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Published byRoss Juniper May Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 6
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First known use: nearly 4000 years as signatures on clay tablets.
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In late 1700’s, Andreas Mayer first noted that no two fingerprints are the same.
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In 1856, Herschel noted that they didn’t change with age.
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In 1879, Bertillon began keeping fingerprints of criminals in police files.
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In 1888, Galton developed the fingerprint classification system in use today.
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In 1896, the ten card was invented, allowing them to be used in criminal investigations from then on.
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Our skin has ridges on the surface to help us grip things. Water, oil, and salt from our glands mix with dirt in the environment and stick to everything we touch.
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Three main types: Loop - most common, about 65% of all prints
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Whorls – About 30% of all prints
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Arches – About 5% of all fingerprints.
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Show of fingers: Loop=1, Whorl=2, Arch=3
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Three types of prints can be found: Patent fingerprints –visible prints left when a left when fingers have a liquid (such as blood) on them. Plastic fingerprints – actual indentations made in soft material like clay. Latent fingerprints – hidden prints that can be made visible with special techniques All are individual evidence.
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Many criminals have tried, using chemicals or fire. Most end up with even more recognizable prints because of differences in the scarring patterns.
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AFIS (Automated Fingerprint Identification System) has more than 47 million prints on file. Digital searches take about two hours, and provide a list of “possibles” which are then compared by technicians.
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Latent prints can be made visible with carbon or talc, and then collected on tape.
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Ninhydrin can be sprayed on paper. It reacts with amino acids in sweat to leave a purple print.
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Cyanoacrylate (super glue) can be heated in a vapor tent. It sticks to amino acids to get fingerprints on glass, plastic, metal, and skin.
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Wood or styrofoam objects can be dipped or sprayed with silver nitrate. It reacts with chloride in the salty sweat to show a print.
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Iodine can be heated in a vapor tent or a fuming gun to get prints off of paper, cardboard, and unpainted surfaces. It fades and must be photographed.
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Fluorochromes can be sprayed on non- porous items and then viewed with UV light.
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Scanning technology can show tiny pore patterns on ridges for better matching.
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Other physical features such as eye and facial patterns are being used to identify people.
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Trace evidence in fingerprints is being used to identify traces of explosives or drugs.
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