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Transcript
Unit 2 - Inside the Crime Lab
8 practices of Scientific Citizens
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Ask Questions and Define Problems
Develop and Use Models
Plan and Carry Out Investigations
Analyze and Interpret Data
Use Math for Computational Thinking
Construct Explanations and Design Solutions
Engage in Debate Supported by Evidence
Communicate Information
Scientific Method
“Scientific method refers to the body of
techniques for investigating phenomena,
acquiring new knowledge, or correcting and
integrating previous knowledge. It is based on
gathering observable, empirical and
measurable evidence subject to specific
principles of reasoning.”
Isaac Newton (1687, 1713, 1726)
“Rules for the study of natural philosophy,”
Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica
Scientific Method
o
Looks different in different textbooks
Scientific Methods – general ideas
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Make Observations that lead to a question
Form a hypothesis to answer the question
Test they hypothesis by experiments
Make conclusions based on the results of
the experiment
Communicate the results
How do we respond to it
o
o
Scientists continually observe, test, and
modify the body of knowledge.
Rather than claiming absolute truth, science
approaches truth either through
breakthrough discoveries or incrementally,
by testing theories repeatedly.
Evidence Samples
o
o
Questioned Samples –The unknown,
usually collected at the crime scene
Control Samples – used for comparison with
Questioned samples, details are known
We ID questioned samples through tests of
physical and chemical properties
Physical Properties and Changes
o
o
9
Physical properties are properties that can
be measured without changing the identity of
the evidence ex) density, color, melting point,
Physical Changes occur and do not alter
the chemical makeup of the substance
Forensic Science II: Forensic Laboratory Techniques, Chapter 3
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Chemical Properties and Changes
Chemical properties determine how a
substance behaves in the presence of other
substances.
o Chemical changes once they occur, there is
no going back. Ex) baking a cake, rusting,
burning, decomposing
When these tests are performed, evidence
is usually destroyed
o
10
Forensic Science II: Forensic Laboratory Techniques, Chapter 3
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Presumptive & Confirmatory Tests
o
o
11
Presumptive tests allow a field investigator
to screen evidence to reduce the number of
possibilities and to get a preliminary
identification. ex) Is it blood?
Confirmatory tests are used to make a
more specific identification. Ex) Whose blood
is it?
Forensic Science II: Forensic Laboratory Techniques, Chapter 3
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Analytical Techniques
Ways we analyze the evidence
Quantitative Analysis – results are a
measureable amount or quantity, #
Qualitative Analysis – description using
words; ex) crime scene notes, smells, colors
etc.
o
12
Forensic Science II: Forensic Laboratory Techniques, Chapter 3
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
History of Crime Labs
1923 – First forensic crime lab started in the
United States; before FBI lab; established in
Los Angeles
1930’s – First university of criminology and
criminalistics
J. Edgar Hoover
o
o
o
“Father of the FBI” - Director of Federal
Bureau of Investigation during the 1930’s
He organized a national laboratory to offer
forensic services to all law enforcement
agencies in the U.S.
VERY CONTROVERSIAL
•
•
He exceeded & abused his authority with unjustified
investigations & illegal wiretaps based on political
beliefs rather than suspected criminal activity
FBI directors are now limited to 10-year terms
FBI Lab – Quantico, VA
•
•
o
o
Currently world’s largest
Conducts more than 1 million
examinations per year
US currently has no national system of forensic labs;
Many cities, counties and states operate crime labs
with government funding
Independent crime labs must fund themselves
The State of Crime Labs in the US
o
o
The development of crime laboratories in the
United States has been characterized by
rapid growth accompanied by a lack of
national and regional planning and
coordination.
At present, approximately 350 public crime
laboratories operate at various levels of
government—federal, state, county, and
municipal.
16
Why More Crime Labs
o
The ever increasing number of crime labs is
partly the result of the following:
1.
2.
3.
Supreme Court decisions in the 1960s
responsible for police placing greater emphasis
on scientifically evaluated evidence.
Crime laboratories inundated with drug
specimens due to accelerated drug abuse.
The advent of DNA profiling.
17
Technical Support
o
The technical support provided by crime laboratories
can be assigned to five basic services.
1. Physical Science Unit incorporates the principles
of chemistry, physics, and geology to identify and
compare physical evidence.
2. Biology Unit applies the knowledge of biological
sciences in order to investigate blood samples,
body fluids, hair, and fiber samples.
3. Firearms Unit investigates discharged bullets,
cartridge cases, shotgun shells, and ammunition.
