Title: Applied Science Often called criminalistics Forensic
1An Introduction toForensic Science
2What is Forensic Science?
- the application of science to those criminal and
civil laws that are enforced by police agencies
in a criminal justice system.
3Forensic Science is
- Applied Science
- Often called criminalistics
4Forensic Science applies
- Chemistry
- Biology
- Physics
- Geology
- Places physical evidence into a professional
discipline.
to civil and criminal law
5The development ofForensic Science
6Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
- Popularized physical detection
methods in a crime scene - Developed the character Sherlock Holmes
7Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
- 1887 published first novel, A Study in Scarlet
- "I've found it! I've found it," he shouted to my
companion, running towards us with a test-tube in
his hand. "I have found a re-agent which is
precipitated by haemoglobin, and by nothing else
. . . . Why, man, it is the most practical
medico-legal discovery for years. Don't you see
that it gives us an infallible test for blood
stains? . . . . The old guaiacum test was very
clumsy and uncertain. So is the microscopic
examination for blood corpuscles. The latter is
valueless if the stains are a few hours old. Now,
this appears to act as well whether the blood is
old or new. Had this test been invented, there
are hundreds of men now walking the earth who
would long ago have paid the penalty of their
crimes. . . . Criminal cases are continually
hinging upon that one point. A man is suspected
of a crime months perhaps after it has been
committed. His linen or clothes are examined and
brownish stains discovered upon them. Are they
blood stains, or mud stains, or rust stains, or
fruit stains, or what are they? That is a
question which has puzzled many an expert, and
why? Because there was no reliable test. Now we
have the Sherlock Holmes's test, and there will
no longer be any difficulty."
? had a considerable influence on popularizing
scientific crime-detection methods
8Mathieu Orfila (1787 1853)
- Father of Forensic Toxicology
- 1814 - Treatise on detection of poisons
their effects on animals.
9Alphonse Bertillon (1853 1914)
- Father of Criminal Detection
- Devised the first scientific system
of personal identification, using
body measurements known as anthropometry in 1879.
10Francis Galton (1822 1911)
- Conducted the first definitive study of
fingerprints and their classification. - 1892 Treatise entitled Finger Prints
11Leone Lattes (1887 1954)
- Devised a simple procedure for determining the
blood type (A,B,O,AB) of a dried bloodstain
12Calvin Goddard (1891 1955)
- Used a comparison microscope to determine if a
bullet was fired from a specific gun - Published study of tool marks on bullets
13Albert S. Osborn (1858 1946)
- Developed fundamental principles of document
examination - 1910 Treatise Questioned Documents
- Was responsible for the acceptance of documents
as scientific evidence by the courts
14Edmond Locard (1877 1966)
- Demonstrated how the principles developed by Hans
Gross could be incorporated into a workable crime
lab. - Locard's exchange principle states that once
contact is made between two surfaces a transfer
of material(s) will occur.
15Organization of aCrime Laboratory
16Crime Labs
- Since the 1960's the number of crime labs
increased due to the courts demanding secure
scientifically evaluated evidence. - More crime
- More drug related crime
- Greater need for physical evidence
- Use of DNA profiling (1990s)
Presently there are 350 Crime Laboratories in the
U.S.
17Services of the Crime Lab
- Many local crime laboratories have been created
solely for the purpose of processing evidence - Currently most of their energy and funds are used
to analyze drugs and DNA. - In 1932, Hoover first established a national
forensics laboratory to support all law
enforcement in the U.S. - The oldest American forensics laboratory is in
Los Angeles, California, created in 1923 by
August Volmer.
