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Objectives. Students should gain an understanding of:The steps taken to preserve a crime sceneDocumentation of the crime sceneWays to systematically search the crime sceneMethods for collecting, preserving, identifying, packaging, and transporting evidenceThe chain of custodyThe Fourth Amendme
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1. Chapter 1 Investigating the Crime Scene
2. Objectives Students should gain an understanding of:
The steps taken to preserve a crime scene
Documentation of the crime scene
Ways to systematically search the crime scene
Methods for collecting, preserving, identifying, packaging, and transporting evidence
The chain of custody
The Fourth Amendment and its application to the search and seizure of evidence
3. Introduction Collection and preservation of evidence are essential for successful criminal investigation
Failure to assure proper collection and preservation can jeopardize the investigation
Accurate records are needed of the actions taken by investigators
Physical evidence is usually collected by the police or civilian crime scene technician; it includes any and all relevant materials or objects associated with the crime scene, victim, suspect, or witness
4. Securing the Crime Scene (1 of 3) First responder
Offer assistance to injured persons
May exclude nonessential persons from the crime scene
Later responders
Are responsible for security of crime scene
Limit access: All who enter have potential for contamination
5. Securing the Crime Scene (2 of 3) Identifying, establishing, protecting, and securing the boundaries
Set initial boundary larger than the scene
Document all actions and observations:
State of scene
Existing conditions
Personal information
Actions and statements of persons entering and exiting
Items moved and who moved them
6. Securing the Crime Scene (3 of 3) Identifying, establishing, protecting, and securing the boundaries
Preserve physical evidence for later identification, collection, and submission
Create single path in and out of scene
Identify all personnel at scene
7. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (1 of 9) Documenting is the most important and time-consuming activity at the scene
Maintaining chain of custody proves nothing was altered.
It demonstrates who discovered an item, when it was discovered, and the item’s appearance, control, movement.
It helps the analyst understand how the evidence relates to the overall scene.
The investigator should record facts that corroborate, refute, or modify the hypothesis.
8. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (2 of 9) Note taking
Document core of crime scene and physical evidence
Make notes in ink, in a bound notebook, with pages numbered sequentially
Do not erase errors; cross them out with pen
Make notations in chronological order
9. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (3 of 9) Note taking
Evidence documented in notes:
Condition
Time of discovery
Name of discoverer
Placement, collection, packaging, labeling
Photographs must be documented
Audio recordings may be used, but later transcribed
10. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (4 of 9) Photography
Take photos without disturbing elements of the scene
Take a systematic series of photos to record the crime scene
Photograph as thoroughly as possible
Use a 35-mm single-lens reflex camera
Retain the original digital images
11. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (5 of 9) Items included in the photo log:
Date and time
Camera settings
Film roll number and exposure number
File name and exposure number
Type of shot
Distance to the subject
Brief description
12. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (6 of 9) Sketching
Accurately record distances between objects
Make rough sketches not drawn to scale, but with adequate information for later finishing
Sketch the scene from an overhead view
Must establish two fixed points that are permanent objects
Recognize that a computer professional will prepare finished sketches later using CAD software
13. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (7 of 9) Items included in a sketch:
Case identifier
Date, time, location
Weather and lighting conditions
Name of the sketch
Identity and assignments of personnel
Dimensions and layout
Measurements and positioning
Key or legend
Orientation
Scale
14. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (8 of 9) Sketching: three techniques
Triangulation: measures location of the evidence from fixed points
Baseline: draws a line between the fixed points and measures the distance to the evidence at a right angle from this line
Polar coordinate method: uses a transit or compass to measure the angle from the north and the distance to the evidence
15. Documenting the Scene and the Evidence (9 of 9) Videography
May be used to complement still photography
Is the best way to document the overall view of the scene
Allows forensic scientists to understand the scene at a later time
Record locations of evidence in still photos
Record running audio narrative
16. Systematic Search for Evidence (1 of 3) Methodically search for less obvious pieces of evidence
Search patterns:
Spiral: no physical boundaries
Grid: large outdoor crime scene
Strip: outdoor crime scene where coordinator organizes many searchers
