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Direct Evidence Biological Circumstantial Physical Direct-statement made under oath › Proves fact without the necessity of involvement or guesses › When true, it overwhelmingly establishes fact Circumstantial-any object or material that is relevant to a crime › A series of circumstances that supports an assumption Physical-fibers, fingerprints, documents, soil, drugs, tool marks, impressions, glass, etc… Biological-hair, body fluids, bodies Be more reliable than eye-witness testimony Prove that a crime has been committed Corroborate or refute testimony Link a suspect or victim to a crime Establish ID of persons related to a crime Allow reconstructions to be responsible Answer questions about what took place, # of people involved, sequence of events Recognized as potential evidence Collected in an appropriate manner Preserved properly Failure to do this could result in: › The erroneous conviction of an innocent party › The inability to convict a guilty party Transient-temporary, easily lost or changed, usually observed by the 1st responder Pattern-produced by direct contact between 2 objects, an object and a person, or 2 persons Conditional-produced by a specific event or action, important in reconstruction Transfer-produced by temporary indirect contact between persons and objects Associative-something that may associate a victim or suspect with the scene or each other Odor-putrefication, perfume, gasoline, urine, burning, explosives, tobacco/drug smoke Temperature-surroundings, car hood, coffee, bathtub, body Impressions-footprints, teeth marks in soft food, tire marks or shoe prints on certain surfaces Mostly in the form of imprints, impressions, striations, markings, fractures, or deposits › › › › › › › › › › › › Blood spatter Glass fracture Burn patterns Furniture position Projectile trajectory Tire/skid marks Clothing distribution Gunpowder residue Material damage Body position Toolmarks Modus Operandi Light-headlights, lighting conditions, ambient light Smoke-color, direction of travel, density, odor Fire-color and direction of flames, speed of spread, temperature and condition Location-injuries/wounds, bloodstains, vehicles, weapons, cartridge cases, broken glass Vehicles-doors locked/unlocked, windows open/closed, radio on/off, odometer mileage Body-position and types of wounds, rigor mortis, liver mortis, algor mortis Scene-condition of furniture, doors, and windows, disturbances/signs of struggle Biological-blood, semen, saliva, sweat, tears, hair, bone, tissues, urine, feces, animal material, insects, bacteria, fungi, plants Chemical-fibers, glass, soil, gun powder, metals, minerals, narcotics, drugs, paper, ink, cosmetics, paint, plastics, lubricants, fertilizer Physical-fingerprints, footprints, shoe prints, handwriting, firearms, tire marks, tool marks, type writing Miscellaneous-laundry marks, voice analysis, polygraph, photography, stress evaluation, psycholinguistic analysis, vehicle ID Individual-links evidence to a particular person or single source › Broken glass, hair, skin cells, license plate Class-common to a group of objects or persons › Most fibers Crime Scene Victim Suspect Remember Locard’s Principle!