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Forensics

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Forensics Circa 1966 Mary Gibson (Mary Coppolino second wife) Marjorie Farber, widow of William Farber, mistress of Carl Coppolino Dr. Carl Coppolino Spring ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Forensics


1
Forensics
Chapter 1 Introduction
2
Forensic Science A Definition
  • Application of science to law
  • Applies the knowledge and technology of science
    for the definition and enforcement of such laws.

Forensic science is the application of science to
those criminal and civil laws that are enforced
by police agencies in a criminal justice system.
3
History and Development
1813
1879
Mathieu Orfila Father of Forensic toxicology
Alphonse Bertillon developed the science of
anthropometry
1929
1892
Calvin Goddard developed the comparison
microscope for bullet comparisons.
Francis Galton first study of fingerprints
4
more History
1910
1950s
Principles of document examination
Microscopy as a tool for the forensic scientist
1893
1910
Developed the application of scientific
principles to criminal investigations
Locards Exchange Principle
5
Locards Principle
  • "Wherever he steps, whatever he touches, whatever
    he leaves, even unconsciously, will serve as a
    silent witness against him. Not only his
    fingerprints or his footprints, but his hair, the
    fibers from his clothes, the glass he breaks, the
    tool mark he leaves, the paint he scratches, the
    blood or semen he deposits or collects. All of
    these and more, bear mute witness against him.
    This is evidence that does not forget. It is not
    confused by the excitement of the moment. It is
    not absent because human witnesses are. It is
    factual evidence. Physical evidence cannot be
    wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be
    wholly absent. Only human failure to find it,
    study and understand it, can diminish its value.

6
Organization of the Crime Lab
  • Over 320 public crime labs in the U.Sa tripling
    of the number since 1966.
  • Supreme Court decision Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
  • Increase in drug abuse
  • Advent of DNA profiling
  • Most State Governments maintain crime labs plus
    satellite labs.

7
Services of the Crime Lab
  • Physical Science Unit
  • Biology Unit
  • Firearms Unit
  • Document Examination Unit
  • Photography Unit
  • Toxicology Unit
  • Latent Fingerprint Unit
  • Polygraph Unit
  • Voiceprint Analysis unit
  • Evidence Collection Unit

8
Physical Science Unit
9
Physical Science Unit
  • Investigators
  • Chemists
  • Physicists
  • Geologists
  • Items Identified
  • drugs, glass, paint, explosives and soil
  • Job
  • Analytical and chemical analysis

10
Biology Unit
11
Biology Unit
  • Investigators
  • Biologists
  • Biochemists
  • Identify and Compare
  • botanical materials such as wood and plants.
  • Job
  • Identification and DNA profiling of dried blood
    stains, other body fluids, comparison of hairs
    and fibers

12
Firearms Unit
13
Firearms Unit
  • Identify and examine
  • Firearms
  • Discharged bullets
  • Cartridge cases
  • Shotgun shells
  • Responsibility
  • Examination of garments to detect firearm
    discharge residue
  • Determine approximate distance from target when
    weapon was fired.

14
Document Analysis Unit
15
Document Analysis Unit
  • Identify and Examine
  • Handwriting and typewriting to determine
    authenticity and/or source
  • Job
  • Analysis of paper and ink and indented writings
    (impressions)
  • Recreate
  • Obliterations, erasures
  • Burned or charred documents

16
Photography Unit
17
Photography Unit
  • Examine and Record
  • Physical evidence at the scene
  • Specialize in
  • Digital imaging, IR, UV, and X ray photography to
    make invisible information visible to the naked
    eye
  • Beyond the Scene
  • Preparation of photographic exhibits for
    courtroom presentation.

18
Can you find the Relationship?
19
Toxicology Unit
  • Investigators
  • Chemists
  • Biologists
  • Examine
  • Body fluids and organs for the presence or
    absence of drugs and poisons.
  • Determines Blood alcohol content
  • Job
  • Works with the coroner or medical examiners
    office

20
Latent Fingerprint Unit
21
Latent Fingerprint Unit
  • Process and examine
  • Fingerprints to determine possible matches with
    victims and suspects

22
Polygraph Unit
23
Polygraph Unit
  • Job
  • Analyze respiration, perspiration, blood pressure
    and pulse rate to determine credibility
  • Used in conjunction with interrogation to
    determine credibility of suspects and witnesses.

24
Voiceprint Unit
25
Voiceprint Unit
  • Interpret
  • Telephone threats
  • Analyze
  • Tape recorded messages
  • Compare
  • Suspect voice recording to evidence to match
    source

26
Evidence Collection Unit
27
Evidence Collection Unit
  • CSI
  • Crime Scene Investigation
  • Consists of
  • trained personnel who are dispatched to the crime
    scene to collect and preserve physical evidence.
  • They simply collect the evidence, they do not do
    every single job as seen on fiction television.

