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Bloodstain Evidence Bloodstain Evidence May reveal: May reveal: Origin(s) of bloodstain Distance of bloodstain from target Direction from which blood impacted Speed with which blood left its source Position of victim & assailant Movement of victim & assailant Number of blows/shots 1
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Bloodspatter

May 22, 2015

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Mrs. Henley

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Page 1: Bloodspatter

Bloodstain EvidenceBloodstain EvidenceMay reveal:May reveal:

• Origin(s) of bloodstain• Distance of bloodstain from target• Direction from which blood impacted• Speed with which blood left its source• Position of victim & assailant• Movement of victim & assailant• Number of blows/shots

1

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Liquid BloodLiquid Blood• Physical properties

– viscosity

– surface tension

– specific gravity

• Behaves as a projectile in motion– biology, physics, maths

2

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Surface TensionSurface Tension

• Resistance to penetration & separation• Surface acts to reduce surface area

• Smallest SA to Volume ratio is offered by sphere

3

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Dripping BloodDripping Blood

Blood drop grows until Wt (G) > S.T.

Single drop breaks free (teardrop shape)

Surface tension pulls in vertically

Shape settles into sphere (0.05 ml)

Does not break up until impact

And horizontally

Blood trickles downwards

4

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Drop size

.

Standard drop size 50ul (0.05ml)

.

Rapid bleeding gives slightly larger drop

Shaking/movementcasts off smaller drops

.

5

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Terminal Velocity v Distance Fallen(metric)

Terminal velocity as a function of distance fallen (metric)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Fall distance (m)

Ter

min

al v

elo

city

(m

/s)

6

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Terminal Velocity v Distance Fallen(imperial)

Terminal velocity as a function of distance fallen (imperial)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Distance fallen (f)

Te

rmin

al v

elo

cit

y (f

/s)

7

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Free Falling Blood Droplets

.

50 ul4.6 mm

7.5 m/s

4.2 to5.4 m

0.5 ul2.12 mm

2.4 to 3 m

.4.6 m/s

0.12 ul1.32 mm

0.84 to 1 m

.3.3 m/s

0.06 ul1.1 mm

0.5 to 0.65 m

.2.2 m/s

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Shape & Size of BloodspotShape & Size of Bloodspot

• Depends mostly on nature of target surface– texture (rough or smooth)

– porous or non porous

• Size is related to distance fallen, provided:– standard 50 ul drop of blood

• There is little change in spot diameter beyond a fall distance of 1.2 m

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Height FallenHeight Fallen

Single drops of blood falling from fingertip onto smooth cardboard from various heights.No change in diameter beyond 7 ft.

Adapted from Introduction to Forensic Sciences,W. Eckert, CRC, 1997

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Effect of Target SurfaceEffect of Target Surface

. .... .Spreads out smoothly ST of spreading edge is

broken by irregular surface

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Experiments with Falling Blood DropletsExperiments with Falling Blood Droplets

blood

dropper

ruler

Terazzo floor

whiteboard

rough paper towel

paper

Fabric (theatre green)

Height

Target Surface

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Height/Surface

Single drop of blood falling from various heights (m) onto various surfaces

smooth floor paper towel fabric

0.5

1

2

3

0.5

1

2

3

13

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Angle of Angle of ImpactImpact

90

10

70

2030

60 50 40

Adapted from Introduction to Forensic Sciences,W. Eckert, CRC, 1997

80

Gravitational dense zoneat lower edge

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Wave Cast-offWave Cast-offDavid Sadler:David Sadler:

.Parent drop

wave cast-off

Tail of wave cast-off points back to parent drop

Tail of elongated stain points in direction of travel

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Point of ConvergencePoint of Convergence16

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Point of ConvergencePoint of Convergence5 ml blood squirted from a syringe from height of 1 m

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Point of OriginPoint of Origin

length

width

Angle of impact = arc sin W/L

Distance from point of convergence

Hei

ght a

bove

poi

nt o

f co

nver

genc

e

Origin

85 60 45 30

181

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Tracing Origin of Tracing Origin of BloodspotsBloodspots

• Point of convergence method– 2 dimensional image

• Point of origin method– adds 3rd dimension to image

• In practice:– use of string & protractor at scene

– use of computer at laboratory

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Blood SpatterBlood Spatter

• Low velocity (5 f/s, 1.5 m/s)– e.g. free-falling drops, cast off from weapon

• Medium velocity (25 - 100 f/s, 7.5 - 30 m/s)– e.g. baseball bat blows

• High velocity (>100 f/s, 30 m/s)– e.g. gunshot, machinery

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Herbert Leon MacDonell,

Laboratory of Forensic Science,P.O. Box 1111,Corning,New York,14830,USA

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Low Velocity Blood SpatterLow Velocity Blood Spatter• Blood source subjected to LV impact

– < 5 f/s (1.5 m/s)

• Spot diameter: mostly 4 - 8 mm – some smaller, some larger

• Free-falling drops (gravity only)• Cast off from fist, shoe, weapon• Dripping• Splashing• Arterial spurting

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Cast-off from WeaponCast-off from Weapon

• First blow causes bleeding• Subsequent blows contaminate weapon with

blood• Blood is cast-off tangientially to arc of upswing

or backswing• Pattern & intensity depends on:

– type of weapon

– amount of blood adhering to weapon

– length of arc

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Downswing of HammerDownswing of Hammer

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Cast-off from WeaponCast-off from Weapon

ceiling

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Overhead swing with bloodied metal bar26

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Cast-off Pattern (1/2)Cast-off Pattern (1/2)

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Cast off Pattern (2/2)Cast off Pattern (2/2)1

2

3

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Cast off Pattern (2/2) Cast off Pattern (2/2) ? Sequence? Sequence

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Cast off Pattern (2/2) Cast off Pattern (2/2) ? Sequence? Sequence 1

(4 spots)

2(3 spots)

3(2 spots)

If weapon does not pick up more blood, spatter from subsequent backswings becomes progressively less.In practice weapon picks up more blood with each successful blow.

