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Chapter 2 The Crime Scene. Crime Scene The location & surrounding areas where a crime has been committed.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 2 The Crime Scene. Crime Scene The location & surrounding areas where a crime has been committed."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2 The Crime Scene

2 Crime Scene The location & surrounding areas where a crime has been committed

3 Physical Evidence Any & all objects that:  establish a crime  link a crime to its victim  link a crime to its perpetrator Must be recognized at scene & preserved!!

4 Processing the Crime Scene 1. Preserve Life 2. Protect Area 3. Photograph 4. Sketch 5. Notes 6. Search 7. Collect 8. Package 9. Chain of Custody

5 Step 1: Preserve Life Get medical help for those who need it Arrest suspect

6 Step 2: Protect Area Keep out all unauthorized people Rope off, barricade, station guards

7 Step 3: Photograph The unaltered scene  so don’t move a thing!! Crime scene & adjacent areas From all angles & overviews

8 Photographs continued… Body position & location Close-ups of evidence, injures, weapons Place ruler by object for reference

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12 Step 4: Sketches A. Rough Sketch  shows evidence & important features  use tape measure  distances must be measured from 2 fixed points (walls)

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14 Sketches continued… B. Finished Sketch  very accurate & drawn to scale  drafting tools & computer programs used

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16 Step 5: Notes Detailed written description of crime scene & evidence Provide time & person who found evidence Record who & how it was packaged  where it was sent

17 Step 6: Search Systematic & thorough Establish points of entry & exit Victim’s body is also searched at autopsy

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19 Step 7: Collect Avoid contamination!!! Keep in original condition Bloodstains  scrape off surface  transfer to moist swab  cut out stain

20 Step 8: Package Evidence must be packaged separately Label/Tag  officer’s initials  location it was found  time

21 Packaging Continued … The following items are useful:  forceps  manila envelops  unbreakable containers/pill bottles with lids  screw-cap glass vials

22 Packaging Fire/Arson Evidence Use airtight containers b/c they trap fumes

23 Packaging Wet Bloodstained Materials Do not use airtight containers Place in paper bags to dry Transfer to crime lab in BIOHAZARD bags

24 Step 9: Chain of Custody Transfer of evidence A list of every person the evidence was passed on to Keep chain as short as possible

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28 What should be collected? 1. Victim’s clothing 2. Fingernail scrapings 3. Hair 4. Blood (DNA) 5. Vaginal, anal, & oral swabs (sex crimes) 6. Recovered bullets from body 7. Hand swabs (gunshot residues)

29 Standard/Reference Samples Sample of known origin (control) Compare it to crime scene evidence Ex: Paint from suspect’s car & paint found on victim

30 Crime Scene Safety 1. Latex gloves (doubled) & shoe covers 2. Masks / goggles / face shield / coveralls 3. Biohazard bags & labels 4. Contaminated equipment  disinfected with 10% bleach solution 5. No smoking, drinking, or eating

31 Court Cases

32 Mincey vs. Arizona Drug dealer  undercover cop killed 4-day search at homicide scene No warrant Guilty verdict reversed

33 Michigan vs. Tyler Business fire  search conducted morning after 3 other searches (4,7, & 25 days later) No warrant Guilty verdict reversed

34 4 th Amendment Protects against unreasonable searches & seizures Warrants must be obtained when time & circumstance permit it

35 A Warrant is NOT Needed When: It’s an emergency You’re being arrested You give your permission Evidence is in danger of destruction


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