Download - Chemistry 113: Forensic Science Introduction Prof. J. T. Spencer Adjunct Prof. T. L. Meeks
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Course DescriptionCourse Description and Prerequisite
Skills: Forensic Science is focused upon the application of scientific methods and techniques to crime and law. Recent advances in scientific methods and principles have had an enormous impact upon law enforcement and the entire criminal justice system. In this course, scientific methods specifically relevant to crime detection and analysis will be presented. No prior chemistry instruction is required or assumed but…
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Course Description …the course should appeal to those who have also
had high school chemistry. Emphasis is placed upon understanding the science behind the techniques used in evaluating physical evidence. Topics included are blood analysis, organic and inorganic evidence analysis, microscopic investigations, hair analysis, DNA, drug chemistry and toxicology, fiber comparisons, paints, glass compositions and fragmentation, fingerprints, soil comparisons, and arson investigations, among others.
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Lectures Lectures: The material covered in class meetings
will be illustrative rather than exhaustive. You should read the material in the text or handouts assigned before the class meeting. In class, alternate ways of understanding the material will often be presented. The examinations, however, will cover both the assigned text and lecture materials (whether or not they are specifically covered in class). Plenty of help is available in class meetings to answer questions and provide assistance with problems.
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Lectures In-Class Materials: The material covered
in class is illustrative rather than exhaustive. You should read the material in the text assigned before the class. In class, alternate ways of understanding the material will often be presented. The examinations, however, will cover both the assigned text and in-class materials (whether or not they are specifically covered in class).
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Grading Grading and Examinations: Final grades will be
assigned based upon the hourly exams given during each quarter in the regularly scheduled class (50%), the final examination – an average of a midterm in January and a final in June (25 %), and the laboratory grade (25 %) as follows – projects will be counted as exam grades in the quarter in which they are presented;
Hourly Examinations and Projects50 %
Final Examination average25 %
Laboratory25 %
100 %
There will be NO MAKE-UP Examinations.
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Quarter ProjectsFirst Quarter Project: Forensic Professionals
– Pick any topic in forensic science. You will be presenting this topic to the class in the form of a 5 minute power point presentation. The object is to familiarize yourself, as well as your classmates, on this topic. The power point should include all necessary pictures, drawings, vocabulary etc. You will provide the narrative. Remember this is a presentation, you are not using the power point as a teleprompter to read from. Provide your resources on one of the last slides. Write 5 test questions on your presentation; either fill-in or short answer style with the answers.
Topic and abstract submission due Friday September 20; TYPED.
Project due date TBA (second week in October)
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Quarter ProjectsFirst Quarter Project: Forensic Professionals
– Description of profession– How that profession fits into Forensics– What is the degree/credentials needed for that
profession (possible salary)– Are you still interested in this as a profession
• Works cited
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Quarter Projects
Second Quarter Project: Innocence Project Research and paper– You will be exploring the Innocence Project online and
answering questions as you move through the website. The questions will give you background needed to create an opinion paper concerning the Innocence Project
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Quarter Projects
Third Marking Period Project:– Drug Project
Topic submission due TBA Projects due TBA
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Textbook
Required Textbooks: The required textbook for this course is “The Science of Criminalistics” (Introduction to Forensic Science) by James T. Spencer to be published this year. Since the hardcopy of the text will not be ready by this summer, students can get to the chapters (free as pdfs) at supa.syr.edu and then click on Moodle (bottom of the page). To logon, they use USERNAME: forensics113 and PASSWORD: Orange113 (no spaces)
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Laboratory
Laboratory: There will be no Make-Up labs. In order to pass, a student must have a passing grade in the laboratory portion of the course. Attendance in laboratory is mandatory. The laboratory periods are 3 hours in length and, while some experiments will not require the total allotted time for completion, students are expected to arrive promptly at the beginning of the lab period and not leave until that particular experiment is completed and turned in. Students that arrive too late to complete the experiment in the allotted time and those that arrive on time but depart before turning in their lab reports will receive a zero for the experiment.
