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Daily Trivia. Women blink nearly twice as much as men. . Agenda. DT Agenda Bloodstain Notes Classwork Homework. Bloodstain Science. Forensic Science. BPA. Bloodstain Pattern Analysis How can an investigator use bloodstain patterns to analyze a crime scene?
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Daily Trivia • Women blink nearly twice as much as men.
Agenda • DT • Agenda • Bloodstain Notes • Classwork • Homework
Bloodstain Science Forensic Science
BPA • Bloodstain Pattern Analysis • How can an investigator use bloodstain patterns to analyze a crime scene? • Location and description of individual stains and patterns • Direction a blood droplet was traveling by calculating angles of impact • Area of origin of blood source or sources • The type of object used in attack (edged, blunt, firearm, etc.) • Minimum number of blows • The positions of the victim, suspect, and objects during events • The sequence of events
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis Terms • Spatter – Bloodstains created from the application of force to the area where the blood originated. • Origin/Source – The place from where the blood spatter came from. • Angle of Impact – The angle at which a blood droplet strikes a surface. • Parent Drop – The droplet from which a satellite spatter originates. • Satellite Spatters – Small drops of blood that break off from the parent spatter when the blood droplet hits a surface. • Spines – The pointed edges of a stain that radiate out from the spatter; can help determine the direction from which the blood traveled.
Passive Bloodstains • Patterns created from the force of gravity • Drop, series of drops, flow patterns, blood pools, etc.
Patterns that occur when a force is applied to the source of the blood • Low, medium, or high impact spatters, cast-off, arterial spurting, expiratory blood blown out of the nose, mouth, or wound. Projected Bloodstains
Transfer or Contact Bloodstains • The pattern created when a wet, bloody object comes in contact with a target surface; may be used to identify an object or body part. • Wipe pattern from an object moving through a bloodstain or swipe pattern from an object leaving a bloodstain.
Luminol • Used to locate traces of blood, even if it has been cleaned or removed. • Only lasts 30 seconds. • Also reacts to some metals, paints, cleaning products and plant matter. • Can destroy other evidence in the crime scene. • For this reason, investigators only use luminolafter exploring a lot of other options
Homework • Bloodstain Pattern WS