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Published byEdmund Brown Modified over 9 years ago
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What are fingerprints? Impressions left on any surface composed of patterns made by the friction ridges – Same definitions could apply to toe, foot, or palm prints Three types: – Latent – Patent – Plastic
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Plastic Prints Impressions left in something pliable like clay, wax, or even paint – Some paintings are authenticated by fingerprints of the artist found in the paint
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Patent Prints Visible prints left on a surface with blood, ink, or some other liquid “Known” prints are patent and usually made of ink on a fingerprint card
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Latent Prints Invisible or transparent impressions; unintentionally left Must have transfer medium to leave print Primarily left by the oils, perspiration, salts, and proteins of the body – Made primarily of water May or may not be absorbed by the item on which it is left
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How can you find an invisible print? Latent prints are processed based on the substrate on which they are left: – Porous: absorbs the transfer medium Chemical processing – Non-porous: does not absorb Physical & chemical processing And on the condition of the evidence – Photographs are taken to preserve
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Chemical Processing Cyanoacrylate ester or super glue – Reacts with moisture, polymerizing the ester, & depositing it Amino acids, fatty acids, and proteins in the print Water vapor in the air – Can be accelerated with circulation, heating, & water vapor Ninhydrin – Reacts with amino acids (any amino acids) to produce a purple color – Accelerate with heat & humidity (ie, an iron); photograph
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Physical Processing Alternate Light Sources (ALS) – Different wavelengths of light that excite components of some powders or dyes to better enhance prints Powders – Made of a resin that adheres to the print and color to visualize it – May be black, white, fluorescent, or magnetic – Black powder mixed with water can be used to enhance prints on adhesive surfaces Dyes – Many different kinds and colors – Used after Superglue fuming with ALS
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Fundamental Principles of Fingerprint Identification 1.Fingerprints are individual Unique to a single & specific person No two fingerprints have been found to have identical minutiae Mathematic calculations support the very low likelihood of having identical fingerprints 2.Fingerprints remain unchanged during a lifetime Barring injury, disease, or decomposition 3.Fingerprints have ridge patterns that allow for classification
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Comparison Analysis – Look at ridge flow, orientation, & minutiae – Determine if print has enough detail or value for comparison Compare – Minutiae between two prints – Are the characteristics & orientation identical? Evaluation – Is there enough minutiae in common to determine identity? Verification by another examiner – Have another examiner review the prints without knowledge of your conclusion
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Analysis
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Compare & Evaluate
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Verify
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AFIS Automated Fingerprint Identification Systems – Before AFIS, complicated Henry system used to assist in manual comparisons Computer system turns print pattern into skeletal image Ridge endings & bifurcations used as identifiers – Gives placement & orientation of minutiae A search algorithm creates a geometric pattern from these points & compares it
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AFIS After a print is searched: – A fingerprint examiner reviews the candidate list produced by AFIS – As needed the 10-card or evidence for the candidate is requested – The searched print is manually compared to the candidate print The examiner with follow ACE-V The results are registered as a hit or no hit
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Important to remember Fingerprints can not tell when someone was somewhere – Children’s prints are especially difficult to recover Prints are compared manually with plastic, patent, photographed, or visuallized At no point does the computer overlay something and flash “MATCH”
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