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Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab
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Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Fingerprinting in the Digital Age

Catherine MyersIndependent Research

Advisor: Gary Hauptmann

Forensic Analyst

Baltimore County Crime Lab

Page 2: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

What is a Fingerprint?

• Ridges and furrows developed by dermal papillae

• Skin secretions• Invisible deposits• Latent vs. patent

Dermal papillae

Sebaceous gland

Eccrine sweat pore

Page 3: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

History of Fingerprinting

• Evidence of fingerprint use in ancient civilizations• Sir Edward Henry made first classification system • First fingerprint bureau in 1901

Loop Whorl Arch

Page 4: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Bifurcation

Core

Crossover

Ridge Ending

Island

Delta

Pore

Page 5: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Collecting Fingerprint Evidence

• Method depends on surface in question– Porous v. nonporous– Light v. dark

• Dusting

• Fuming

• Chemical development

Page 6: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Dusting Methods

• Powder: used on metal, glass and wood– Black or white– Fluorescent

• Magnetic: used on more porous surfaces like paper

Page 7: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Cyanoacrylate Fuming

• Superglue placed in sealed container

• Heated to approx. 120o

• Fumes evaporate• Cyanoacrylate adheres to

solid deposits of fingerprint• View under UV light or dye

with colored stain

Page 8: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Ninhydrin Development• Used on paper• Paper is submersed in ninydrin, allowed to dry• Evidence is placed in a warm, humid

environment• Ninhydrin reacts with amino acids in fingerprint

residue to form Ruhemann’s purple

Page 9: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Fingerprints?

Page 10: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

Digital Enhancement

• Digital prints not as detailed as silver-developed prints

• Adobe Photoshop– Color balance– Brightness– Contrast– “Dodging and Burning”

Page 11: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

EvidenceHow to Ensure that Evidence is

Admissible in Court

• “If this is a digital image, has it been enhanced or is this the original capture with no changes to it? If it’s been enhanced, I want you to show me what you did and tell me what your training is. And did you go out of your area of expertise to do this? (McRoberts)”

• Record of camera, lens, shutter speed, illumination, camera position, and distance and angle from an object

• Audit trail to document changes made

Page 12: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

More Safeguards

• Original photograph should be

saved separately

• Changes should be directly reproducible

• Chain of custody should be documented and preserved

Page 13: Fingerprinting in the Digital Age Catherine Myers Independent Research Advisor: Gary Hauptmann Forensic Analyst Baltimore County Crime Lab.

SourcesAll photos obtained from www.google.com/images

Berry, John, and David A Stoney. "History and Development of Fingerprinting."Advances in Fingerprint Technology. Ed. Henry C Lee and R E Gaensslen. 2nd ed. N.p.: CRC Press, 2001. 1-41.

Lee, Henry C, and R E Gaensslen. "Methods of Latent Fingerprint Development." Advances in Fingerprint Technology. 2nd ed. N.p.: CRC Press, 2001. 105-176. McRoberts, Flynn, and Steve Mills. "Digitized Prints can Point Finger at the Innocent." Chicago Tribune 3 Jan. 2005. 19 Dec. 2006 <http://www.truthinjustice.org/digitized-prints.htm>.

O'Connor, Tom. Fingerprints and Trace Evidence. 26 Dec. 2004. North Carolina Wesleyan College. 14 Nov. 2006 <http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/315/315lect05.htm>.

Prabahakar, Salir, and Anil Jain. "Fingerprint Identification." Biometrics Research. Michigan State University. 2 Nov. 2006 <http://biometrics.cse.msu.edu/fingerprint.html>.

Ramotowski, Robert S. "Composition of Latent Print Residue." Advances in Fingerprint Technology. Ed. Henry C Lee and R E Gaensslen. 2nd ed. N.p.: CRC Press, 2001. 63-04. Reis, George. Digital Image Integrity. 2004. Adobe. 19 Dec. 2006<http://www.adobe.com/digitalimag/pdfs/digital_image_integrity.pdf>.

Scientific Working Group on Imaging Technologies. Vers. 1.1. Feb. 2001. Florida Division of the International Association for Indentification. 19 Dec. 2006 <http://www.fdiai.org/images/SWGIT%20guidelines.pdf>.