Title: NEW MEXICO STATE POLICE
1 Crime Scene Processing Series CRIME SCENE
DIAGRAMMING New Mexico State Police Criminal
Investigations Section Crime Scene Team
2Learning Objectives
- Understand the purpose for preparing a diagram
- Identify the information that must appear on a
diagram - Demonstrate knowledge and proficiency in various
methods of incident scene diagram
3Why do a Crime Scene Diagram?
- It establishes a permanent record of the scene
- Associates evidence with the scene
- Supplements photographs
- Useful in orienting a person to the scene
- Witnesses can look at a diagram without being
prejudicedyou cant show witnesses photos - Useful in Court
- Easily blown-up for presentation
- Not prejudicial to the jury
4Why do a Diagram, cont.
- The draw back of photos is that that they are a
two- dimensional representation of a three
dimensional object - Most photos distort the relationship of the
photographed objects, causing items to appear
closer or farther apart than they actually are - The sketch is a bird-eye view, which is hard to
get with a camera
5Methods
- Grid (X/Y) Coordinates
- Triangulation Coordinates
- Polar Coordinates
- Raw Measurements
6Grid Method
- The scene in divided into four quadrants
- Each item is measured at right-angles from each
axis - This is a great method because it is easy
efficient
7Grid (X/Y) Method
Y axis
X axis
(origin)
The grid can also be expressed as north, south,
east, and west measurements
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9Grid (X/Y) Method
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11Baseline Method
- Place a single line, dividing the scene in half
- Measure relative to the line
- Alone the baseline
- At a right-angle to the baseline
- Great for a diagram where you have no fixed
reference points
12Incident Bone Scatter, Death Investigation Locati
on Chavez County, NM Date 3/3/07
Drawn by R. Mathews Not to Scale
REF. PT. 1 N 32 degrees 41.292 W 105 degrees
13.951
skull
Leg bone
torso
North
Leg bone
N
Arm bone
Trees
Arm bone
Dry stream bed
Ref. PT. 2 N 32 degrees 41.317 W 105 degrees
14.003
N
13Triangulation Method
- Straight line distance measured from two (2)
reference points - The item of evidence will be at the intersection
of the intersection of the two (2) arcs - This is a very accurate method of measuring
14Triangulation Method
15Polar Method
- Straight line distance measured from a fixed
reference point - Measure the distance from the reference point to
the item of evidence - Document the lines azimuth from the fixed
reference point to the item of evidence - This is the best method for determining
elevations above/below a fixed reference point
16Polar Method
North
12 ft _at_ 120 degrees
18 ft _at_ 100 degrees
17Raw Measurements
- The physical dimensions of a room/area
- You should do this on every diagram to complement
the main method of measurement - Width of roads
- Distance from the victims hand to the gun
- Overall dimensions of a room
18Raw Measurements
19Information added to a USGS Map
20Sketching the Crime Scene
- Equipment
- Measuring tapes, rulers
- Hammer, nails, shop clamps
- Laser range-finder
- Graph paper and PENSILS (avoid using a pen)
- GPS
- Maps, blue-prints, aerial photos
- Accident/crime scene templates
21Sketching the Crime Scene
- Its usually prepared in one of two ways
- Birds-eye-view (straight down)
- Elevation (cross section)
- Try to maintain proportionality (scale)
- Double-check your measurements to be sure that
they are correct - Especially important if calculations will later
be used - Bloodstain pattern analysis
- Accident reconstruction
- Shooting scene reconstruction
22Sketching the Crime Scene
- Crime scene diagram is similar to diagramming an
auto accident with injuries - Use fixed reference points and reference lines
- Diagram the location of all evidence, including
the body - Diagram the location of the head and the feet if
practical...otherwise, diagram the location of
the center-of-mass - If you start a diagram need to leave, make sure
you pass on the responsibility to another person
23Rough Draft
24Finished product
25Sketching the Crime Scene
- Use the rough-draft to make a finished (court
admissible) product - Hand-drawn is fine if you are a good artist
- Use black ink and good paper
- Use a template
- Computer generated sketches are preferable
- Can be easily reproduced without loss of quality
- Can be easily blown-up or added to Power Point
- Maintain the original, rough sketch
- It is discoverable-just like your other field
notes
26Things to put in the Legend
- Specific location of the scene
- Address, GPS Coordinate, etc.
- Date/Time
- Case Number
- Preparer
- Scale (or scale disclaimer )
- Compass Orientation (North Arrow)
- Evidence Numbers
- Measurements
27Court room presentations
28Court room presentations
29Court room presentations
30Court room presentations
31Court room presentations
32Questions?