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Published byPhyllis Ball Modified over 9 years ago
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Physical Evidence
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Class characteristics: Evidence can only be associated with a group and not a unique source Individual characteristics: Evidence can be attributed to a unique source with a high degree of certainty (or even to the exclusion of all others)
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Examples of Class Characteristics Shoes (Nike, Air Jordan, size 9) Paint (Cherry red 1967 Chevy Mustang) Fibers (Red polyester fiber, braided weave) Fingerprints (loops, whorls, arches) Toolmarks (1/4” flat blade B&D screwdriver) Firearms (.40 caliber S&W magnum pistol) Arson (accelerants) DNA (male)
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Examples of Unique Characteristics Shoes (natural wear, bubble gum) Paint (physical match) Fibers (physical match, unique “trait”) Fingerprints (ridge detail) Toolmarks (stria markings) Firearms (stria, firing pin markings) DNA (profile)
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Scenarios Pathology wound matches murder weapon… Glass fragments found in burglar’s coat pocket… Burglar’s tools… Poison found in suspect’s home with rare component…
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Analysis of Evidence Known Unknown Common Source e.g. the unknown XXX collected at the crime scene was compared to known XXX collected from Ms. Y and could have originated from a common source.
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Edmond Locard (1877-1966) French investigator Background in medicine and law 1910-started a police laboratory Founded Institute of Criminalistics at the University of Lyons Contributed to fingerprints (poroscopy)
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Locard’s Exchange Principle Principle of cross-transfer Whenever two objects come into contact there is evidence of that contact through cross-transfer… Microscopic Macroscopic Every contact leaves a trace!
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Physical Evidence Can… 1.Prove that a crime has been committed or establish key elements of a crime Example Rape = victim has torn clothing, bruises, broken arm = non-consensual
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Physical Evidence Can… 2.Link a suspect with the victim or crime scene Example Burglary = suspect has broken glass shards in his pants cuff that are consistent with glass shards at scene
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Physical Evidence Can… 3.Establish the identity of persons associated with a crime Example Latent fingerprints identified through AFIS. DNA identified through CODIS.
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Physical Evidence Can… 4.Exonerate the innocent Example Rape = DNA preserved was compared against man convicted of the crime = no match.
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Physical Evidence Can… 5.Corroborate the victim’s story Example Officer involved shootings
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Physical Evidence Can… 6.Contradict information provided to investigators Example Discredit a witness; elicit a confession
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Physical Evidence Can… 7.Be more reliable than eyewitness testimony “[Physical Evidence] does not forget. It is not confused by the excitement of the moment. It is not absent because human witnesses are. It is factual evidence. It cannot be wrong; it cannot perjure itself; it cannot be wholly absent. Only in it’s interpretation can there be error. Only human failure to find, study, and understand it can diminish its value.” Paul Kirk, Crime Investigation, 1953
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Physical Evidence Can… 8.Be the cornerstone of a case Police/prosecutors are expected to obtain physical evidence and rarely rely on a confession alone
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Physical Evidence Can… 9.And IS expected by a jury/the public TV, books, media focus on physical evidence and the miracles performed (reality vs. fantasy) The “CSI Effect”
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Lack of Physical Evidence Can… 10.Support or refute a theory The absence of forced entry in a burglary case…
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