1 / 56

Review of Forensic Science & t he Law

Review of Forensic Science & t he Law. Forensic Science. It is the study and application of science to matters of law (criminal and civil) Includes the business of providing timely, accurate, and thorough information to all levels of decision makers in our criminal justice system

Download Presentation

Review of Forensic Science & t he Law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Review of Forensic Science & the Law

  2. Forensic Science • It is the study and application of science to matters of law (criminal and civil) • Includes the business of providing timely, accurate, and thorough information to all levels of decision makers in our criminal justice system • Also called criminalistics

  3. Criminalists vs Criminologists • A criminalist examines physical evidence for legal purposes • Criminologists study the crime scene for motive, traits, and behavior as to help interpret the evidence • They learn to think like criminals

  4. Forensic Scientists • Applies the principles and techniques of the physical and natural sciences to the analysis of the many types of evidence that may be recovered during a criminal investigation • May also provide expert court testimony • Known as an expert witness • Individual whom the court determines possesses knowledge relevant to the trial

  5. Developments in Forensic Science • 700s AD- Chinese used fingerprints to establish identity of documents and clay sculptures • ~1000- Roman courts determined that bloody palm prints were used to frame a man in his brother’s murder • 1149- King Richard of England introduced the idea of the coroner to investigate questionable death • 1200s- A murder in China is solved when flies were attracted to invisible blood residue on a sword of a man in the community • 1598- Fidelus was first to practice forensic medicine in Italy

  6. Developments in Forensic Science • 1670- Anton van Leeuwenhoek constructed the first high powered microscope • 1776- Paul Revere identified the body of General Joseph Warren based on the false teeth he had made for him • 1784- John Toms convicted of murder on basis of torn edge of wad of paper in pistol matching a piece of paper in his pocket • 1859- Gustav Kirchoff and Robert Bunsen developed the science of spectroscopy • 1864- Crime scene photography developed

  7. Developments in Forensic Science • 1879- Alphonse Bertillion developed a system to identify people using particular body measurements • 1896- Edward Henry developed the first classification system for fingerprint identification • 1900- Karl Landsteiner identified human blood groups • 1904- Edmond Locard formulated his famous principle, “Every contact leaves a trace” • 1922- Francis Aston developed the mass spectrometer

  8. Developments in Forensic Science • 1959- James Watson and Francis Crick discover the DNA double helix • 1977- AFIS developed by FBI, fully automated in 1996 • 1984- Alec Jeffreysdeveloped and used the first DNA tests to be applied to a criminal case

  9. People of Historical Significance • Mathieu Orfila- father of forensic toxicology • Alphonse Bertillion- devised first scientific system of personal identification • Francis Galton- conducted first definitive study of fingerprints and their classification • Leone Lattes- developed a procedure to determine blood type from dried bloodstains • Calvin Goddard- used a comparison microscope to determine if a particular gun fired a bullet

  10. People of Historical Significance • Albert Osborn- developed the fundamental principles of document examination • Walter McCrone- utilized microscopy to examine evidence • Hans Gross- wrote treatise on criminal investigation • Edmond Locard- considered the father of criminalistics; responsible for Locard’s exchange principle • States that when a criminal comes in contact with an object or a person, a cross transfer of evidence occurs

  11. The Crime Lab • Characterized by rapid growth due to • Supreme Court decisions in the 1960s placing greater emphasis on scientifically evaluated evidence • Accelerated drug abuse • Initiation of DNA profiling • 350 public crime labs exist at federal, state, county, and municipal levels

  12. The Crime Lab • History • First established in 1910 by Locard • First police crime lab established in 1923 in Los Angeles, CA • Scientific Crime Detection Lab established in 1929 • First FBI crime lab opened in 1932

  13. Crime Lab Services • 5 exist • Physical science • Biology • Firearms • Document • Photographic

  14. Physical Science Unit • Incorporates the principles of chemistry, physics, and geology to identify and compare physical evidence

  15. Biology Unit • Applies the knowledge of biological sciences in order to investigate blood samples, body fluids, hair, and fiber samples

  16. Firearms Unit • Investigates discharged bullets, cartridge cases, shotgun shells, and ammunition

  17. Document Unit • Provides the skills needed for handwriting analysis and other questioned document issues • http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/accused-master-art-forger-tracked-shanghai/story?id=24558288