28
Locards Principle Revisited
  • Attempt the Hypothetical Case with a partner.
  • Answers
  • Victim was inside the car means fibers from its
    interior have been transferred onto the victims
    clothing.
  • Blood from the victim has been transferred onto
    the velour interior.
  • Fiber, blood, hair, and skin cells may also have
    been transferred between the criminal and victim.
  • Tire tracks from the car may have been left in
    the woods.
  • This would probably lead to the make of car,
    since the tires are special.
  • If the vehicle was located, small driving
    imperfections in the tread could link it to the
    crime.
  • The type of soil at the crime scene may still be
    on the cars tires, too.
  • Interior of suspects car could be tested for the
    fibers, hair, skin cells and blood of the victim.

29
Types of Law The Three Cs
  • Criminal
  • Civil
  • Common
  • Note there are others but these will be the
    primary ones in many of our cases
  • Probable Cause situation in which a reasonable
    and prudent person, viewing the available
    informatio,n would conclude that a crime has been
    committed and that the suspect committed it

30
Functions of the Forensic Scientist
  • Frye v. United States 1923 Rejection of Lie
    Detector (Polygraph) results necessitated
    guidelines for determining judicial admissibility
    of scientific examinations.
  • The Frye Standard The court must decide if the
    questioned procedure, technique or principles are
    generally accepted by a meaningful segment of
    the scientific community.

31
Daubert v. Merrel
  • Whether the scientific technique or theory can be
    tested.
  • Whether the technique or theory has been subject
    to peer review and publication.
  • The techniques potential for error.
  • Existence and maintenance of standards
    controlling the techniques operation.
  • Whether the scientific theory or method has
    attracted widespread acceptance within a relevant
    scientific community.

32
Coppolino Case Study
33
Dr. Karow
  • August 28, 1965
  • Family physician, Karow, called to Coppolino home

Carmelas remains
34
  • Circa 1966

35
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36
Dr. Carl Coppolino
Spring Chicken Gibson
37
  • July 30, 1963
  • William Farber died

38
Carl and his lawyer
Carl in custody
39
Coppolino v. State
  • M.E. testified that victim died of an overdose of
    a drug called succinylcholine chloride based on
    his toxicology report.
  • Succinylcholine chloride breaks down into
    succinic acid in the body.
  • This drug had never before been detected in a
    human body.
  • Defense argued that this test was new and absence
    of corroborative experimental data by other
    scientists.
  • The court rejected the defenses argument on the
    grounds that although the tests may be new and
    unique, they are admissible only if they are
    based on scientifically valid principles and
    techniques.

40
Expert Testimony
  • Must be competent education degrees, member of
    applicable societies, published papers or books,
    etc.
  • Defense may cross-examine the
  • potential expert witness.
  • The individual trial judge is the
  • ultimate decision maker
  • regarding expert witnesses.

41
Training in Recognition, Collection, and
Preservation of Evidence
  • Specially trained evidence collectors CSI
  • On 24-hour call to aid criminal investigators in
    retrieving evidence
  • Specially equipped with all the proper evidence
    collection equipment
  • Unfortunately, some police forces still dont use
    them or the police themselves have contaminated
    the crime scene before the CSI team gets there!

42
Forensic Pathology
  • Investigation of sudden, unnatural, unexplained,
    or violent death.
  • Medical Examiner vs Coroner M.D. vs political
    appointee.
  • Autopsy http//www.pathguy.com/autopsy.htm
  • Causes of death natural, homicide, suicide,
    accident, undetermined.
  • Rigor mortis starts within the first 24 hours
    and disappears after 36 hours. Helpful in
    estimating time of death. See Algor mortis
  • Livor mortis settling of blood after the heart
    stops. Skin appears dark blue. Used to
    determine position of body at time of death.

43
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44
Rigor Mortis
  • Chemical change in the muscles after death,
    causing the limbs of the corpse to become stiff
    and difficult to move or manipulate.
  • 3-12 hours disappears after 72 hours in humans.

45
Muscles and Rigor Mortis
46
Rigor Mortis
47
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48
Livor Mortis
49
Livor Mortis
50
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51
Determining time of Death
  • Algor mortis continual cooling of body
    temperature after death
  • Factors location of body, size of body,
    victims clothing, ambient temperature
  • General Rule Beginning about an hour after
    death, the body will lose heat at a rate of 1 to
    1.5 degrees F. per hour until the body reaches
    the environmental temperature.
  • Potassium levels in the vitreous humor of the eye

52
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53
More Time of Death Factors
  • Food in victims stomach can establish last time
    victim ate.
  • Liver temperature
  • Only if done at crime scene
  • Anal Temperature
  • Compared to ambient temperature

54
Stomach Contents
  • Stomach begins to empty within 10 minutes of meal
  • Size of Meal vs. Time in Stomach
  • Light - 1-2 hours
  • Medium - 3-4 hours
  • Heavy - 4-6 hours

55
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56
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57
Other Areas involving Forensics
  • Anthropology Examination of human skeletal
    remains
  • Entomology insect life span can be used to
    determine the time of death.
  • Psychiatry competency of suspect serial killed
    profiles
  • Odontology body identification based on dental
    records evidence using bite marks left on
    victims
  • Engineering accident reconstruction to
    determine causes
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