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Published byLesley Cooper Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 2: Types of Evidence
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1. Testimonial Evidence – statement made under oath by a competent witness Juries are heavily influenced by eyewitness accounts What might influence their accuracy? lighting, stress, brief encounter, distractions, time lapse between crime and questioning Memory errors are common
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Points to consider: Victims of serious crimes have a more accurate memory of the event Adults have a better memory than children Witnesses remember actions better than descriptions Open ended questions get better answers Most cases of an innocent person being convicted were due to mistaken eyewitness identification
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2. Physical Evidence - any object or material relevant in a crime More reliable than testimonial evidence Forensic scientists must determine the identity and origin of the physical evidence
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Value of physical evidence: Can prove a crime was committed Ex: gasoline at a fire can prove arson Can support or refute testimony Ex: Was the blood from the suspect (as claimed) or from the victim Can link a suspect with a victim or crime scene Ex: pollen and soil in shoe tread match pollen and soil at crime scene
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Can determine a person’s identity Ex: DNA or fingerprints Can allow investigators to reconstruct a crime Ex: Blood spatter may show relative positions
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3. Circumstantial Evidence – implies a fact without proving it Blond hair in hand of murder victim implies murderer was blond Size 5 shoe print implies murderer wore size 5 Many people are blond, many wear size 5 – fewer are both blond and size 5 More evidence narrows the suspect pool
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4. Individual Evidence – material that can be related to a single source 5. Class Evidence – material that can only be associated with a group of items that share characteristics
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