  18. Photographic Unit • Applies specialized photographic techniques for recording and examining physical evidence

  19. Other Crime Lab Services • Toxicology Unit- examines body fluids and organs for the presence of drugs and poisons • Latent Fingerprint Unit- processes and examines evidence for latent fingerprints • Polygraph Unit- conducts polygraph or lie detector tests • Voiceprint Analysis Unit- attempts to tie a recorded voice to a particular suspect • Evidence Collection Unit- dispatches specially trained personnel to the crime scene to collect and preserve physical evidence

  20. Other Forensic Science Services • Forensic Pathology- concentrate closely on the understanding of types and causation of injuries and causes of sudden and unnatural death • Deals with the different stages of death • Rigor mortis- stiffening of the body (occurs within first 24 hours) • Livor mortis- settling of blood closest to the ground (occurs up to 12 hours) • Algor mortis- results in loss of heat

  21. Other Forensic Science Services • Forensic Anthropology-concentrates on the identification of deceased individuals whose remains are decomposed, burned, mutilated or otherwise unrecognizable • Forensic Entomology- is the study of insects and their relation to a criminal investigation, commonly used to establish the time of death • Forensic Psychiatry- work with courts in evaluating an individual's competency to stand trial, defenses based on mental diseases or defects (e.g., the "insanity" defense), and sentencing recommendations

  22. Other Forensic Science Services • Forensic Odontology- evaluates teeth to determine the identification of the deceased • Forensic Engineering- investigation of materials, products, structures or components that fail or do not operate/function as intended, causing personal injury for example • Cybertechnology- involves the examination of digital evidence

  23. Major Crime Labs • FBI- Federal Bureau of Investigations • DEA- Drug Enforcement Agency • ATF- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives • US Postal Service • US Fish and Wildlife Service

  24. The Crime Scene Team • A group of professional investigators, each trained in a variety of special disciplines • Team members include • First police officer on the scene • Medics (if necessary) • Investigator(s) • Medical examiner • Photographer and/or Field Evidence Technician • Lab Experts

  25. Forensics in Court There are five main stakeholders in the courtroom: • Prosecutor • Defense (representing the defendant) • Forensic Scientist • Judge • Police officer/Detective

  26. Role of the Prosecutor • Gives legal advice in investigations • Sometimes writes or assists writing warrants, etc. • Reviews case for potential trial issues • - Plea bargaining option • Discovery – provides Brady material • Prepares case • Defends evidentiary challenges – based on case law • Subpoenas witnesses • Introduce evidence • Question witnesses – also establishes expert witnesses

  27. Role of the Defense • Monitor’s defendants rights in pre-trial process • Reviews case for potential trial issues • May negotiate plea bargain • Prepares case • Makes evidentiary challenges – based on case law • Subpoenas witnesses – if any, mostly alibi • Introduce evidence – if any • Question witnesses – Cross of prosecution case, may introduce counter testimony with own expert witnesses

  28. Forensic Scientist • May collect evidence • Creates/maintains chain of evidence • Processes evidence • Interprets evidence • Prepares reports • Follows Constitutional requirements • Often communicates with investigator about case • Often communicates with prosecutor before trial • May help prepare posters/materials for court • Testifies to jury about evidence

  29. Judge • Researches case law • Reviews motions • Make decisions on evidentiary challenges • Makes decisions on expert witnesses • Makes decisions on details of case such as crime scene photos being used (shock effect on jury) • Monitors trial

  30. Police/Investigator • Manages crime scene • Oversees evidence collection – often done by officer • Follows up on leads, questions witnesses • Makes arrests • Writes warrants • Maintains extensive reports and notes • May assist prosecutor with case preparation • Prepares for court

  31. Laws that Pertain to the US Criminal Justice System • The US Constitution • Statutory Law • Common Law or Case Law • Civil Law • Criminal Law • Equity Law • Administrative Law

  32. US Constitution • Supreme body of laws that governs our country • Overrules the constitutions of individual states

  33. Statutory Laws • Are written laws as enacted by a government body such as Congress • Are based on the Constitution

  34. Common Law • Also known as case law • Are made by judges • Makes for predictability and consistency in how the law is applied

