Forensic 1 Crime Scene and Investigation/Evidence Collection Quiz
who are the 5 professional people at a crime scene
-police officers -crime scene investigators -medical examiners -detectives -specialists
Bindle
A folded paper used to hold trace evidence
individual evidence
A kind of evidence that identifies a particular person or thing
physical evidence
Evidence like fingerprints
Direct evidence
Evidence that (if true) proves an alleged fact, such as an eyewitness account of a crime.
trace evidence
Fibers, hair and other such microscopic evidence which relates to the commission of a crime. ... These trace materials include human hair, animal hair, textile fibers and fabric, rope, feathers, soil, glass, and building materials.
Dr. Locard
French criminologist, the pioneer in forensic science who became known as the "Sherlock Holmes of France," formulated the basic principle of forensic science: "Every contact leaves a trace".
Search patterns
Grid, Linear, Quadrant or Zone, and Spiral
Class evidence
Material that connects an individual or thing to a certain group.
biological evidence
Samples of biological material—such as hair, tissue, bones, teeth, blood, semen, or other bodily fluids—or to evidence items containing biological material
Seven S's
Secure scene, separate witness, scan scene, see scene, sketch scene, search for evidence.
why is securing a crime scene important
So that the evidence is not tampered with or contaminated
chain of custody
The chronological documentation or paper trail that records the sequence of custody, control, transfer, analysis, and disposition of physical or electronic evidence.
First responder
The first police officer to arrive at a crime scene
principals of exchange
Whenever two objects come into contact with one another, there is exchange of materials between them.
Eyewitness
a person who has personally seen something happen and so can give a first-hand description of it.
specialists duty at crime scene
consulted if evidence requires their expertise
identify the method in which evidence is documented properly
datum points, chain of custody, evidence log
medical examiners duty at crime scene
determine manner of death: natural, accidental, homicide, suicidal , undetermined
crime scene investigator's duty at crime scene
document the crime scene, collect physical evidence, record data, sketch scene, take photos
circumstantial evidence
evidence also called indirect, trace evidence
biological evidence
evidence like blood or hair
detectives duty at crime scene
interview witnesses and talk to crime scene investigators about evidence
Crime scene investigator
known as forensic science technicians, collect and examine evidence present at crime scenes.
police officer's duty at crime scene
secure the scene, direct activity, call in DA to determine whether search warrant is necessary for crime scene investigators
why is the chain of custody important in packaging evidence
so that it is evident that the evidence was not tampered with on its way to court and also so that if it gets messed up they know who did it