18
Technical Support
4. Document Unit provides the skills needed for
handwriting analysis and other questioneddocument issues.
5. Photographic Unit applies specialized
photographic techniques for recording and
examining physical evidence. Some crime
laboratories may offer the optional services of
toxicology, fingerprint analysis, voiceprint
analysis, evidence collection, and polygraph
administration.
19
Technical Support
o
Optional Services by Full-Service Labs
• 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
http://www.adfs.alabama.gov/
•
•
•
independent state agency which provides forensic service
law enforcement agencies throughout the State of Alabam
established in 1935 and is one of the oldest forensic
agencies in the country
There is no charge for these services for law enforcement
agencies including prosecutorial and defense attorneys in
criminal cases
Birmingham Regional Lab
located in Hoover
o
o
services 22 counties in Alabama (Lamar,
Pickens, Sumter, Greene, Hale, Marengo,
Perry, Tuscaloosa, Fayette, Walker,
Jefferson, Shelby, Bibb, Coosa, Talladega,
St. Clair, Blount, Clay, Cleburn, Etowah,
Calhoun, and Cherokee)
services that are provided to these counties
are Drug Chemistry, Forensic Biology,
Firearms and Toolmark, and Toxicology
Headquarters and Auburn Laboratory
o
services ten counties in Alabama in the area
of Drug Chemistry
Huntsville Laboratory
Death Investigation - Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, Colbert, Cullman,
DeKalb, Etowah, Fayette, Franklin, Jackson, Lamar, Lauderdale, Lawrence,
Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan, St. Clair, Walker and Winston
Drug Chemistry - Colbert, Cullman, DeKalb, Franklin, Jackson, Lauderdale,
Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan and Winston
Firearms and Toolmark - Colbert, Cullman, DeKalb, Franklin, Jackson,
Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan and
Winston
Forensic Biology - Colbert, Cullman, DeKalb, Franklin, Jackson, Lauderdale,
Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan and Winston
Forensic Pathology - Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne, Colbert, Cullman,
DeKalb, Etowah, Fayette, Franklin, Jackson, Lamar, Lauderdale, Lawrence,
Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan, St. Clair, Walker and Winston
Mobile Laboratory
o
o
services eight counties in South Alabama
Provides Drug Chemistry, Forensic Biology,
Firearms and Toolmark, Death Investigation and
Forensic Pathology
Montgomery Laboratory
o
services 24 counties in
Alabama in the area of
Forensic Biology and
Firearms and Toolmark
Pelham - Implied Consent
o
o
o
services all counties of Alabama in Draeger Training
Implied Consent Section exists to: Provide law enforcement with an
effective and defensible breath alcohol testing program for use in
enforcing the DUI Laws of the State of Alabama.
Provide those citizens directed to submit breath samples for the
detection of alcohol with the most comprehensive and scientifically
reliable program available.
Montgomery Medical Laboratory
• provides Death Investigation and Forensic
Pathology to 36 counties
Why more crime labs?
-some possibilities
a.Supreme
Court decisions in the
1960’s
b.Advent of DNA profiling
c. Staggering increase in crime
rates in the US
d.Increase in drug-related arrests
Development of Forensic Science
Organizations
o
o
o
o
American Academy of Forensic Sciences
(AAFS)
Established in 1948
Approximately 5,000 members representing
all forensic science disciplines and specialties
Started the Journal of Forensic Sciences in
1954
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Development of Forensic Science
Organizations
o
o
o
o
American Society of Crime Lab Directors
(ASCLD)
Established in the early 1970s
Created a Lab Accreditation
Board (ASCLD/LAB)
ASCLD/LAB began lab
accreditation in 1982
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
AAFS - Specialties
American Academy of Forensic Science
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Criminalistics – Crime scene reconstruction,
detectives
Digital Sciences – computers and technology
Engineering Science – buildings, ie – hurricane
proofing, how WTC collapsed
Jurisprudence – philosophy of law; attorneys
Odontology – dental and teeth
AAFS - Specialties
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
34
Pathology/Biology – diseases; forensic
medicine; cause and manner of death
Anthropology – study of bones
Psychiatry – mental health
Questioned Documents – frauds and
forgery
Toxicology – chemicals
General – emerging fields
Forensic Science II: Forensic Laboratory Techniques, Chapter 3
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Criminalistics:
o
o
o
analyze, compare, identify, and interpret
physical evidence
The main role of the criminalist is to objectively
apply the techniques of the physical and natural
sciences to examine physical evidence
interpreting the results of the tests to determine
the truth
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Digital & Multimedia
Sciences:
o
o
o
Use information located on computers and
other electronic devices as investigative aids
Find hidden or deleted information to
determine if internet based crimes have been
committed
aid in the documentation of crime scenes
and injuries
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Engineering:
o
o
applies the art and science of engineering to the
purpose of the law
failure analysis, accident reconstruction, causes and
origins of fires or explosions, design review, quality
evaluation of construction or manufacturing,
maintenance procedures
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
General – emerging fields i.e.
