Title: History of Forensic Science
1History of Forensic Science
2History of Forensic Science
- In 1930 May published The identification of
knives, tools and instruments, a positive
science, in The American Journal of Police
Science.
3History of Forensic Science
- (1920s) Calvin Goddard perfected the comparison
microscope for use in bullet comparison.
4History of Forensic Science
- 1921 John Larson and Leonard Keeler designed the
portable polygraph.
5History of Forensic Science
- 1923 In Frye v. United States, polygraph test
results were ruled inadmissible. - The federal ruling introduced the concept of
general acceptance and stated that polygraph
testing did not meet that criterion.
6History of Forensic Science
- 1924 August Vollmer, as chief of police in Los
Angeles, California, implemented the first U.S.
police crime laboratory.
7History of Forensic Science
- 1926 The case of Sacco and Vanzetti, which took
place in Bridgewater, Massachusetts, was
responsible for popularizing the use of the
comparison microscope for bullet comparison. - Calvin Goddards conclusions were upheld when the
evidence was reexamined in 1961.
8History of Forensic Science
- 1929 Calvin Goddards work on the St. Valentines
day massacre led to the founding of the
Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory on the
campus of Northwestern University, Evanston,
Illinois.
9History of Forensic Science
- 1930 American Journal of Police Science was
founded and published by the staff of Goddards
Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory in Chicago.
- In 1932, it was absorbed by Journal of Criminal
Law and Criminology, becoming the Journal of
Criminal Law, Criminology and police science.
10History of Forensic Science
- 1932 The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
crime laboratory was created.
11History of Forensic Science
- 1935 Frits Zernike, a Dutch physicist, invented
the first interference contrast microscope, a
phase contrast microscope, an achievement for
which he won the Nobel prize in 1953.
12History of Forensic Science
- 1937 Walter Specht, at the University Institute
for Legal Medicine and Scientific Criminalistics
in Jena, Germany, developed the chemiluminescent
reagent luminol as a presumptive test for blood.
13History of Forensic Science
- 1937 Paul Kirk assumed leadership of the
criminology program at the University of
California at Berkeley. In 1945, he formalized a
major in technical criminology.
14History of Forensic Science
- 1941 Murray Hill of Bell Labs initiated the study
voiceprint identification. The technique was
refined by L.G. Kersta.
15History of Forensic Science
- 1950 August Vollmer, chief of police of Berkeley,
California, established the school of criminology
at the University of California at Berkeley.
16History of Forensic Science
- 1950 Max Frei-Sulzer, founder of the first Swiss
criminalistics laboratory, developed the tape
lift method of collecting trace evidence.
17History of Forensic Science
- 1954 R. F. Borkenstein, captain of the Indiana
State Police, invented the Breathalyzer for field
sobriety testing.
18History of Forensic Science
- 1974 The detection of gunshot residue (GSR) using
scanning electron microscopy with electron
dispersive X-rays (SEMEDX) technology was
developed.
19History of Forensic Science
- 1975 The Federal Rules of Evidence, originally
promulgated by the U.S. Supreme Court, were
enacted as a congressional statute. - They are based on the relevancy standard in which
scientific evidence that is deemed more
prejudicial than probative may not be admitted.
20History of Forensic Science
- 1977 Fuseo Matsumur, a trace evidence examiner
from Japan, notices his own fingerprints
developing on microscope slides while mounting
hairs from a murder case. - He relates the information to co-worker Masato
Soba, a latent print examiner. Soba would later
that year be the first to develop latent prints
intentionally by Superglue fuming.
21History of Forensic Science
- 1977 The FBI introduced the beginnings of its
Automated Fingerprint Identification System
(AFIS) with the first computerized scans of
fingerprints.
22History of Forensic Science
- 1984 Sir Alec Jeffreys developed the first DNA
profiling test. - He published his findings in 1985.
23History of Forensic Science
- 1986 In the first use of DNA to solve a crime,
Jeffreys used DNA profiling to identify Colin
Pitchfork as the murderer of two young girls in
the English Midlands. - Significantly, in the course of the
investigation, DNA was first used to exonerate an
innocent suspect.
24History of Forensic Science
- 1986 In People v. Pestinikas, Edward Blake first
used PCR-based DNA testing, to confirm different
autopsy samples to be from the same person. - The evidence was accepted by a civil court. This
was also the first use of any kind of DNA testing
in the United States
25History of Forensic Science
- 1987 DNA profiling was introduced for the first
time in a U.S. criminal court. Based on DNA
analysis Tommy Lee Andrews was convicted of a
series of sexual assaults in Orlando, Florida.
26History of Forensic Science
- 1987 New York v. Castro was the first case in
which the admissibility of DNA was seriously
challenged. - It set in motion a string of events that
culminated in a call for certification,
accreditation, standardization, and quality
control guidelines for both DNA laboratories and
the general forensic community.
27History of Forensic Science
- 1991 Walsh Automation Inc., in Montreal, launched
development of an automated imaging system called
the Integrated Ballistics Identification System,
or IBIS, for comparison of the marks left on
fired bullets, cartridge cases, and shell
casings. - This system was subsequently developed for the
U.S. market in collaboration with the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF).
28History of Forensic Science
- 1992 The FBI contracted with Mnemonic Systems to
develop Drugfire, an automated imaging system to
compare marks left on cartridge cases and shell
casings. - The ability to compare fired bullets was
subsequently added.
29History of Forensic Science
- 1993 In Daubert et al. v. Merrell Dow, a U.S.
federal court relaxed the Frye standard for
admission of scientific evidence and conferred on
the judge a gatekeeping role.
30History of Forensic Science
- 1996 The FBI introduced computerized searches of
the AFIS fingerprint database. - Live scan and card scan devices allowed
interdepartmental submissions
31History of Forensic Science
- 1998 An FBI DNA database, NIDIS, enabling
interstate cooperation in linking crimes, was put
into practice.
32History of Forensic Science
- 1999 The FBI upgraded its computerized
fingerprint database and implemented the
Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification
System (IAFIS), allowing paperless submission,
storage, and search capabilities directly to the
national database maintained at the FBI.
33History of Forensic Science
- 2006 A new technology developed by a University
of Sheffield team of researchers which allows
fingerprint images to be compressed and
transmitted via mobile phones is approved for use
in British police forces.
34Detection in the 21st Century
- As research advances, it enables the production
of smaller, less expensive, more accurate, more
sensitive, portable, more robust, fast sensors
for detecting even trace forensic samples.
35Detection in the 21st Century
- It will also allow analytical data to be
extracted, analyzed remotely and matches obtained
in databases from scenes of crime more quickly
than has ever been possible before.