2 methods used to identify materials found at the scene of a crime

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2 Methods used to identify materials found at the scene of a crime

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2 Methods used to identify materials found at the scene of a crime. Identification. Requires: adoption of testing techniques for specific materials. Must be able to be duplicated in subsequent tests. Must EXCLUDE all other substances. Comparison. Compares a suspect’s specimens to a standard. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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2 Methods used to identify materials found at the scene of a crime

IdentificationRequires: adoption of testing techniques for specific materials. Must be able to be duplicated in subsequent tests.Must EXCLUDE all other substances.

ComparisonCompares a suspect’s specimens to a standard.All properties must compare.Whether that comparison can put a suspect at the scene, or just make it possible that he was, is dependent on the uniqueness of the standard that the specimen is being compared to.Usually, this is supportive of all other evidence; generally, materials that are not unique cannot definitely place a suspected person at the scene.

Individual characteristics

Matching striations (markings)

Wear patterns

Fitting irregular pieces together

Fitting material to a given set of objects by

matching features (tears, striations, etc.)Probability of multiple pieces being a match, even if the original object was not unique, bolsters the case against a suspect. 

Class Characteristics

Can be associated only with a group, not a particular source (paint used by a car manufacturer, for example).IDENTICAL!

Blood typeWhen other blood factors are added in, it narrows the potential number of suspects.You multiply the frequency of all the factors to determine the probability of a match to a particular suspect (X out of a given number).

Other EvidenceCase 1 Case 2 Case 3Blond hair (32%) Red hair (11%) Brown hair (51%)Type O blood (43%) Type B blood (12%) Type AB blood (3%)Arch Fingerprints (5%)

Loop Fingerprints (65%)

Whorl Fingerprints (33%)

Guess which Case is likeliest to have a higher degree of certainty in identifying the suspect.

Product RuleMultiply the frequency of all the evidenceFor example, 5% will give you 0.5 X the other frequenciesThe product of those frequencies is the likelihood that two individuals would share the stated characteristics

Manufactured products have class characteristics.

Natural fibers and handmade items have more unique characteristics.Fibers used to be able to be identified by dye lot – a unique characteristic that limited the possible fiber to a particular batch of manufacturer. Normally, today’s fibers are identical to all other fibers of that particular color.

Class CharacteristicsOld-fashioned typewriters produced evidence that uniquely connected that document to a particular typist – how hard they typically struck the keys, how even their strike on the keys was (did they hunt & peck, did they touch type, how smoothly they typed).Modern printers lack any individual characteristics

Weakness of Evidence with Class

CharacteristicsGenerally, indistinguishable from other, similar items of same manufactureLittle statistical data exist