Chapter 1Introduction, Historic Development, and Legal Roles of Forensic Science
Prof. J. T. Spencer
Adjunct Prof. T. L. Meeks
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Learning Goals and Objectives
Today, the role of science in the courtroom is undisputed. We rely upon the scientific analysis and interpretation of key evidence to both exonerate and convict. But this hasn’t always been true in history. In this chapter an introduction to the role that forensic science has and does play in criminal justice is presented. Also, the legal underpinnings of the admissibility, use, and limitations of scientific evidence and testimony are explored. In this chapter, you will need to understand the following concepts:
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Learning Goals and Objectives
What is meant by the terms forensic science and criminalistics
What is the difference between a basic and an applied science
What is the relationship between the law, basic science and applied science
How has forensic science developed throughout history to its present state
What is Locard’s Exchange Principle How has fiction contributed to the development of forensic
science What features do fictional detectives and modern forensic
scientists have in common
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Learning Goals and Objectives
What is the CSI Effect and how has it influenced scientific evidence in the courtroom
What is meant by the Principle of Individuality How do precedent cases pave the way for scientific
evidence and testimony What are the key features of the Frye and Daubert cases How have the Joiner, Khumo and Melendez-Dias cases
affected expert testimony.
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Forensic Science
Forensic Science - Application of the scientific method and techniques to law and criminal justice.– Lies at the point of convergence between our
legal and scientific systems– The Law wants certainty– The Science can only establish the simplest of
factEncompasses many fields...
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Forensic Science
Advances in Forensic Science occur in unexpected leaps rather than small steps– The underlying science has been further developed– Technology has been created– Changes in legal policy or practice
Revolutionary rather than evolutionary
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Forensic Science
Natural Sci: Bio
Medicine
Social Sci.:Psyc., Anth.
Engr
Forensic Science
Law and Enforcement
Physical Sci.Chem, Phys
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Scientific Evidence in Court
Scientific (Forensic) evidence is aimed at informing the court where it lack expertise.
Assist in determining fact.What is admissible evidence?
– Real Science vs Pseudo (Quack) Science– Established how to determine the difference
through 4 primary cases (Frye, Daubert, Joiner, and Kuhmo)
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Forensics in Court
How does a lay jury sort out real science from pseudo science?– Until 1923 individual courts could define what was
acceptable as evidence in the courtroom.• Charisma• Ability to convince the jury
The Jury Decides…The Jury Decides…
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Forensics in Court
1923, polygraph evidence– “…the evidential force of the principle must be
recognized, and while the courts will go a long way in admitting expert testimony deduced from well-recognized scientific principle or discovery, the thing from which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general general acceptanceacceptance in the particular field in which it belongs”.
– Sets up the scientific field as the “vaildator” for legal admissibility while court determines if principles are “generally accepted”.
FryeFrye Standard Standard
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Forensics in CourtWhat is general acceptability?What is general acceptability?
Technique must be accepted by a “meaningful segment of the relevant scientific community” through
• Books
• Papers
• Prior judicial decisions
• Length of existence of technique
– Inflexible (and slow) for new developments or extensions of existing techniques and methods
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Forensics in CourtDaubertDaubert case case
1993, Birth defects were caused by prenatal ingestion of Bendectin made by Merrill Dow. – The District Court granted Dow summary judgment based on expert
testimony that said that maternal use of Bendectin had not been shown to be a risk factor for human birth defects. Although Daubert had the testimony of eight other experts who based their conclusions that Bendectin can cause birth defects on animal studies, chemical structure analyses, and the unpublished "reanalysis" of human statistical studies, the court determined that this evidence did not meet the applicable "general acceptance" standard for the admission of expert testimony. The Court of Appeals agreed and affirmed, citing Frye.
Supreme Court - The Federal Rules of Evidence, not Frye, provide the Supreme Court - The Federal Rules of Evidence, not Frye, provide the standard for admitting expert scientific testimony in a federal trial.standard for admitting expert scientific testimony in a federal trial.
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Forensics in CourtWhat are the Federal Rules of Evidence?What are the Federal Rules of Evidence?
Based upon Federal Rules of Evidence (Rule 702) that are more flexible.– “If scientific … knowledge will assist the tryer of
fact to understand evidence or to determine a fact in an issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify…..if”
• It is based upon sufficient fact or data• It is a product of reliable principles and methods• The principles are applied reliably to the facts of the case.
