1 / 19

Bloodstain Pattern Analysis Guided Notes

Bloodstain Pattern Analysis Guided Notes. IRP 4 Forensics Mrs. Toth. BPA. Blood spatter examination is termed bloodstain pattern analysis (BPA)

cesarg
Download Presentation

Bloodstain Pattern Analysis Guided Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bloodstain Pattern Analysis Guided Notes IRP 4 Forensics Mrs. Toth

  2. BPA • Blood spatter examination is termed bloodstain pattern analysis (BPA) • Defined as the analysis and interpretation of the dispersion, shape characteristics, volume, pattern, number, and relationship of bloodstains at a crime scene to reconstruct a process of events

  3. Basic Blood Facts • Blood has 4 components: 1. RBC 3.WBC 2. Platelets 4. Plasma • Blood is under high pressure in arteries and low pressure in veins • Blood types include A, B, AB, and O (Landsteiner) • Blood contains hemoglobin which is important for chemical testing to identify liquids as “blood”

  4. Basic Blood Facts Continued… • The smaller the blood drop, the faster the velocity of it; a fog of tiny droplets indicates high velocity (gunshot or explosive device) • Large, slow drops relate to low-impact injuries (punches) while mid-speed droplets usually relate to a knife or blunt objects • The longer the droplet, the lower the angle of impact

  5. What do blood stains tell us? • Point of origin and the direction of blood travel • Type of force and number of blows • Sequence of events and the position of the victim and the perpetrator • The movement of people/objects • Confirm/refute assumptions and witness accounts • Blood spatter does NOT tell age, sex, disease, alcohol level, temperature, or humidity (serology does this)

  6. Blood Stains continued… • To determine if a stain is blood, 4 general reagents are used: - phenolphthalein (called Kastle-Meyer test) - leucomalachite green (swab turns greenish/blue) - tetramethylbenzidine (swab turns intense blue color) - luminol (sprayed on; viewed in darkness with UV light)

  7. What is blood spatter? • Definition: - in blood pattern analysis, it describes a stain that results from blood hitting a target • Two types of spatter: 1. Forward spatter: results when blood droplets are projected away from the item creating the impact Ex. Hammer 2. Back spatter: caused by droplets being projected toward the item; generally lighter and stains are smaller

  8. Forward vs. Backward Spatter

  9. Types of Bloodstains • Passive: clots, drops, flows, pooling • Transfer: wipes, swipes, pattern transfers, general contact stains • Projected/Impact: spatters, splashes, cast-off stains, arterial spurts or gushes - other stains include fly spots, voids, and skeletonized stains

  10. Bloodstain Types A. Passive Bloodstain B. Impact Bloodstain (medium velocity) C. Cast-off Bloodstain D. Arterial Gush (Spurt) Bloodstain E. Wipe bloodstain F. Transfer bloodstain (knife blade pattern)

  11. Wipe stain - created when an object moves through a preexisting bloodstain - Ex. Clean rag through a blood pool Swipe stain - transfer of blood onto a target by a moving object that is itself bloodstained - Ex. Blood-soaked clothing being dragged over unstained vinyl flooring Stains continued…

  12. Stains continued… • Cast-off stains - result of blood being flung or projected from a bloody object in motion or one that stops suddenly - these stains are linear and reflect the position of the person moving the bloody object

  13. Stains continued… • Arterial spurts/gushes - stains that are a result of the pumping action and variable pressure of blood as it exits a wound, producing an up-and-down pattern

  14. Fly spots - stains resulting from fly activity - flies may regurgitate and defecate when consuming blood at a crime scene - these can be misleading to investigators Voids - outlined or shadowed bloodstain patterns on a wall or object that was behind the object of impact - indicate some secondary object came between a blood spatter and the final target - important because can tell investigators if items were moved or discarded after the attack Stains continued…

  15. Stains continued… • Skeletonized stains - wiped bloodstains where the edges have dried leaving behind edges and borders - these stains retain the size and shape of the original stain and indicate time has passed • Satellite droplets - small amounts of blood that detach from “parent stains” and splash onto a surface

  16. Basic Measurements of BPA A = arc sin (width/length) • Angle of impact: the acute angle created by the intercept of the target with the droplet’s vector • Direction angle: angle between the long axis of the stain and a standard reference point, usually 0º vertical • Directionality: the vector of a droplet when it hit the target; the tail points in the direction of travel

  17. Determining Point of Origin • Where lines converge at a common point indicates the possible point of origin • Visual aids such as string; rulers, protractors, and lasers help analysts determine lines of convergence

  18. Documenting Blood Spatter • Size • Shape • Distribution of stains • Viscosity - blood is 3.6 to 5.4x more viscous than water

  19. Documenting Blood Spatter continued… • Diameter of blood depends on: - volume - distance of fall - surface texture of what it falls on

More Related