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Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene

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Page 1: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Crime Scene

Processing the Crime Scene

Page 2: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Processing the Crime Scene

“Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can provide a link between a crime and its victim or a crime and its perpetrator.”

Page 3: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Secure and Isolate the Crime Scene

Responsibility?

Only authorized personnel should be allowed on the scene

Every person who enters the scene is a potential destroyer of viable physical evidence

Page 4: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Secure and Isolate Con’t

Once the scene is secured, lead investigator establishes: boundaries of the scene perpetrator’s path of entrance and

exit documentation of photographs of

physical evidence strategy for systematic examination

and documentation of entire crime scene

Page 5: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record the Scene

Since the crime scene will not remain in its original state for very long, a permanent record of the scene must be made as soon as possible. These records are also required at trial.

Page 6: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record the Scene

The three methods of recording the scene are done in the following manner: Photography Sketching the scene Note-taking

Page 7: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Photography

Photography the scene should be

photographed in an unaltered condition. Unless someone is injured, everything should be left in its original condition until all evidence is photographed.

Page 8: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Photography

What should be photographed?area the crime took placeall adjacent areas where acts

occurred immediately before or after the crime

points of entrance and exit if a body is present, photos should

be taken to show position and location relative to the entire scene

Page 9: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Photography

What should be photographed? Con’t close-ups of injuries and

weapons are necessary After removal of body,

photos of the area underneath the body should also be taken

Page 10: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Photography

Close-up Photos of Physical Evidence with a ruler or something else to show size/scale (point of reference)

Videotaping/digital cameras can also enhance the preservation of the evidence in its original state

Still photography is still the best for its detail

Page 11: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Rough Sketches

after photos, the investigator will sketch the scene (see diagram)

Page 12: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can
Page 13: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Rough Sketch

Why? First a rough sketch is made at the scene

containing accurate depiction of the dimensions at the scene and the location of important objects to the case (body, weapon, etc.)

Page 14: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Rough Sketch Con’t

All objects are measured from two fixed points (triangulation method) accurately with a tape measure (NOT GUESS)

Each object is then given a letter and a legend or list will correlate the letter to the item

The sketch should always designate North

Page 15: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Rough Sketch Con’t

Page 16: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Finished Sketch

A finished sketch will be made from the rough sketch and will then be drawn to scale using the measurements provided in the rough sketch. (This is what will be used as evidence in court.)

Page 17: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can
Page 18: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Record Scene: Notes Note taking is a constant activity throughout

the processing of the crime scene and include: Detailed written description of the

scene with the location of physical evidence recovered

Must identify the time the evidence was discovered, by whom, how and by whom it was packaged and marked and disposition of the item after it was collected

Tape recording notes is a helpful tool, but at some point the tape must be transcribed

Page 19: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Searching the Scene

Types of Searches (See Diagram) – searches at the crime scene must be systematic and the type of search will be determined by locale and size of the area and actions of victim and suspect at the scene

Page 20: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Searching the Scene

Page 21: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Searching Con’t

The physical evidence that should be collected include hairs, fibers, blood, glass, soil, fabric impressions (in a car or on furniture)

Particular attention is paid to cross-transfer of evidence between the perpetrator and the weapon and/or victim

Clothing from the suspect may be collected and must be bagged separately

Areas of the crime scene may be vacuumed and the sweeping submitted to the lab for testing

Page 22: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Vacuum Equipment

Page 23: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Searching Con’t The following items obtained from the body

should be sent to the lab for testing: Victim’s clothing Fingernail Scrapings Head and pubic hairs Blood Vaginal, anal, penile, oral swabs

(in sex-related crimes) Bullets recovered from body Hand swabs from shooting

victims

Page 24: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Collect and Package Physical Evidence

Physical evidence must be collected in such a way that prevents any change between the crime scene and the crime lab Hairs, blood and fibers should not be

removed at the scene. The article it is on should be sent to the lab intact and the evidence removed there.

Page 25: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Collect and Package Con’t

Blood stains can be removed by either scraping and transferring to a moistened swab or cutting out the stain

EACH DIFFERENT ITEM MUST BE PACKAGED SEPARATELY!!!

Many materials can be used to package evidence – plastic pill bottles, manila envelopes, and vials etc.

Page 26: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Collect and Package Con’t

Blood (and all clothing) SHOULD NEVER be packaged in an air-tight plastic container Why?

Any charred debris SHOULD be packaged in an air-tight container Why?

Page 27: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Maintaining a Chain of Custody

Continuity of possession (chain of custody) must be established whenever evidence will be presented in court

EVERY PERSON WHO HANDLED THE EVIDENCE MUST BE ACCOUNTED FOR!!!!

Evidence is carefully packaged and marked at the crime scene (collector’s initials, date of collection, location of evidence)

Page 28: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Chain of Custody Con’t

Whenever a transfer of evidence occurs it must be recorded

Chain of custody should be kept to a minimum

Page 29: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can
Page 30: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Obtain Controls

When possible, any collected evidence (hair, fibers, soil, etc.) should be compared with a control (known sample) from the actual crime scene

Bloodstain evidence must be accompanied by whole blood or buccal swab controls which are obtained from all relevant crime scene participants

Page 31: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Submitting Evidence to the Lab

Evidence submission forms are required for all articles to be tested

Case history should accompany the evidence submission form so the analyst can examine the evidence in a logical sequence

The particular type of test should be noted, but analyst is not bound only to that test

Page 32: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Submitting Evidence Con’t

Each item for testing must be listed, packaged separately and assigned a number or letter

Page 33: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Crime Scene Safety – (see guidelines)

See text pgs 47 - 50

Page 34: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Legal Considerations at the Crime Scene

Any evidence at the scene must be removed in compliance with 4th Amendment privileges.

Allowances for a warrant-less search: the existence of emergency

circumstances the need to prevent the immediate

loss or destruction of evidence

Page 35: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Legal Allowances Con’t

a search of a person or property within the immediate control of the person provided it is made incident to a lawful arrest

a search made by consent of the parties involved

Page 36: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Mincey v. Arizona

under the pretext of buying drugs, police forced entry into Rufus Mincey’s apartment and an undercover officer was killed

over a 4 day period police gathered evidence without a warrant

Mincey was convicted but appealed saying the evidence was collected without a warrant or his consent

Page 37: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Mincey v. Arizona Con’t

The court upheld Mincey’s position stating that the police had time to obtain a warrant since Mincey was in custody

Page 38: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Michigan v. Tyler

a fire burned down Tyler and his partner’s business

police were prevented from immediately searching the scene due to smoke, darkness, etc.

the next morning evidence was collected and removed

Page 39: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Michigan v. Tyler Con’t

4, 7, and 25 days later more evidence was collected without a warrant and was used to convict Tyler and his partner of arson

The Supreme Court overturned the decision stating the evidence collected that morning was proper and did not need a warrant but the additional entries did require a warrant

Page 40: Crime Scene Processing the Crime Scene.  “Physical evidence encompasses any and all objects that can establish that a crime has been committed or can

Court Case Conclusion

The Moral of the Story: OBTAIN A SEARCH WARRANT BEFORE

INVESTIGATING AND COLLECTING PHYSICAL EVIDENCE!!!!!