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Forensics in CourtJudge is the “Gatekeeper”Judge is the “Gatekeeper”
General acceptance of Frye standard not necessary.– Assigns trial judge “gatekeeper” responsibilities in
determining the admissibility and reliability of scientific evidence. (Daubert Hearings)
– More Flexible in admitting new types of data– Relies upon jury (with help from the judge) to
determine value of evidence and the adversarial judicial system (cross-examination of expert witnesses and counter expert witnesses) to refute scientific evidence.
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Forensics in CourtHow does the judge decide?How does the judge decide?
Guideline for determining value of scientific evidence may include:
• Has the technique or theory been tested• Has the technique or theory been subjected to
peer review• What is the technique’s potential error rate• Existence of standards controlling the
performance of the analysis• Has the theory or method received widespread
acceptance within the appropriate community– Allows for authentic scientific break-throughs
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Forensics in CourtJoiner Joiner
1995 -Case asserted that PCB’s caused cancer in plaintiff– Tried to establish a causal link between PCB’s and
cancer based upon animal models.– “Conclusions and methodology are not separate.
Experts commonly extrapolate from existing data but nothing requires a court to admit opinion evidence that is connected to the data only by the expert themselves.”
– The court may conclude that there is too great a gap between the data and the opinion.
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Forensics in CourtKumho TireKumho Tire Case Case
1999 - Tire blowout liability case. – Plaintiff expert wanted to testify that the blowout was
due to defect rather than under-inflation.– Did not allow plaintiff expert testimony since the
“test” by the expert was unreliable and made up by him (i.e., baseball batter designing his own “strike zone”).
– “…make certain that an expert…employs the same level of intellectual rigor that characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field.”
– Supreme Court extended Daubert's holding to include non-scientific expert testimony.
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Forensics in Court
Federal Courts use Daubert Standard
Many State Courts use Daubert
About Half of State and Most Local Courts still use Frye.
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Forensic Science History
Began formally in late 1700’s. Real application of the scientific method and
techniques developed in 1900’s. Important Names:
– Alphonse Bertillion (anthropometry)– Francis Galton (Fingerprinting)– Calvin Goddard (Ballistics)– Alexandre Lacassagne (anthropology)– Edmond Locard (scientific criminal investigation)– Matheau Orfila (toxicology)– Crime Writers: esp. A.C. Doyle, D.L. Sayers, A.Christie
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Alphonse Bertillion (1853-1914) Physician
and Statistician devised a system of
identification of criminals that relies on 11 bodily measurements and the color of the eyes, hair, and skin
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Francis Galton (1822-1911)
Anthropologist and
Explorer the author of memoirs on
various anthropometric subjects; he originated the process of composite portraiture, and paid much attention to fingerprints and their employment for the identification of criminals
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Calvin Goddard (1891-1955)
Pioneer in Forensic Ballistics
brought professionalism, the use of the scientific method, and reliability to Forensic Firearm Identification, at a time when charlatanism was rampant in this field
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Alexandre Lacassagne (1843-1924)
Professeur de médecine légale à la Faculté de Lyon, Alexandre
Criminal Anthropology
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Edmond Locard 1877-1966 -
Application of scientific techniques to criminal investigations.
Set up first real forensics lab and developed the first fundamental principle of forensic science
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Locard’s Exchange Principle
The most basic concept of Forensic Science:– When contact with an object or person occurs, a
cross transfer of evidence occurs• Examples; dust, biological samples, fingerprints,
chemical residues, etc.
– Can be used as evidence based on the Principle of Individuality
• Two objects may be indistinguishable, but no two objects are ever identical. Things can at least be put in classes or even individualized in useful ways.
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Matheau Orfila1787-1853 – Professor of
Chemistry in the faculty of Medicine at Paris.
Traité des poisons or Toxicologie générale (1813) - published at the age of 27
His first publication was a vast mine of experimental observation on the symptoms of poisoning of all kinds, on the appearances which poisons leave in the dead body, on their physiological action, and on the means of detecting them
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Arthur Conan Doyle
Creator of Sherlock Holmes - Based upon Poe’s Dupin and real life Prof. Joe Bell (U. Edinburgh).
