ID, Collection of Evidence

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Presumptive Drug Tests Screening for drugs or “What could that white powder be?” Retrieved from:
Advertisements

DRUG TESTING 17 February Vocab Review What is the difference between a presumptive test and a confirmatory test? Presumptive tests have high false.
Forensic Toxicology.
Drug Analysis.
Chapter 7 Drugs. Chapter 7 - Drugs (and Crime) A drug is a natural or synthetic substance designed to affect the subject psychologically or physiologically.
5-1 PRENTICE HALL ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ DRUGS Chapter 5.
Drug Identification Screening tests vs. Confirmation
Chapter 7 Drugs “Having sniffed the dead man’s lips, I detected a slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he had poison forced upon him.”
Forensic Drug Analysis CONFIRMATION TESTS LABORATORY BASED DRUG TESTS
Drugs: Analysis. Summary  Analysis of Chemical Drugs  Instrumental Examination  Botanical Examination.
Forensic Drug Analysis
Drugs CHS. Definition A drug can be defined as a natural or synthetic substance that is used to produce physiological or psychological effect in the human.
Part 1: qualitative analysis
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein Drug Identification.
5-1 PRENTICE HALL ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ DRUGS Chapter 5.
Forensic Drug Analysis
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein DRUGS Chapter 5.
FRSC 2001 – Introduction to Forensic Science Technology II Professor Bensley Alfred State College.
5.4 Notes.
5 -1 FORENSIC DRUG ANALYSIS Drug Identification The challenge comes in selecting analytical procedures that will specifically identify a drug. This.
DRUGS Ch. 5.
Forensic Drug Analysis 60 % of Forensics Lab work is drugs 85-90% of all Criminal Cases involve drugs.
Drug Analysis Forensic Science/CSI Foster. How would you figure out which type of drug each of these are?
5.3 Notes Light & Spectrometry Pg Theory of Light  Color is a visual indication of the fact that objects absorb certain portions of visible.
Methods of Chemical Analysis. Selecting an Analytical Technique  Organic vs. Inorganic materials  Organic:  Inorganic:  Quantitative vs. Qualitative.
Lecture:Forensic Toxicology : Drugs. Narcotic Drugs  Pharmacologically classified as an analgesic  Central Nervous System Depressants  Popular drugs.
Drug Testing Notes, Poppy Seed Mythbusters Forensic Science 2/10/14.
Drug Analysis Forensic Science/CSI Foster. How would you figure out which type of drug each of these are?
Drugs A natural or synthetic substance used to produce physiological effects in humans or other animals.
Pd. 3&5—Fin Lab Pd. 6 – Drug Testing Notes
Intro to Poisons: The Poisoner’s Handbook Forensic Science 2/17/15.
Evidence. Collection Explosion usually followed by fire Often destroyed by one or other Dangerous – shards of glass or metal, toxic or flammable vapors,
Drug Identification. The challenge of forensic drug identification comes in selecting the correct procedure(s) that will ensure a specific identification.
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein Spectrophotometry.
1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. Drug Assignments u Today is the last day for DRUG ASSIGNMENTS 2.
Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.
Drugs: Analysis Dr. Jason Linville University of Alabama at Birmingham
Lab Tools of Forensic Scientists. Detection Presumptive tests ◦ Give idea as to what probably is in a sample/what definitely is not in a sample  Ex:
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein DRUGS Chapter 5.
Chapter 7 Drug Evidence. Chapter 7 1 Drugs and Crime  A drug is a natural or synthetic substance designed to affect the subject psychologically or physiologically.
Physical Evidence and Organic Analysis
Chapter 7 Drugs Kendall/Hunt.
Evidence.
Chapter 5 – Organic Analysis
Forensic Toxicology by: Julie & Scott.
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company
Controlled Drugs.
Chapter 9 -- Drugs Drug: a substance that is used to produce physiological or psychological effects. Drug abuse – a brief history In the 1960s, the main.
Test Review: Lab Tools and Techniques of the Forensic Scientist
Chapter 7 Drugs “Having sniffed the dead man’s lips, I detected a slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he had poison forced upon him.”
Forensic Drug Analysis
Forensic Drug Analysis
Drugs, Toxicology, Arson, and Explosives
Forensic Drug Analysis
Toxicology Drugs and Poisons.
Chapter 7 Drugs “Having sniffed the dead man’s lips, I detected a slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he had poison forced upon him.”
Chapter 7 Drugs Kendall/Hunt.
Drug Identification In what types of situations would a forensic scientist need to test for drugs? In what ways can forensic scientists test for drugs?
Chapter 7 Drugs “Having sniffed the dead man’s lips, I detected a slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he had poison forced upon him.”
2/13 OBJECTIVE: Finish book assignment and copy powerpoint notes.
FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology
Created by C. Ippolito Sept. 2007
Chapter 7 Drugs Kendall/Hunt.
Collection of Drug Evidence
Identification of Drug Evidence
Frequently Abused Drugs
Testing for drugs in the lab
Presentation transcript:

ID, Collection of Evidence 9.4 Notes ID, Collection of Evidence

Objectives Describe the laboratory tests normally used to perform a routine drug identification analysis Understand proper collection and preservation of drug evidence

Drug Identification Either a specimen is a specific drug or it is not Chemists must be prepared to support and defend the validity of the results in a court of law Screening test – reduces possibilities first test is color test Confirmation test - pinpointing

Drug Identification cont. The procedures must be able to confirm that the likelihood of any other substance responding in an identical manner to a certain drug is so minimal that there exists no other conclusion but reasonable scientific certainty

Analytical schemes Color tests Microcrystalline tests Chromatography Spectrophotometry Mass Spectrometry

Color Tests 1. Marquis reagent – purple with heroine and morphine; orange with amphetamines 2. Dillie-Koppanyi – violet blue with barbiturates 3. Duquenois-Levine – ABC layers with layer C purple with marijuana 4. Van Urk – purple/blue with LSD 5. Scott Test – ABC (A with cocaine, blue to pink in B, and blue again in C layer)

Microcrystalline Tests Chemical reagent added to drug on slide Crystalline precipitate with unique structures results

Chromatography Uses TLC (Thin Layer Chromatography) and gas Requires the Rf comparison of known and questioned drugs Accompanies color and crystal test

Spectrophotometry Absorption of light in the UV and IR regions of the spectrum Establishes probable drug IR can specifically ID a substance

Mass Spectrometry GC/MS Utilizes the fragmentation pattern of sample molecules which serves as a fingerprint Can be used to separate components of a complex drug mix

ID of Marijuana Based on botanical features Cystolithic hairs – short hairs, shaped like bear claws DuQuenois-Levine color test Without leaf, TLC is used

Collection & Preservation of Drug Evidence Original container Airtight container if glue sniffing Packages marked Background information