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Crime-Scene Investigation and Evidence Collection

Crime-Scene Investigation and Evidence Collection. Objectives. Are there cars parked on the sides of the road? What color is the pickup truck driving in the road? Any minivans around? What does the blue sign say? What’s the speed limit? Are there any pedestrians on the road?.

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Crime-Scene Investigation and Evidence Collection

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  1. Crime-Scene Investigation and Evidence Collection

  2. Objectives

  3. Are there cars parked on the sides of the road? • What color is the pickup truck driving in the road? • Any minivans around? • What does the blue sign say? • What’s the speed limit? • Are there any pedestrians on the road?

  4. Locard’s Exchange Principle • When a person comes into contact with an object or another person, a cross-transfer of physical evidence can occur • Hair, skin cells, clothing fibers, pollen, glass fragments, debris from clothing, makeup, soil • Called trace evidence • pet hair on clothes • Hair on your brush • Fingerprints on glass • Soil tracked into house • Drop of blood on t-shirt • Used tissue • Paint chips • Broken glass • Fiber from clothing

  5. Evidence • Classified two different ways – • Direct evidence • Circumstantial evidence • Physical evidence • Biological evidence • Trace evidence

  6. Direct Evidence • Firsthand observations such as eyewitness accounts or police dashboard video cameras • Confessions • Testimony by a witness in court

  7. Circumstantial Evidence • Indirect evidence that can be used to imply a fact but that does not directly prove it • Link between crime scene and a suspect • Physical – Impressions, fingerprints, footprints, shoe prints, tire impressions, tool marks, fibers, weapons, bullets, shell casings • Reduces number of suspects to a specific, smaller group • Biological – body fluids, hair, plant parts, natural fibers • Makes the group of suspects very small, or reduces it to a likely individual

  8. Class vs. Individual Evidence • Class – narrows identity to a group of persons or things • Ex – blood type • Individual – narrows an identity to a single person or thing • Ex – fingerprints

  9. The CSI Team • Police officers • District attorney • Crime scene investigators • Medical examiners • Detectives • Specialists

  10. The Crime Scene Investigation Team • Police officers – secure the scene • District attorney – determine whether search warrant is necessary • Crime-scene investigators – document crime scene in detail and collect physical evidence • Recorders, sketch artists, photographers, evidence collectors • Medical examiners – determine cause of death if homicide • Detectives – look for leads by interviewing witnesses and talking to crime-scene investigators about evidence • Specialists – consulted if the evidence requires their expertise • Entomologists, forensic scientists, forensic psychologists, etc.

  11. The Seven S’s of Crime Scene Investigation • Securing the scene • Separating the witnesses • Scanning the scene • Seeing the scene • Sketching the scene • Searching for evidence • Securing and collecting evidence

  12. 1. Securing the Scene • Responsibility of the first responder (usually a police officer) • Restricts all persons not authorized from entering • Security log of all entering and exiting • May request various experts to be sent to scene • First Priority – safety of all individuals • Second Priority – preservation of evidence

  13. 2. Separating Witnesses • Witnesses must not be allowed to talk to one another! • Questions to ask: • When did the crime occur? • Who called in the crime? • Who is the victim? • Can the perpetrator be identified? • Where were you when you observed the crime scene?

  14. 3. Scanning the Scene • Scan the scene to determine where photos should be taken • Primary crime scene – where crime took place • Secondary crime scene – location linking to crime • Ex: Primary scene - front of store where robbery took place Secondary scene – home of suspect Ex: Primary scene – location of murder Secondary scene – location where corpse was found

  15. 4. Seeing the Scene • Crime examiner needs to see whole scene • NEEDS TO BE IN UNALTERED POSITION!!! • Photos of overall area • Close-up photos • Photos with and without a measuring ruler • View of crime scene from different angles and distances • Close-up photos of any evidence and bodies • Photos need to be taken before evidence or body is moved

  16. 360 view

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  23. Evidence

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  37. 5. Sketching the Scene • Rough sketch – notes position of body and any other evidence • All objects measured from two immovable landmarks • North should be labeled, scale included for distance • Doors, windows, furniture • If outdoors, position of trees, vehicles, hedges, other structures • Drawn AT the scene • Also include – name, date, location, conditions outside or inside

  38. Figure 2–4  Rough-sketch diagram of a crime scene. Courtesy Sirchie Finger Print Laboratories, Inc., Youngsville, N.C., www.sirchie.com.

  39. 5. Sketching the Scene • Final Sketch – include all the aspects of a rough sketch but more accurate • Possible for presentation in court • Computer programs available now • Drawn in the lab AFTER searching the crime scene • Note-taking also occurs throughout entire process

  40. Figure 2–5  Finished-sketch diagram of a crime scene. Courtesy Sirchie Finger Print Laboratories, Inc., Youngsville, N.C., www.sirchie.com

  41. 6. Searching for evidence • Scene should be walked and location of evidence marked, photographed, and sketched • Patterns: • Spiral • Grid • Linear • Quadrant or Zone • Single investigator – grid, linear, or spiral pattern • Group of investigators – linear, zone, quadrant

  42. 7. Securing and Collecting Evidence • All must be properly packaged, sealed, and labeled • Liquids and arson – stored in airtight, unbreakable container • Biological evidence – stored in breathable containers so air can dry out • Wet evidence – stored in paper and allowed to air dry • NEVER place wet evidence in an airtight container; will cause mold and degrade DNA • Paper bindle – paper used to store evidence • Placed into evidence bag and labeled

  43. Standards • There are many standards for collecting different types of evidence • Example: National Institute of Justice

  44. Control Samples • Obtained from the victim for the purpose of exclusion • Ex - blood samples found on a victim or at crime scene compared to victim’s blood • If they match, sample is victims and no further tests run • If not, may have come from suspect and further testing is completed!

  45. Evidence Log • Case number • Item inventory number • Description of evidence • Name of suspect • Name of victim • Date and time of recovery • Signature of person recovering evidence • Signature of any witnesses present during collection

  46. Chain of Custody • Each person who handles the evidence must be recorded properly • When evidence is found – marked with proper information and placed in a collection bag • Container is sealed and collector’s signature is written across sealed edge • Next person responsible opens at a location other than sealed edge, completes exam, reseals in new packaging and signs chain of custody log! • Pattern continues!

  47. Chain of Custody • EXTREMELY important for courtroom! • All who handled evidence could be asked to appear in court • Process must show evidence was handled properly and every person handling it was recorded

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