Preceded and foretold many chemical analyses for forensic investigations
CSI Effect
The general public is now not only comfortable with forensic evidence as never before, they actually seek outopportunities to test their “forensic skills” with whodunits….
The expectation and the demand by the general public regarding the information that forensic science canprovide, often by exaggerating to impossible levels the role that forensic science plays in cases, has been risen tremendously…
CSI Effect
CSI EffectDefinition of CSI Effect (Nolo’s Plain English Law Dictionary): “A phenomenon reported by prosecutors who claim that television shows based on scientific crime solving have made actual jurors reluctant to vote to convict when, as is typically true, forensic evidence is neither necessary nor available.”In a recent CSI Effect study (N.J. Schweitzer and M.J. Saks Jurimetrics Vol. 47, p. 357, 2007) “Compared to non-CSI viewers, CSI viewers were more critical of the forensic evidence presented at the trial, finding it less believable. Regarding their verdicts, 29% of non-CSI viewers said they would convict, compared to 18% of CSI viewers.”
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Earliest crime lab was founded by Edmond Locard Evolution of Crime Lab
http://www.mdpd.com/astmhtm.htmlhttp://www.mdpd.com/astmhtm.html New York State Trooper’s Forensic Lab
http://www.troopers.state.ny.ushttp://www.troopers.state.ny.us Approximately 320 public crime labs operate at
various levels of gov’t: federal, state, county, and municipal
Crime Labs
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Rationale for Crime Labs
The increasing volume of physical evidence recovered from crime scenes was a result of rising crime rates.
The need to perform chemical analyses on drugs, coupled with a significant increase in illicit drug seizures.
Supreme Court decisions have enhanced the rights of the defendant. Decisions, such as those insuring a defendant’s right to counsel and the right to remain silent, have encouraged police agencies to place a greater reliance on scientific investigative techniques.
Advances in scientific technology have provided forensic scientists with many new skills and techniques to extract meaningful information from physical evidence.
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Incorporating evidence collection into crime labs:
Before evidence can be properly analyzed it must be recognized, collected and properly packaged at the crime site.
Evidence technicians under the continuous direction of the crime laboratory are more likely to have received thorough training in the gathering of evidence at the crime site.
Evidence technicians, who are continuously exposed to the problems and techniques of the forensic scientist, are better prepared to adopt new procedures or modify existing procedures to improve evidence collection.
Crime Lab
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Services of Crime Lab -Biology Unit-Firearms Unit-Document Examination Unit-Photography Unit-Toxicology Unit-Latent Fingerprint Unit-Polygraph Unit-Voiceprint Analysis Unit-Evidence-Collection Unit-Forensic Anthropology-Forensic Entomology-Forensic Psychiatry-Forensic Odontology-Forensic Engineering
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Dynamic Duo of Principles
Locard’s Principle When two objects come into contact, some materials
or information is transferred between the two.
If this transferred evidence can be found, then the connection between the two can be established.
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Dynamic Duo of Principles
Principle of Individuality Even though two objects may be indistinguishable,
they can never be exactly identical. While we might not be able to tell the difference
between two objects, at some level – maybe even only at the atomic or molecular level – they must be different.
We should be able to determine whether two samples came from one original source or from two completely separate sources.
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QUESTIONS FOR FURTHER PRACTICE AND MASTERY
1.1 What is forensic science? 1.2 What is the Daubert standard? 1.3 What is Locard’s Exchange principle? 1.4 What is meant by the “CSI Effect” when it comes to jury expectations during a
trial? 1.5 What is the Principle of Individuality? 1.6 What is meant by a “precedent” case? Give examples of precedent cases and
explain their significance. 1.7 How did the Frye decision of 1923 impact the admissibility of forensic
evidence? 1.8 What standard replaced the Frye standard and how did it change the use of
forensic evidence at trial? 1.9 List and explain the three parts of the Daubert standard. 1.10 Explain the importance of the Joiner (1995) and Khumo (1999) cases as they
pertain to forensic testimony.