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Three overhead swings with hatchet

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Cast-off & medium velocity spatter32

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Cast-off & medium velocity spatter 233

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Cast-off PatternCast-off Pattern? Object? Object

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Cast-off PatternCast-off Patternfrom Handfrom Hand

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Cast-off pattern from bloodied hand swung in front of target

6” ruler

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.... ...

..

...

Drip PatternDrip Pattern

• Free-falling drops dripping into wet blood• Large irregular central stain• Small round & oval satellite stains

.. .......

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Drip 1:Drip 1:

Blood dripping into itself from height of 1 m (8 drops)

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Drip 2Drip 2

Blood dripping into itself from height of 1 m (8 drops)

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Dripping onto steps

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Splash PatternSplash Pattern

• Volume > 1 ml – Subjected to LV impact – Thrown – Tipped

• Large central irregular area surrounded by elongated peripheral spatter pattern

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Splash 1Splash 1

5 ml blood squirted from a syringe from a height of 1 m

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Splash 2Splash 2

5 ml blood squirted from a syringe from a height of 1 m

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Splash 3Splash 3

5 ml blood squirted from a syringe from a height of 1 m44

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Splash onto vertical surface

6” ruler

10 ml blood thrown 1 m onto a vertical target surface

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Stamping in blood 1

Area seen in close-up in next slide

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Stamping in blood Close-up of heel area

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Stamp 1Stamp 1

Blood pool (10 drops) before stamping

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Stamp 2Stamp 2

Blood pool (10 drops) after stamping49

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Arterial Spurt PatternArterial Spurt Pattern• Blood exiting body under arterial pressure• Large stains with downward flow on

vertical surfaces• wave-form of pulsatile flow may be

apparent

50

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Small arterial spurt

spatter

broken pottery

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Neck incisions (scene)52

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Neck incisions

Thyroid cartilage

Probe in carotid artery

‘Hesitation’ injuries

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Medium Velocity Medium Velocity Blood SpatterBlood Spatter

• Blood source subjected to MV impact– (25 - 100 f/s, 7.5 - 30 m/s)

• Spot diameter: mostly 1 - 4 mm• Blows with weapon (e.g. baseball bat)

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Medium velocity blood spatter.Point of impact 15 cm in front of vertical target surface

6” ruler

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Flick 1:Flick 1:

Blood flicked between middle finger & thumb onto a vertical smooth surface from a distance of 15 cm

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Flick 2:Flick 2:

Blood flicked between middle finger & thumb onto a vertical smooth surface from a distance of 15 cm

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High Velocity Blood SpatterHigh Velocity Blood Spatter• Blood source subjected to HV impact

– > 100 f/s, 30 m/s

• Fine mist: spot size < 0.1 mm• Small mass limits spread to 1 m• !Some larger droplets reach further• Gunshot

– back-spatter from entry wound

– forward spatter from exit wound

• High speed machinery

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Gunshot: back& forward spatterBloodstained foam held just above target surface.

Back-spatter on entry

Forward spatteron exit

bullet

Bullet passing L to R just above sheet

Bullet enters foam

bullet exits foam

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Gunshot Back SpatterGunshot Back Spatter

• Arises from entrance wound• Passes back towards weapon & shooter• Seen only at close range of fire• Seen on:

– inside of barrel

– exterior of weapon

– hand, arm, chest of shooter

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Back spatter on steadying

hand

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Gunshot Forward SpatterGunshot Forward Spatter

• Arises from exit wound• Passes forwards in same direction as shot• More copious than back-spatter• Can be seen at any range of fire• Seen on nearby surfaces, objects, persons

– especially on wall behind victim

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Forward spatter (5 ms after bullet impacted at 1000 f/s)

2.5 cm

blood soaked target

bullet

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6” ruler

Forward spatter onto target placed 15 cm behind point of HV bullet impact (bullet passing towards screen) 1

64

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Forward spatter (closer view)65

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Forward spatter (closest view)

5 mm

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Wipe PatternsWipe Patterns• Object moves through a wet bloodstain• Feathered edge suggests direction

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Transfer PatternsTransfer Patterns

• Wet, bloodied object contacts a secondary surface

• Transfer from:– hand, fingers

– shoes, weapon

– hair

• Transfer to:– walls, ceilings

– clothing, bedding

• Produces mirror-image of bloodied object

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Transfer from hair (hair-swipe) 1

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Transfer from hair (hair-swipe) 2

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Flow PatternsFlow Patterns• Blood flows horizontally & vertically• Altered by contours, obstacles• Often ends in pool

71

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Flow pattern72

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Trapped!

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Stabbing 1

74

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Stabbing 275

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Blood flow on shirt

Horizontally to R side

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Pattern on shirt77

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Bloodspots on trousers78