Title: The Murder Scene: Death
1The Murder Scene Death Autopsies
- Chapter 2
- OConnor/Forensics
2The body
- The most important piece of evidence in a crime
scene that resulted in death is the body.
3Who Investigates?
- Primarily the Forensic Pathologist
- Aided by
- Forensic Anthropologist
- Forensic Entomologist
4Role of Forensic Pathologist(in their role as
coroner)
- They must answer these basic questions
- Who is the victim?
- What injuries are present?
- When did the injuries occur?
- Why how were the injuries produced?
- What is the cause of death?
- If observation cant answer these questions, than
an autopsy must be performed.
55 Classifications of cause of death
- Natural
- Homicide
- Suicide
- Accident
- undetermined
6Remember!!
- Sometimes things are not as they first appear
- ex. Apparent suicide as murder cover-up.
- Sometimes things are simple and there is not more
to it than what first appears. - Ex. a rock near a body is just a rock, not a
murder weapon
7Estimating time of death
- After a human body expires it goes through
several stages of decomposition. - It is necessary to determine time of death in a
crime.
8Livor mortis
- a settling of the blood in the lower portion of
the body, causing a purplish red discoloration of
the skin when the heart is no longer pumping the
blood, heavy red blood cells sink due to gravity.
This discoloration does not occur in the areas of
the body that are in contact with the ground or
another object. - starts 20 minutes to 3 hours after death is
congealed in the capillaries in 4 to 5 hours. - It can also be used by forensic investigators to
determine whether or not a body has been moved.
9Rigor mortis
- It commences after around 3 hours, reaching
maximum stiffness after 12 hours, gradually
dissipates until approximately 72 hours after
death. Rigor mortis occurs due to changes in the
physiology of muscles when aerobic respiration
ceases.
10Algor Mortis
- the rate at which a body cools after death.
- affected by the physiology of the individual
(age, weight, illness,) the conditions of the
environment (temperature, clothing, surface,
activity prior to death). - After the first hour to a period of about 6 hrs
postmortem, a body will generally cool at the
rate of 1.5 F for each hour after death. - The preferred time window for evaluating algor
mortis is within the first several hours after
death. Beyond that, the rate of cooling becomes
less less accurate as the body temperature
approaches equilibrium with that of its
environment.
11Tour of a morgue
- interactive at morgue with Dr. G
12Interactive Autopsy
- Discovery Health Autopsies
13Forensic Anthropology
- Skeletal detectives
- Examination of bones may reveal
- Sex, approximate age, race skeletal injury.
- Used not only in crimes, but also for individual
identification in mass tragedies, like a plane
crash.
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15Forensic Reconstruction
16Computer Aided Reconstruction
171994 tourist disappearance
18Body found in a shallow grave in Capetown
19Forensic Entomology
- is the science of determining a time frame
and/or circumstance from the empirical evidence
of insect activity on or around the site in
question. - A time of death can be reasonably determined by
factoring in ambient temperature , availability
of corpse to insects, and the progress of blowfly
larvae through their life cycle on that corpse. - Approximately fourteen days is necessary for a
blowfly to go from egg to adult.
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21Beetle Larvae
- are more variable in form than fly larvae,
there is more variation between species in the
number of larval instars (stage of development
between moulting) - up to fourteen. Beetles
associated with carrion live in an ephemeral
environment and tend to have short larval
development times with only two or three instars.
Most beetle larvae have chewing mouthparts and
they feed on a variety of foods associated with
corpses. - Some are specialist predators, feeding on fly
larvae, while others feed on dry flesh, skin,
ligaments and hair.
22Stages of decomposition as seen in piglets
- Why piglets?
- A 40 kg pig resembles a human body in its fat
distribution, cover of hair and ability to
attract insects. These factors make pigs the next
best things to humans when it comes to
understanding the process of decay of the human
body. - The pigs in this website are newborn piglets
(weighing about 1.5 kg) that have been
accidentally crushed by their mothers - a key
cause of death of piglets. Their bodies have been
donated to science.
23Stage 1- living pig
24Stage 2 Initial decay - 0 to 3 days after death
25Stage 3 Putrefaction - 4 to 10 days after death
26Stage 4 Black putrefaction - 10 to 20 days after
death
27Stage 5 Butyric fermentation - 20 to 50 days
after death
28Stage 6 Dry decay - 50-365 days after death
29Science reveals secrets of death