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,
    and particularly describing the place to be
    searched, and the persons or things to be
    seized.
  • Discussion Is it a violation of 4th amendment to
    view the heat emanating from homes with IR to
    detect growing of marijuana?
  • http//cases.justia.com/us-court-of
    appeals/F3/62/1325/535156/
  • United States of America, Plaintiff-appellee, v.
    Theodore Robinson, Sr., Defendant-appellant
    United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
    - 62 F.3d 1325 Aug. 31, 1995
  • Is it a violation to collect a half eaten apple
    for a DNA swab to compare against the crime scene
    stain?

23
Surreptitious Sampling DNA from discarded
itemsCourts permit the practice Others object.
Pro? Con?
http//www.nytimes.com/2008/04/03/science/03dna.ht
ml?_r1orefslogin
24
Important Cases
  • Mincey v Arizona u/c police officer killed
    premises held and searched for four days
  • Michigan v Tyler arson building left
    unattended until it could be searched, then it
    was searched on several different days throughout
    the month following incident
  • Supreme Court when time and circumstances
    permit, obtain a search warrant!

25
Equipment Supplies Needed
  • Tape
  • Clipboard
  • Pencil, notepadCompass
  • Chalk/lumber crayon
  • Presumptive test kits
  • Tweezers
  • Scissors
  • Casting equipment
  • Flares
  • Fingerprint kit
  • Gsr kits
  • Flares
  • Crime scene tape
  • Flashlight
  • Gloves/protective equipment (goggles, masks,
    booties, boots, etc)
  • Numbered placards
  • Camera, film, flash, batteries, tripod
  • Measuring devices (rulers, tape measures,
    strollmeters)
  • Packaging materials (paper bags, envelopes,
    biohazard bags, small ziplock bags, pain cans
    with lids, glycine paper, etc)
  • Marking pens
  • Sterile swabs distilled water

26
Summary
  • Crime scene Area(s) with all physical evidence
    (Pri and Sec BTFU)
  • PE - Any object that can establish that a crime
    has or has not been committed.
  • Value of PE- establish that a crime has been
    committed
  • establish key elements of a crime- place the
    suspect and/or victim at the crime scene-
    establish ID of suspects- exonerate the innocent-
    corroborate victims testimony- cause suspect to
    confess confronted w evidence -can be more
    reliable than eye witness testimony
  • Hypotheses and the Scientific method (Q, O, H, E,
    A, I, R)
  • Types of Physical evidence (Name 15)
  • Locards Exchange Principle- Contact results in a
    cross-transfer of evidence
  • CSI 4 basic steps- SSRR, 8 detailed steps- S,
    W, Sys, Doc, Coll, Submit, Maintain COC,
    Reconstruct.
  • Processing the scene correctly is absolutely
    critical to the rest of the case (PIP, COC, When
    is PIP not correct?)
  • SAFETY- Biohazards, People, Scene
  • LEGAL ISSUES- COC- Warrants, Warrantless?
  • Evidence must be gathered with search warrant
    (Mincey and Tyler cases)
  • Justification for a warrantless search- Exigent
    circumstances- Prevent immediate loss or
    destruction of evidence- Immediate area of
    control of a person incident to a lawful arrest-
    Consent of parties involved
  • Surreptitious Sampling (what is it as it pertains
    to CSI?- Do you approve or dissaprove and why?

27
CSI Exercise 2- Types of Evidence
  • In your small teams examine one of your team
    mates shoes (you will do this in separate places
    so the other teams are not aware of which shoe
    you are examining).
  • Team leaders should collect all the observations.
  • Write down as many characteristics of the shoe
    that you and your teammates believe will assist a
    CSI in determining if a shoeprint was left by a
    particular shoe.
  • Once completed be sure everyone signs the paper
    and indicate you are done.

28
CSI Questions
  • How many different characteristics did you
    identify?
  • Which ones might be found for other shoes?
  • Which ones are unique to that shoe?
  • Is there enough documentation for someone that is
    not on your team to identify the shoes? Would
    you be able to pick the shoe from a rack of 100
    others in 10 years?
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