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FORENSIC SCIENCE Serology

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Title: FORENSIC SCIENCE Serology


1
Having sniffed the dead mans lips, I detected a
slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion
that he had poison forced upon him. Sherlock
Holmes, in Sir Arthur Conan Doyles A Study in
Scarlet
2
Blood evidence
  • Blood typing can provide _____ evidence DNA
    profiling can provide __________ evidence.
  • What information can be obtained from blood
    spatter?

class
individual
  • information about the origin of the blood
  • the angle and velocity of impact
  • type of weapon used
  • the truthfulness of an account by a witness or a
    suspect

3
Serology
  • Serology is the examination
    and analysis of body fluids (saliva, semen,
    urine, and blood.)
  • Through the late 1980s, forensic serology was a
    most important part of lab procedures. With the
    development of DNA techniques, more time, money,
    and significance was placed in developing DNA
    labs.
  • Blood typing is quicker and less expensive than
    DNA profiling.

4
Blood Characteristics
  • Plasma - the fluid portion of the blood (55)
  • Cells (45)
  • Erythrocytes (red blood cells) most numerous -
    carry oxygen and CO2 and have proteins that ID
    blood type
  • Leukocytes (white blood cells) contain cell
    nuclei and fight disease/foreign invaders used
    for DNA
  • Thrombocytes (platelets) are responsible for
    blood clotting

5
Unknown Stain at a Scene
  • Questions to be answered
  • Is it blood?
  • Is it human blood?
  • Whose is it?
  • Determine blood type, alcohol content, drugs
    present
  • Determine the method(s) in which blood may have
    been deposited

6
Human vs Animal Blood
  • Microscopic observation
  • Precipitin test
  • human blood is injected into a rabbit
  • antibodies form
  • the rabbits blood is extracted as an antiserum
  • the antiserum is placed on sample blood
  • The sample will react with human proteins if
    human blood is present.
  • This test is very sensitive and requires only a
    small amount of blood.

7
Blood Terminology
  • ABO blood groupsbased on having an A, B, both or
    no antigens on red blood cells
  • Rh factormay be present on red blood cells
    positive if present and negative if not
  • Antigena substance that can stimulate the body
    to make antibodies. Certain antigens (proteins)
    found in the plasma of the red blood cells
    membrane account for blood type.
  • Antibodya substance that reacts with an antigen
  • Agglutinationclumping of red blood cells will
    result if blood types with different antigens are
    mixed

8
Blood Typing
  • Blood type A has antigen A on the surface of the
    cell and will agglutinate with blood type B.
  • Blood type B has antigen B on the surface of the
    cell and will agglutinate with blood type A.
  • Blood type AB has antigens A and B on the
    surface of the cells and will not agglutinate
    with either type A or B blood.
  • Blood type O has neither antigen A or B and will
    not agglutinate.

9
Blood Groups
Can Give Blood To
Can Get Blood From
Antigen
Type
Antibody
A
B
AB
O
10
Population Distribution of Blood Types in the
U.S.
Type
Percent
O
45
A
41
B
10
AB
4
11
Blood Droplet Characteristics
  • A blood droplet will remain spherical in space
    until it collides with a surface
  • Once a blood droplet impacts a surface, a
    bloodstain is formed.
  • A droplet falling from the same height, hitting
    the same surface at the same angle, will produce
    a stain with the same basic shape.

12
Conditions Affecting Shape of Blood Droplet
  • Size of the droplet
  • Angle of impact
  • Velocity at which the blood droplet left its
    origin
  • Height

13
Blood Spatter Interpretation
  • Analysis of a splatter pattern can aid in
    determining the
  • direction blood traveled.
  • angle of impact.
  • point of origin of the blood.
  • velocity of the blood.
  • manner of death.

14
Impact
  • When blood falls from a height or at a high
    velocity, it can overcome its natural
    cohesiveness and form satellite droplets.
  • When it falls onto a less-than-smooth surface, it
    can form spiking patterns around the drops.

15
Blood Splatter Analysis Six Patterns
Splash smear passive drop
Describe and ID each of these a. passive drops
b. arterial gushes c. splashes d. smears
e. trails f. pools
trail
Pool arterial gushes
16
Blood Splatter Analysis Impact
  • Patterns can help investigators determine the
    type of weapon used.
  • What kind of a pattern is produced by a gun shot?
  • What kind of a pattern is produced by a hammer
    blow?

17
Bloodstain Patterns
  • The harder and less porous the surface, the less
    the blood drop will break apart.
  • The softer and more porous the surface, the more
    a blood drop will break apart.
  • The pointed end of the blood stain faces the
    direction of travel.

18
Area of Intersectionand Convergence
  • Draw straight lines down the axis of the blood
    splatters.
  • Where the lines converge, the blood originated.

19
Blood Evidence
  • Blood stain patterns are considered
    circumstantial evidence in a court room.
  • Experts could argue many points including
    direction of travel, height of the perpetrator,
    position of the victim, left/right hand, whether
    the body was moved, etc.

20
Crime Scene Investigation of Blood
  • Search for blood evidence.
  • If any is discovered, process it determining
  • Whether the evidence is blood.
  • Whether the blood is human.
  • The blood type.
  • Interpret the findings
  • See if the blood type matches a suspect.
  • If it does not, exclude that suspect.
  • If it does, decide if DNA profiling is needed.

21
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