18Crime Lab Units
- Standard
- Physical Science
- Biology
- Firearms
- Documents
- Photography
Optional Toxicology Fingerprints Polygraph Voice
Print Evidence
19Basic Services Provided byFull-Service Crime
Laboratories
- Physical Science Unit
- Applies the principles and techniques of
Chemistry - Physics
- Geology
- to the identification and comparison of
crime-scene evidence - Biology Unit
- Identifies dried bloodstains and body fluids
- Compares hairs and fibers
- Identifes and compares botanical materials such
as wood and plants - Performs DNA analysis
20Basic Services (continued)
- Firearms Unit examines
- Firearms
- Discharged bullets
- Cartridge cases
- Shotgun shells
- Ammunition of all types
- Document Examination Unit
- Analyzes handwriting, paper and printers of
documents - Photography Unit
- Examines and records physical evidence at the
crime scene and at suspects' locations
21Optional Services Provided by Full-Service Crime
Labs
- Toxicology Unit
- Examines body fluids and organs in order to
determine the presence and identification of
drugs and poisons - Latent Fingerprint Unit
- Processes and examines evidence for latent
fingerprints - i.e. those found on surfaces
- Polygraph Unit
- Uses lie detectors, an essential tool of the
crime investigator rather than the forensic
scientist
22Optional Services (continued)
- Voiceprint Analysis Unit
- Involved in cases of telephone threats or
tape-recorded messages - Investigators may be able to connect a voice to a
particular suspect - Evidence-Collection Unit
- Incorporates evidence collection into a total
forensic science service
23The Functions of theForensic Scientist
- Analysis of Physical Evidence
- The forensic scientist must be skilled in
applying the principles and techniques of the
physical and natural sciences in order to
identify the many types of evidence that may be
recovered during crime investigations. - Expert witness
- An expert witness possesses a particular skill or
has knowledge in a trade or profession that will
aid the court in determining the truth.
24The Functions of theForensic Scientist(continued
)
- Specially trained evidence collection technicians
- Training in Proper Recognition,
- Collection, and Preservation of
- Evidence is required so that
- the forensic pathologist, as the
- medical examiner or coroner,
- can determine the cause of
- death via an autopsy.
25Other Forensic Services
- Death can be classified into five different
categories natural death, homicide, suicide,
accident or undetermined manner of death. - Forensic Pathology
- The cause of death
can often be
determined by
performing an
autopsy
26Other Forensic Services - 2
- Forensic Pathology continued
- After a human body expires there are several
stages of death - Rigor Mortis
- immediately following death, the muscles relax
and then become rigid, shortening of the muscles. - Livor Mortis
- when the human heart stops pumping, due to the
blood begins to settle in the parts of the body
closest to the ground due to gravity. The skin
will appear dark blue or purple in these lower
areas close to the ground. - Algor Mortis
- the process in which the body temperature
continually cools after death until it reaches
room temperature, enabling the medical examiner
to establish the general time of death.
27Other Forensic Services - 3
- Forensic Anthropology
- Primarily involves the identification and
examination of skeletal remains, in order to
determine if the remains are human or another
type of animal. - If human, ethnicity, sex, approximate age, and
manner of death can often be determined by an
anthropologist.
28Other Forensic Services - 4
- Forensic Entomology
- The study of insects and their developmental
stages - Can help to determine the time of death by
knowing when those stages normally appear in the
insect's life cycle
29Other Forensic Services - 5
- Forensic Psychiatry
- The study of human behavior and legal proceedings
in both civil and criminal cases - In civil and criminal cases, competency often
needs to be determined - In criminal trials, the evaluation of behavior
disorders is often required in order to establish
the psychological profile of a suspect.
30Other Forensic Services - 6
- Forensic Odontology
- An odontologist can match bite marks to a
suspect's teeth, or match a victim to his dental
x-rays - Results in an identification of an unknown
individual - Forensic Engineering
- Used to analyze construction accidents, and the
causes and origins of fires or explosions
31Forensic Analysis
- Can include organic and inorganic analytical
techniques - Organic analysis of unknown substances
- Includes analytical techniques such as
Chromatography, UV- visible and infrared
Spectrophotometry and Mass Spectrometry. - Inorganic analysis
- Includes techniques such as the emission spectrum
of elements, Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometry,
Neutron Activation Analysis, and X-Ray
Diffraction Analysis.