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Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science
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Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Jan 02, 2016

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May Jenkins
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Page 1: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Forensic ScienceUnit 1

Introduction to Forensic Science

Page 2: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

I. Introduction• What is forensic science? - In it’s broadest definition it is the application of science to law.

Forensic science – the application of science to those criminal and civil laws that are enforced by police agencies in a criminal justice system.

Page 3: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

History and Development of Forensic Science

• One of the earliest records of applying forensics to solve criminal cases comes from third-century china. A manuscript titled yi yu ji (A collection of criminal cases) reports how a coroner solved a case in which a woman was suspected of murdering her husband and burning the body then claiming that he died in an accidental fire. Noticing that the husband’s corpse had no ashes in its mouth, the coroner performed an experiment to test the woman’s story. He burned two pigs – one alive and one dead – and then checked for ashes inside the mouth of each. He found ashes in the mouth of the pig that was alive before it was burned but none in the mouth of the pig that was dead beforehand. The coroner thus concluded that the husband, too, was dead before his body was burned. Confronted with this evidence, the woman admitted her guilt.

Page 4: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Anthropometry• A system developed by French scientist Alphonse

Bertillon in 1879.• Was a systematic procedure that involved taking a series of body measurements as a means of distinguishing one individual from another.

Page 5: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Twentieth-Century Breakthroughs

The pace of technological change advanced forensics rapidly.•1901: Dr. Karl Landsteiner – Blood types•1910: Albert Osborn -Questioned Documents (still in use today!)•Col Calvin Goddard – comparison microscope use

Page 6: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Locard’s exchange Principle

• Frenchman Edmond Locard believed that when a criminal came in contact with

an object or person, a cross transfer of evidence occurred.

Page 7: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

II. Crime Laboratories

History of Crime labs in the U.S.• The oldest forensic laboratory in the

United States is that of the Los Angles Police Department - created in 1923 by august vollmer.

• In 1932 the FBI organized a national laboratory that offered forensic services to all law enforcement agencies in the country.

Page 8: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

• There is no national system of forensic laboratories. Instead, many local law enforcement jurisdictions – city, county, and state- each operate their own independent crime labs.

• Laboratory staff sizes vary and services may be diverse or specialized.

Page 9: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

1. FBI – belongs to the department of justice (doj)

Broad investigative

powers

2. DEA – belongs to the department of justice (doj)

Analysis of drugs and all related items

3. ATF – Belongs to the department of the Justice

Alcoholic beverages, weapons, explosive devices, gun control & organized crime

4. U.S. Postal Inspection Services

- part of USPS

Criminal investigations related to the postal service

Page 10: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

State and Local Agencies

Georgia Bureau of Investigation (gbi) –handles crime scenes for counties without their own criminalists.

Cobb County Police Department (CCPD)Cobb County Sheriffs Department

Page 11: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

III. Real Forensic Science

• Like TV shows, the real forensic scientist does work the crime scene and processes the evidence in the lab. They also testify in court about that evidence.

• They DON’T investigate in other ways such as questioning suspects.

Page 12: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Analyzing of Physical Evidence

• Compared to confessions and eyewitness accounts, only physical evidence is free of inherent error or bias.

• The scientific method is a process that uses strict guidelines to ensure careful and systematic collection, organization, and analysis of evidence.

Page 13: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Admissibility of Evidence

• The rejection of the scientific validity of the lie detector (polygraph) established a standard guideline for determining the judicial admissibility of scientific examinations.

Page 14: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Frey v. United States

• The courts ruled that in order to be admitted as evidence at trial, the questioned procedure, technique, or principles must be “generally accepted” by a meaningful segment of the relevant scientific community.

• Usually requires collection of experts to testify or books/papers written on the subject.

Page 15: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Federal Rules of Evidence• In this alternative to Frey a witness

“qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education” may offer expert testimony if

(1) there are sufficient facts or data. (2) it is the product of reliable

principles and methods. (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.

Page 16: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc

• In 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court asserted that “general acceptance” is not an absolute prerequisite to the admissibility of scientific evidence.

Page 17: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Guidelines for admissibility

Suggested areas of inquiry:1.Technique or Theory can be tested.2.Technique or theory has been subject to peer review & publication.3.Potential rate of error.4.Existence & Maintenance of standards controlling the operation.5.Widespread scientific acceptance.

Page 18: Forensic Science Unit 1 Introduction to Forensic Science.

Providing Expert Testimony• Expert witness – An individual whom the

court determines to possess a particular skill or knowledge in a trade or profession that is not expected of the average layperson

and that will aid a court in determining the truth of a matter at trial.