Zone: indoor crime scene where different teams are assigned small areas
Wheel: circular crime scenes
17. Systematic Search for Evidence(2 of 3) Search suspected points of ingress and egress
Collect evidence that might degrade first
Search outside scenes in daylight if possible
18. Systematic Search for Evidence(3 of 3) Recognition of physical evidence
First step in processing is to recognize obvious pieces of physical evidence
Ability to recognize what is and is not evidence is learned through experience
Many departments employ specialized evidence retrieval technicians
The nature of the crime determines the type of evidence sought
19. Collection, Preservation, Inventory, and Transportation of Physical Evidence (1 of 4) Once documented, evidence must be collected, preserved, inventoried, and packaged in preparation for submission to the crime lab
Physical evidence from scene is a questioned sample
Known samples come from relevant persons and are used for comparison
Individualization means proving a particular unknown sample is unique
20. Collection, Preservation, Inventory, and Transportation of Physical Evidence (2 of 4) Impression evidence
Developed or enhanced by use of specialized photographic techniques or chemical developers
Biological evidence
Enhanced/developed by chemical means
Firearms and ammunition
Located by sight
Must be rendered safe
Store in paper envelopes, bags, or cardboard boxes
Make no permanent markings on weapons
21. Collection, Preservation, Inventory, and Transportation of Physical Evidence (3 of 4) Arson and bomb evidence
Locate by sight and smell
Place carpet, wood, and absorbent materials in clean paint cans and seal lid
Place flammable liquids in glass bottle with tight-fitting lid
Chemicals and controlled substances
Locate by visual observation
22. Collection, Preservation, Inventory, and Transportation of Physical Evidence (4 of 4) Trace evidence
May be extremely small or microscopic
Collect by forceps, tweezers, scraping, taping, or vacuuming
Document and collect questioned and known samples
Work in conjunction with medical examiner for homicide evidence collection
23. Packaging Evidence Package must preserve and protect evidence
Paper envelopes are routine
DNA in blood will degrade if not stored properly
Wet blood should dry first and then be scrapped or collected on a swab
Put clothing in large paper sacks
Take entire piece of evidence as it is found at the scene, if possible
24. Submitting Evidence to Crime Laboratory Evidence is stored in constantly guarded evidence collection areas.
It may be submitted to the crime lab in person or via mail.
A Federal Firearms License required for postal mailing of firearms.
Chemicals, radiological agents, and explosives may be transported via UPS or FedEx.
Each item must be packaged separately.
25. Chain of Custody In court, all evidence will be subject to questions about chain of custody.
The chain starts with the evidence’s original discoverer.
The chain is broken if movements are not documented; that may result in evidence being excluded in court.
Preserve the chain of custody by making sure that investigator notes completely document everything that happens to each piece of evidence at the scene.
26. Criminal Evidence and the Fourth Amendment (1 of 5) Evidence is most often excluded due to Fourth Amendment violations.
Officers must present an affidavit of probable cause that criminal activity is taking place at a particular location to receive a search warrant.
Contraband, “fruits and instrumentalities of the crime,” evidentiary items, voice and handwriting samples, and conversations can all be obtained via warrants.
27. Criminal Evidence and the Fourth Amendment (2 of 5) Exceptions to the Fourth Amendment
Border searches: customs searches at the border do not require a warrant
Consent searches: persons can voluntarily submit to a search
Search incident to arrest: persons and the area under immediate control can be searched during a lawful arrest
Plain view doctrine: officers can seize contraband and evidence that they can see from legal vantage point
28. Criminal Evidence and the Fourth Amendment (3 of 5) Exceptions to the Fourth Amendment
Emergency exceptions: officers can enter premises without a warrant if they have reasonable suspicion that an injured person is inside
Open fields: no expectation of privacy
Stop and frisk: officer may pat down a suspicious person who may be armed and dangerous
Vehicle inventories: may need to search the vehicle immediately if the driver or other occupant is arrested
29. Criminal Evidence and the Fourth Amendment (4 of 5) Mincey v. Arizona (1978)
Police conducted an undercover raid of a suspected drug house.
An officer and three suspects were shot.
The premises were searched extensively over 4 days without a warrant.
The court overturned the conviction: The offense did not merit a warrantless search because the evidence would be not lost while a warrant was obtained.
30. Criminal Evidence and the Fourth Amendment (5 of 5) Michigan v. Tyler (1978)
It involved a fire at a furniture store.
Investigators conducted several searches, including some well after the fire was out.
The convictions were overturned: The later warrantless entries were not part of the initial emergency circumstances.
Officers must obtain a search warrant before they conduct a careful, detailed examination of a crime scene.