  35. Civil Law • Also known as private law • Deals with relationships between individuals involving properties or contracts • Regulates noncriminal relationships between individuals, businesses, agency of government, and other organizations • Includes contracts, marriages, divorces, wills, property transfers, negligence, and products manufactured with hidden hazards • More concerned with assigning blame than intent

  36. Criminal Law • Also known as public law • Deals with regulation and enforcement of rights • Concerned with offenses against an individual that are deemed offensive to society • Cases tried are always the person vs the state • Those laws that are broken fall into 1 of 2 main categories • Misdemeanor- is a minor crime such as theft, minor assault and battery, or possession of small amounts of illegal drugs • Felony- is a major crime such as murder, rape, armed robbery, serious assaults, dealing in illegal drugs, fraud, auto theft, or forgery

  37. Equity Law • Remedial or preventive law • Are for cases not covered by common law • Restraining orders • Injunctions

  38. Administrative Law • Laws established by governmental agencies such as the IRS, Social Security Administration, or the military

  39. The Bill of Rights • The right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty • The right not to be searched unreasonably, either on one’s person or in one’s home • The right not to be arrested without probable cause • The right against unreasonable seizure of personal property • The right against self-incrimination • The right to fair questioning by police

  40. The Bill of Rights • The right to protection from physical harm throughout the justice process • The right to an attorney • The right to trial by jury • The right to know any charges against oneself • The right to cross examine prosecution witnesses • The right to speak and present witnesses

  41. The Bill of Rights • The right not to be tried again for the same crime • The right against cruel and unusual punishment • The right to due process • The right to a speedy trial • The right against excessive bail • The right against excessive fines • The right to be treated the same as others, regardless of race, gender, religious preference, country of origin, and other personal attributes

  42. Steps in Pursuing Justice • If a crime is committed these are the steps to take while pursuing justice • Police investigate what happened • Information is collected • Crime scene is documented and searched for evidence • All info is assembled into a report and sent to DA • Investigation continues until probable cause is established • An arrest warrant is issued for the suspect • The suspect is arrested • Individual is booked, fingerprinted, photographed and informed about his/her rights

  43. The Miranda Rights • Miranda v. Arizona (1966) • Before a law enforcement officer may question a suspect regarding the possible commission of a crime, he or she must inform the detainee about his or her Miranda rights, making sure the detainee understands them

  44. The Miranda Rights • Warning of Rights • You have the right to remain silent and refuse to answer questions • Anything you do or say may be used against you in the court of law • You have the right to consult an attorney before speaking to the police and to have your attorney present during questioning now or in the future • If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you before any questioning if you wish • If you decide to answer questions now without an attorney present, you will still have the right to stop answering at any time until you talk to an attorney • Knowing and understanding your rights as I have explained them to you, are you willing to answer my questions without an attorney present?

  45. Steps in Pursuing Justice • Person is brought before a magistrate judge who informs the individual of the charges, his/her rights, and bail • The person may also enter a plea of guilty, not guilty, not guilty by reason of insanity, double jeopardy (been tried for same crime in same court), or nolo contendere (no contest) • If a plea of guilty is entered, the person is brought before a preliminary or evidentary hearing (no jury present) • Most states use a grand jury • Will determine if there is enough evidence to bring the accused to a formal trial • The prosecutor presents evidence and the grand jury (16-23 citizens) decide the fate of the accused • If the grand jury decides there is enough evidence, a trial date will be set

  46. Steps in Pursuing Justice • If a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity is entered, the defendant will have to prove, by “clear and convincing evidence,” that “at the time of the commission of the acts constituting the offense, the defendant, as a result of a severe mental disease or defect, was unable to appreciate the nature and quality or wrongfulness of his acts” • Crimes must show intent- the insanity plea removes intent

  47. Steps in Pursuing Justice • Sometimes, the DA will plea bargain with the accused • The defendant works out a deal with the DA • May reduce jail time

  48. Types of Crimes • All crimes are violations (breach of a right, duty, or law) • 3 types • Infractions • Misdemeanors • Felonies

  49. Infractions • Minor offense or petty crime • Is less serious than a misdemeanor • Examples include • Jaywalking • Traffic violations • Littering • Penalty is usually a fine

More Related