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Chapter 10. CRIME SCENE RECONSTRUCTION: FORENSIC BLOODSTAIN PATTERN ANALYSIS. Vocabulary Terms. Angle of impact Area of convergence Area of origin Arterial spray Back spatter Cast-off Drip trail pattern Expirated blood pattern Flow pattern. Forward spatter High velocity spatter
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Chapter 10 CRIME SCENE RECONSTRUCTION: FORENSIC BLOODSTAIN PATTERN ANALYSIS
Vocabulary Terms • Angle of impact • Area of convergence • Area of origin • Arterial spray • Back spatter • Cast-off • Drip trail pattern • Expirated blood pattern • Flow pattern • Forward spatter • High velocity spatter • Impact spatter • Low velocity spatter • Medium velocity spatter • Parent drop • Satellite spatter • Spine • Skeletonization • Transfer pattern • void
Crime Scene Reconstruction • The method used to support a likely sequence of events by the observation and evaluation of physical evidence as well as statements made by those involved with incident. • Medical examiners • Criminalists • Law enforcement • All parties recover physical evidence and sort out the events surrounding the occurrence of a crime.
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis (BPA) What can an investigator learn from the analysis of a blood spatter? • Type & velocity of weapon • # of blows • Handedness of assailant (right or left-handed) • Position & movements of the victim and assailant during and after the attack • Which wounds were inflicted first • Type of injuries • How long ago the crime was committed • Whether death was immediate or delayed Source: http://science.howstuffworks.com/bloodstain-pattern-analysis1.htm http://www.crimescenetwo.com/img/popup/book2p2.jpg
Stain Patterns of Blood • CSI responsibilities: • location, distribution, and appearance of bloodstains and spatters may be useful for interpreting and reconstructing the events that produced the bleeding. • Surface texture and the stain’s shape, size, and location must be considered when determining the direction, dropping distance, and angle of impact of a bloodstain.
Stain Patterns of Blood • Surface texture • In general, the harder and less porous the surface, the less spatter results • Wood vs. marble • Direction of travel of blood striking object • Pointed end of a bloodstain always faces its direction of travel • Impact angle of blood on a flat surface can be determined by measuring the degree of circular distortion • @ right angles the blood drop is circular • As the angle decreases, the stain becomes elongated.
Height/Surface 0.5 0.5 1 1 2 2 3 3 Single drop of blood falling from various heights (m) onto various surfaces 13 smooth floor paper towel fabric
Lines of Convergence • Draw straight lines down the long axis of splatter & notice intersection • Origin Point • The intersection or point of convergence of the lines represents the origin point.
16 Point of Convergence
Stain Patterns of Blood • A shooting may leave a distinct gunshot spatter pattern. • Forward spatter from an exit wound • Back spatter from an entrance wound. • Amount of back spatter depends on • location of injury • size of the wound created • distance between the victim and the muzzle of the weapon
bullet exits foam Bullet enters foam bullet 59 Gunshot: back& forward spatter Bloodstained foam held just above target surface. Bullet passing L to R just above sheet Back-spatter on entry Forward spatter on exit
61 Back spatter on steadying hand
50 Arterial Spurt Pattern • Blood exiting body under arterial pressure • Large stains with downward flow on vertical surfaces • Wave-form of pulsating flow may be apparent
51 Small arterial spurt spatter broken pottery
Cast-off From Weapon • A cast-off pattern is created when a blood-covered object flings blood in an arc onto a nearby surface • First blow causes bleeding • Subsequent blows contaminate weapon with blood • Blood is cast-off tangentially to arc of upswing or backswing • Pattern & intensity depends on: • type of weapon • amount of blood adhering to weapon • length of arc
24 Downswing of Hammer
25 Cast-off from Weapon ceiling
Tail of elongated stain points in direction of travel . Tail of wave cast-off points back to parent drop Parent drop wave cast-off 15 Wave Cast-off
73 Trapped!
Impact Bloodstain • Low velocity (5 ft/s, 1.5 m/s; >3mm drop) • e.g. free-falling drops, cast off from weapon • Medium velocity (5-25 ft/s, 7.5 - 30 m/s; 1-3mm drop) • e.g. baseball bat blows • High velocity (100 ft/s, >30 m/s; < 1mm drop) • e.g. gunshot, machinery
55 Medium velocity blood spatter.Point of impact 15 cm in front of vertical target surface 6” ruler
80 90 10 60 50 40 70 20 30 Angle of Impact Gravitational dense zone at lower edge Adapted from Introduction to Forensic Sciences, W. Eckert, CRC, 1997
Stain Patterns of Blood • Expirated blood pattern • pattern created by blood that is expelled from the mouth or nose from an internal injury • Void • created when an object blocks the deposition of blood spatter onto a target surface or object. • When an object with blood on it touches one that does not have blood on it, this produces a contact or transfer pattern. • fingerprints, handprints, footprints, footwear prints, tool prints, and fabric prints in blood.
Stain Patterns of Blood • A pool of blood occurs when blood collects in a level (not sloped) and undisturbed place. • Flows • Patterns made by drops or large amounts of blood flowing by the pull of gravity • The edges of a stain will dry to the surface, producing a phenomenon called skeletonization. • Trail pattern • A series of drops that are separate from other patterns, formed by blood dripping off an object or injury.
72 Flow pattern
Projected Bloodstains • Patterns that occur when a force is applied to the source of the blood • Includes low, medium, or high impact spatters, cast-off, arterial spurting, expiratory blood blown out of the nose, mouth, or wound. • Transfer or Contact Bloodstains • These patterns are created when a wet, bloody object comes in contact with a target surface; may be used to identify an object or body part. • A wipe pattern is created from an object moving through a bloodstain, while a swipe pattern is created from an object leaving a bloodstain. Blood Spatter Movie Types of Bloodstain Patterns • Passive Bloodstains • Patterns created from the force of gravity • Drop, series of drops, flow patterns, blood pools, etc. Images from http://www.bloodspatter.com/BPATutorial.htm
How is Blood Evidence Detected? • UV lights to help find traces of blood & other bodily fluids that are not visible under normal lighting conditions. • Blood Reagent Tests (Presumptive tests) • Detects hemoglobin in the blood. • Phenolphthalein (Kastle-Meyer test) and produces a pink color when it reacts with hemoglobin. • HemaStix is a strip that has been coated with tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) and will produce a green or blue-green color with the presence of hemoglobin.
Documenting Bloodstain Evidence • Investigators should • Note, study, and photograph each pattern and drop of blood • Accurately record the location of specific patterns • The investigator should create photographs and sketches of the overall pattern • Two common methods of documenting bloodstain patterns are the grid method and the perimeter ruler method.