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Chapter 1: Introduction to Forensic Science What is Forensics? As an adjective 1. pertaining to, connected with, or used in courts of law or public discussion and debate. 2. adapted or suited to argumentation; rhetorical. As a noun 3. the art or study of argumentation and formal debate. forensics. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged. Retrieved June 16, 2010, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/forensics Modern Definition • noun (used with a sing. verb) 1. The art or study of formal debate; argumentation. 2.The use of science and technology to investigate and establish facts in criminal or civil courts of law. forensics. (n.d.). The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Retrieved June 16, 2010, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/forensics Origin of Forensics • 1581, from L. forensis "of a forum, place of assembly," from forum. • Used in sense of "pertaining to legal trials," as in forensic medicine (1845) forensics. (n.d.). Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved June 16, 2010, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/forensics Forensics + Science • science used • in public, • in a court, or • in the justice system. • Any science used for the purposes of the law is a forensic science • Video forensics. (n.d.). American Academy of Forensic Science. Retrieved June 16, 2010, from Aafs.org website: http://aafs.org/default.asp?section_id=resources&page_id=choosing_a_career#Bookmark1 Summary • Forensics science • Application of science to law • Technology applied to • Food • Air quality • Pesticides Drugs Water quality Banking • Application of science to criminal minds and civil laws that are enforced by police agencies and criminal justice system Forensic Science • Deals with laws and science • This class focus • • • • • Chemistry Biology Physics Geology Computer technology • Not so much on laws Crime Laboratory • Science used for analysis of crime scene evidence • 2 basic functions • Identify a sample • Compare two samples History • China – 3rd century • Yi Yu Ji (“A Collection of Criminal Cases” • First to use fingerprints for identification • Limited knowledge • Anatomy and pathology • Hampered development of Forensic Science until 17th-18th centuries History (continued) • Italy – 1686 • Marcello Malpighi, University of Bologna • Sweden - 1775 • Carl Wihelm Scheele • France – 1798 • François – Emanuel Fordéré History (continued) • Germany – 1806 • Valentin Ross • Spain – 1814 • Mathieu Orfila Father of Forensic Toxicology History (continued) • 1828 • William Nichol • 1839 • Henri-Louis Bayard • James Marsh History (continued) • 1850-1860’s • Started using photography to record crime scenes and prisoners • 1853 • First microcrystalline test for hemaglobin • 1863 • First presumptive test for blood History (continued) • 1879 • Alphonse Bertillon • Father of criminal identification • Anthropometry History (continued) • Finger prints • Chinese used since 3rd century • 1877 – U.S. microscopist Thomas Taylor 1880 – Scottis physician Henry Faulds • 1892 – Englishman Francis Henry Galton History (continued) • 1893 • Hans Gross • Late 19th century • Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle History (continued) • 1901 • Dr. Karl Landsteiner • 1910 • Albert S. Osborn • 1915 • Dr. Leone Lattes History (continued) • 1910 • Frenchman Edmond Locard • Starts first police laboratory • Became founder and director of Institute of Criminalistics at the University of Lyons • Locard’s exchange principle History (continued) • 1923 • August Vollmer • 1932 • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Under direction of J. Edgar Hoover History (continued) • Dr. Walter C. McCrone • U.S. Army Colonel Calvin Goddard Modern Advances • Mid-20th century • Computer technology • • • • Chromotography Spectrophotomery Electrophoresis Data bases Modern Advances • DNA typing • Sir Alec Jeffreys Summary • Forensics Science • Application of science to criminal and civil laws • Anthropometry • First system of personal identification • A series of body measurements • Origins from • Bertillion, Galton, Lattes, Goddard, Osborn, Locard • Locard’s Exchange Principle • Cross-transfer of materials when they come in contact with each other Organization of a Crime Lab • Around 350 public crime laboratories operate at various levels of government • • • • Federal State County Municipal • Various sizes and diversity • No set model Organization of a Crime Lab • Federal Level • FBI • Department of Justice • Drug Enforcement Agency • Department of Justice • Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms • Department of Treasury • U.S. Postal Inspection Service Organization of a Crime Lab • Growth of labs • 1960s- Supreme court decision • Requirements to advise criminal suspects • Of their constitutional rights • Their rights of immediate access to council • Successful prosecution of criminal cases • Thorough and professional police investigation Organization of a Crime Lab • Growth of labs • Increased crime rate • Increased drug traffic • DNA profiling Services of a Crime Lab • Physical analysis • Biology • Firearms • Document Examination • Photographic Unit • Toxicology • Fingerprinting • Polygraph Services of a Crime Lab • Voiceprint analysis • Evidence Collection Unit • Pathology • Psychology • Odontology • Anthropology • Entomology • Engineering