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Chapter 2: Types of Evidence “You can learn a lot by just watching.” —Yogi Berra, former New York Yankees catcher and sage
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 1 Evidence The difference between indirect and direct evidence That eyewitness accounts have limitations What is meant by physical evidence and give examples What physical evidence can and cannot prove in court The significance of individual and class evidence Students will learn:
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Chapter 2 Testimonial vs. Physical Physical Evidence and Eyewitness Testimony Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 2
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 3 Eyewitness A police composite may be developed from the witness testimony by a computer program or forensic artist. “Perception is reality.” As a result of the influences in eyewitness memory, ________ ______________ becomes critical. Faces—a composite program by InterQuest
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 4 Reliability of Eyewitness Accounts Factors: ________________and the situation in which the crime is observed Characteristics of the __________ _________ in which the information is __________ ______________________with the accused/victim ____________________between the offense and the identification Any _________ identification or _________to identify the individual or iitem Any prior identification of a person ____________________________ by the eyewitness
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 5 Types of Evidence Two general types: _____________—a statement made under oath; also known as direct evidence or Prima Facie evidence ___________—any object or material that is relevant in a crime; also known as real evidence. Examples are hair, fiber, fingerprints, documents, blood, soil, drugs, tool marks, impressions, glass.
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 6 Value of Physical Evidence Generally more ____________ than testimonial Can prove that a crime has been committed Can _____________or _________ testimony Can _______ a suspect with a victim or with a crime scene Can establish the _________ of persons associated with a crime Can allow _______________ of events of a crime
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 7 Reconstruction Physical Evidence is used to answer questions about: _______ ______ _______ ______crime took place _________ ____________ ____________ of events
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 8 Types of Physical Evidence __________—temporary; easily changed or lost; usually observed by the first officer at the scene __________—often produced by direct contact between a person and an object or between two objects ______________—produced by a specific event or action; important in crime scene reconstruction and in determining the set of circumstances or sequence within a particular event ____________—often produced by contact between person(s) or object(s), or between person(s) and person(s) _______________—items that may associate a victim or suspect with a scene or each other; ie, personal belongings
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 9 Examples of Transient Evidence _______—putrefaction, perfume, gasoline, urine, burning, explosives, cigarette or cigar smoke ______________— surroundings, car hood, coffee, water in a bathtub, cadaver __________ and indentations—footprints, teeth marks in perishable foods, tire marks on certain surfaces
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 10 Examples of ________ ______ Most are in the form of imprints, indentations, striations, markings, fractures or deposits. Clothing or article distribution Gun powder residue Material damage Body position Tool marks Modus operandi Blood spatter Glass fracture Fire burn pattern Furniture position Projectile trajectory Tire marks or skid marks
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 11 Examples of __________ ________ _______—headlight, lighting conditions ________—color, direction of travel, density, odor _____—color and direction of the flames, speed of spread, temperature and condition of fire ___________—of injuries or wounds, of bloodstains, of the victim’s vehicle, of weapons or cartridge cases, of broken glass ________—doors locked or unlocked, windows opened or closed, radio off or on (station), odometer mileage ______—position, types of wounds; rigor, livor and algor mortis ________—condition of furniture, doors and windows, any disturbance or signs of a struggle
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 12 Classification of Evidence by _________ ___________—blood, semen, saliva, sweat, tears, hair, bone, tissues, urine, feces, animal material, insects, bacterial, fungal, botanical ___________—fibers, glass, soil, gunpowder, metal, mineral, narcotics, drugs, paper, ink, cosmetics, paint, plastic, lubricants, fertilizer ____________—fingerprints, footprints, shoe prints, handwriting, firearms, tire marks, tool marks, typewriting ____________—laundry marks, voice analysis, polygraph, photography, stress evaluation, psycholinguistic analysis, vehicle identification
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 13 Evidence Characteristics _______—common to a group of objects or persons ______________—can be identified with a particular person or a single source Blood DNA TypingFingerprints
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 14 Class vs Individual Evidence Which examples do you think could be individual evidence?
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 15 Class vs Individual Evidence The large piece of glass fits to the bottle—it is ___________ evidence These fibers are ______evidence— there are millions like them.
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 16 Statistical Significance Probative value increases by considering class evidence _____________ __________: The combined probability of independent events is the product of the individual probabilities.
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 17 Statistical Significance When flipping a coin once, the probability of getting “tails” is ½ or.50 or 50% When flipping a coin twice the probability of getting “tails” twice is ½ x ½ = ¼ or.5 x.5 =.25 or 25%
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Chapter 2 Stats in Forensics The decision makers must be given an idea of the significance of the scientific finding…is it common or rare? The probability of independent events all occurring is the product of the probabilities of each of the events occurring. Used in blood-grouping, DNA typing, etc. Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 18
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 19 Forensic Investigations Include some or all of these seven major activities 1. _____________—ability to distinguish important evidence from unrelated material Pattern recognition Physical property observation Information analysis Field testing 2. _____________—collection and proper preservation of evidence
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 20 Investigations 3. ____________/characterization—use of scientific testing of properties Physical Chemical Structural Biological Immunological 4. ______________—class characteristics are measured against those of known standards or controls; if all measurements are equal, then the two samples may be considered to have come from the same source or origin.
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 21 Investigations 5. _______________—demonstrating that the sample is unique, even among members of the same class 6____________—gives meaning to all the information 7. ___________—reconstructs the events of the case
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 22 Known and Questioned Samples Scientists frequently compare _________________ or unknown samples (Q) Material collected from a known location but of unknown origin to ________________ or control samples (K) Material that comes from a known or proven source
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 23 The Goal of Analysis To identify the _________ of the evidence To determine if there are _______ between victim, crime scene, and suspect To __________________ the crime
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Chapter 2 Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company 24 FBI Investigation Try a case that was set up by the FBI. Observe the various units of their lab and read the section: “How Did They Do That?”. www.fbi.gov/kids/6th12th/investigates/investigates.htm
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