Forensic Entomology:
Entomology is a branch of biology
devoted to the study of insects
• Forensic entomologists use insects
as investigative aids
• By examining insects, larvae or
pupae associated with a corpse,
knowing the life cycle of insects, and
by using the existing environmental
factors, forensic entomologists can
estimate the time of death
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
•
Forensic Science Specialties
Jurisprudence:
Attorneys for the prosecution and the defense, as
well as the judge
Forensic: defined by Black's Law Dictionary as
"belonging to courts of justice."
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Expert Witness Testimony
A witness must establish to the
satisfaction of a trial judge that he or she
possesses credibility through credentials,
background and experience that will aid
the court in determining the truth of the
matter at issue, then that individual will
be accepted as an expert witness.
Supreme Court Case:
The Frye v. United States
decision set guidelines for
determining the admissibility of
scientific evidence into the
courtroom.
o To meet the Frye standard, the
evidence in question must be
“generally accepted” by the
scientific community.
polygraph test results were ruled
inadmissible
o
Supreme Court Case:
Daubert vs Merrell Dow
Pharmaceuticals (1993)
o
o
o
Establishes the judge as the “gatekeeper” where the judge decides on
whether or not evidence is admissible in court.
In Daubert, the Court stated that evidence based on innovative or
unusual scientific knowledge may be admitted only after it has been
established that the evidence is reliable and scientifically valid. The
Court also imposed a gatekeeping function on trial judges by
charging them with preventing "junk science" from entering the
courtroom as evidence.
Daubert outlined four considerations: 1. testing, 2. peer review, 3.
error rates, and 4. acceptability in the relevant scientific community.
These four tests for reliability are known as the Daubert factors or the
Daubert test.
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Odontology:
o
o
Odontology is the study of the physiology,
anatomy, and pathology of teeth
Forensic odontologists perform two types of
analyses involving the human dentition
•
•
Identify human remains by comparing premortem and
postmortem dental X-rays
Bite mark comparisons (crime scene marks to known
bite marks)
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Pathology:
o
o
o
o
Pathology is a specialty area of medicine
Pathology is the study of diseases and the bodily
changes caused by the diseases
Forensic pathologists determine the
cause of death (the medical reason
why a person died; e.g.
asphyxiation)
Forensic pathologists determine
the manner of death (the circumstances causing death;
e.g. homicide)
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Physical Anthropology:
o
Physical Anthropology is the
science of the human skeleton
and how it has evolved over time
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic anthropologists:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Can determine whether found remains are
of human or animal origin
Reconstruct the skeleton from found remains
Provide an estimate of age, stature, and
gender
Can sometimes determine racial origin
Detect skeletal abnormalities and any trauma
Can provide information about the cause of
death
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Psychiatry & Behavioral Science:
o
o
o
o
Psychiatry is a branch of medicine concerning the
diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of mental illness
Psychology is the scientific study of the mind and behavior
of humans
Forensic psychiatrists & psychologists evaluate offenders
for civil and criminal competence and may be involved in
offender treatment programs
A few specialize in “profiling” of criminal cases, primarily
serial murderers and serial rapists
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Questioned Documents:
Discovers and proves the facts concerning documents and
related material, such as ink, paper, toner from a copier or
fax, and ribbons, such as from a typewriter
• Who wrote this?
• Is this a true signature?
• Has this document been altered?
• Are there additions and/or erasures on this check?
• Was this pen used to write this?
• Tell me about this paper
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved
Forensic Science Specialties
Forensic Toxicology:
o
o
o
o
Forensic toxicology is the study of the effects of
extraneous materials such as poisons and drugs in
the body
Forensic toxicologists must determine both the
presence and the amounts of extraneous materials in
the body
Assist the medical examiners in determining the
cause of death
May be involved in the determination of ethanol
levels in blood and breath samples
2007 McGraw-Hill Companies, all rights reserved