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Ch. 14 Fingerprints. History of Fingerprinting. The first system of personal identification used in criminal investigations was anthropometry. Anthropometry – developed in 1883 by Alphonse Bertillon System of precise body measurements. History of Fingerprinting. History of Fingerprinting.
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History of Fingerprinting • The first system of personal identification used in criminal investigations was anthropometry. • Anthropometry – developed in 1883 by Alphonse Bertillon • System of precise body measurements
History of Fingerprinting • 1892 – Francis Galton – published the textbook, Finger Prints. *impetus for police agencies to adopt fingerprinting as a means of identification • 1891 – Dr Juan Vucetich-developed a classification system still used in many Spanish speaking countries • 1897 – Sir Edward Richard Henry –proposed a classification system used today in most Engish-speaking countries
History of Fingerprinting • 1901 - Fingerprints were first used for identification in the US by the New York City Civil Service Commission. • 1924 – Fingerprint records were consolidated into one system by the FBI
Principles of Fingerprints • Fingerprints are a reproduction of friction skin ridges found on the palm side of the fingers and thumbs. • The basic principles underlying the use of fingerprints in criminal investigations are that: 1. a fingerprint is an individual characteristic because no two fingers have yet been found to possess identical ridge characteristics; 2. a fingerprint will remain unchanged during an individual’s lifetime; and 3. fingerprints have general ridge patterns that permit them to be systematically classified.
First Principle • The individuality of a fingerprint is determined by careful study of ridge characteristics. • Ridge characteristics: Ridge endings, bifurcations, enclosures and other ridge details.
Second Principle • Fingerprints are a reproduction of friction skin ridges found on the palm side of fingers and thumbs. • Latent fingerprint-made by the deposit of oils and/or sweat; invisible to the naked eye. • A fingerprint remains unchanged during an individual’s lifetime.
Third Principle • Fingerprints have general ridge patterns that permits them to be systematically classified • Fingerprints are classified as: • Loops • Whorls • Arches
Loops • Loops • Ridge lines enter from one side and curve around to exit from the same side • 60-65% of population • Radial loops open towards thumb • Ulnar loops open toward pinky • Have one delta
Whorls • Rounded or circular ridge pattern • 30-35% of population • Two deltas
Arches • Ridge lines enter from one side of print and exit out the other • 5% of population
Identify each fingerprint pattern. ? A B Right Hand Left Hand C Right Hand E D Right Hand Left Hand
Primary Classification • First, fingers are paired up, placing one finger in the numerator of a fraction and the other in the denominator. • The presence or absence of the whorl pattern is the basis for the determination of the primary classification. • If a whorl pattern is found on any finger of the first pair, it is assigned a value of 16; on the second pair, an 8; on the third pair, a 4; on the second pair, a 2; and on the last pair, a 1. • Any finger having a loop or arch is assigned a 0. R. Index R. Ring L. ThumbL. MiddleL. Little R. Thumb R. Middle R. Little L. Index L. Ring
Primary Classification • After values for all 10 fingers are obtained, they are totaled, and a 1 is added to both the numerator and denominator. The fraction thus obtained is the primary classification As an example: If the right index finger and right middle finger are whorls and the rest are loops the classification is: 16 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 1 = 17 0 + 8 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 1 9 • This system allows for 1024 classification groups
Automated Fingerprint Identification Systems • 1999- FBI initiated the IAFIS database which linked state AFIS systems to the FBI database • Many AFIS systems exist at the city, county, and local government level
AFIS • Scanning devices digitally encode fingerprints bases on the presence and location of ridge endings and bifurcations • A fingerprint can be rapidly scanned and compared with thousands of prints per second. • A search produces a list of possible matches. • The ultimate verification of a prints identity is made by a finger print expert.
AFIS • Before AFIS police were limited to comparing crime-scene fingerprints to known suspects • After police can use crime-scene fingerprints to generate a list of suspects.
AFIS There are two major disadvantages of using AFIS systems: • Sometimes a latent print does not make a hit on AFIS because of the poor quality of the file print. • Many different AFIS systems operate at various levels of government using different software systems which prevents them form communicating with each other.
Methods of Detecting Fingerprints Three types of Fingerprints • Visible prints – made when the finger deposits a visible material such as ink, dirt, or blood on a surface • Plastic prints – a fingerprint impressed in a soft surface such as wax, soap, clay, etc. • Latent prints – caused by the transfer of perspiration or oils to the surface of an object; usually invisible to the investigator.
Locating Fingerprints • Some prints can be visibly identified • Powders or chemicals can be used depending on the surface. • RUVIS – uses ultraviolet light to identify the location of prints on a surface. YouTube - Solved- Fingerprint Analysis
On hard surfaces: Powder Grey or black Florescent Magnetic Superglue On soft surfaces: Iodine fuming Nonpermanent visualization Ninhydrin Reacts with proteins AgNO3 Reacts with salt Developing Latent Prints
Fingerprint Powders • Used on smooth, non-porous materials. • The area is lightly and carefully dusted with powders of various colors, chosen based on contrast with the surface. • The dust is lifted with tape and set against a contrasting background. • The print is preserved via photography. YouTube - Developing Latent Fingerprints
Iodine Fuming • Suspect material is placed in an enclosed cabinet along with iodine crystals. • The crystals are heated, and will sublimate (turn into a gas vapor). • The vapors cause the prints to visualize.
Chemical Treatment • Ninhydrin - this chemical is sprayed onto a porous surface via an aerosol can. Prints begin to visualize an hour or two after application, although the process can be accelerated through heating the print. • Silver nitrate- silver nitrate is sprayed onto the porous surface and left to dry. Then it is exposed to ultraviolet light to visualize the prints.
Super Glue Fuming • Used mainly on non-porous materials. • Superglue is placed on cotton and treated with sodium hydroxide. • Fumes can also be created by heating the glue. • The fumes and the object are contained in a closed chamber for up to six hours. • The fumes adhere to the print, visualizing it. • YouTube - Developing Fingerprints with Super Glue Prints taken from a plastic bag and developed using super glue fuming
Other techniques • Laser light – causes substances found in perspiration to fluoresce. • Chemicals can be added to fingerprints which fluoresce in the presence of laser light • Other techniques have been developed which allow chemicals added to prints to fluoresce with alternative sources of light.
Preservation of Developed Prints • Developed prints can be photographed with a specially designed camera. After photographs are taken: • The object containing the fingerprint can be transported to a crime lab • The print can be “lifted” using various types of adhesive tape.