65034 Introduction to Forensic Science
Introduction to Crime Scene Investigation
                        Philip Maynard
                      iPhilip.maynard@uts.edu.au
   The Scene and the aim of CSI
          Multi-case focus, crime
          disruption, crime prevention   Intelligence
          and reduced fear of crime                                          Links to:
                                                                              Natural sciences
                                                                              Criminology
                                                                              IT & computing
                                                                              Decision-making
                                                        Detection,            Data mining
                                                        characterisation and  Policing
                                         Trace          exploitation          Law
                                                                              Sociology
                                                                              Cognitive sciences
                                                            Judicial
                         Investigation
                                                            System
Single-case focus,
implication and exoneration
of individuals                                                             Single case focus, expert
                                                                           evidence and evidence of fact
                                                         uts cricos provider code: 00099f
   UTS:SCIENCE                                                               science.uts.edu.au
1.1 What is a Crime Scene?
 Murder, assault, sexual assault.
 The crime scene is the place where the victim is discovered, in addition to the
 place where any tools are recovered and  if the victim has been moved  the place
 where the offence actually occurred.
 A reconstruction of events is required from the traces at the scene, as well as
 anything which may provide clues to the identity of the perpetrator.
1.1 What is a Crime Scene?
 Car Accident: The investigation seeks to reconstruct:
         position of victims,
         position of vehicles and
         sequence of events.
 The main issues for the forensic scientist are to:
      identify a vehicle which has left the scene, based on paint, headlights,
       debris, tyre traces
      determine the state of the vehicle at the time of the accident (brakes, lights)
1.1 What is a Crime Scene?
 Fire/explosion: The investigation must:
         determine the history of the
          development of the fire
         trace the origin of the event
         determine the ignition source.
 The investigation must ultimately draw a
 conclusion about the cause of the fire based on
 the ignition source, and determine if a
 perpetrator can be identified for a deliberate
 fire.
1.1 What is a Crime Scene?
 Mass catastrophe.
 The investigators have the same
 problem as an accident scene, but
 the dimensions are much larger
 (size of the site and numbers of
 victims).
 The main activity of the forensic
 scientists after a mass catastrophe
 is the identification of victims (DVI
 team) and the collection of specific
 traces to reconstruct and explain
 the catastrophe.
1.2 Aims of the Investigation.
 The first observations made at any scene are the corner-stone of all inquiries
 (Bischoff 1938)
 Errors committed during the interrogation and other aspects of the preliminary
 investigation can perhaps be corrected, but errors committed in the protection and
 examination of the crime scene can never be rectified.
 The aim of the investigation is to make observations at the scene in a systematic
 and scientific manner and to be as thorough as possible, in the knowledge that
 there will not be a second chance to make those observations.
1.2 Aims of the Investigation.
 The common elements to all crime scene investigations are:
      to reconstruct what happened (sequence of events, modus operandi)
      to recover traces which link perpetrators or victims to the scene.
 This difficult task requires patience, accuracy, meticulous attention to details. The
 overall strategy is to move from the general to the particular (Analogous to
 laboratory investigation of forensic evidence).
1.3 General to the Particular.
 The first investigations undertaken at a scene will always be
 those that provide information without touching or disturbing the
 traces. The most general observations come first, followed by a
 detailed examination to locate and identify traces.
 Only at the very end of the observational stage are traces
 touched or moved. This is analogous to a laboratory examination
 moving from non-destructive to destructive testing. As soon as
 the trace is disturbed, an irreversible change has occurred at the
 crime scene.
1.4 Locard Exchange Principle.
 Every contact leaves a trace.
 The investigation may reveal the presence of traces at a scene from a suspect, their
 garments, tools, vehicle, etc. Conversely, traces may be taken away by the suspect.
 This exchange can be a material deposit, such as:
 fingerprint, fibres, paint, glass, DNA,
 or it may be the result of an action:
 eg, moulded traces (toolmarks, footwear impression, tiremarks).
1.4 Locard Exchange Principle.
 Double transfer.
 For any type of linkage evidence transfer there are two possibilities:
      Simple transfer: the trace find on A comes from B, or
      Double transfer: the trace find on A comes from B, and the trace find on B
       comes from A.
 In evaluating Class evidence, double transfer increases the value (probability ratio)
 of the evidence enormously (by a factor of thousands compared to simple transfer
 in many cases). It is important to recognize and collect double transfer evidence
 where it occurs.
1.5 Overview  the Crime Scene.
 What is the crime scene investigator required to do at a crime scene?
 1.Intervene at the Scene.
 2.Protect the Scene / Preserve the Trace.
 3.Document the Scene.
 4.Process the Scene.
 and do all of these things in a timely yet systematic and careful manner.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 The crime scene is :
      the place from which most physical traces will be obtained
      a dynamic, rapidly changing place.
 The scene must be preserved. The basic rule is always to anticipate the worst and
 to take extensive rather than minimal precautions.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 It is obvious that the crime scene examiner is never the first at the scene. Most of
 the time other officials (rescue services, police, fire brigades, ambulance) as well
 as civilians (witnesses, person who discovered the crime, etc) precede the crime
 scene examiner in arriving at the scene.
 These people are not expert in forensic science. The crime scene examiner needs
 to:
      preserve all the traces on arrival at the scene
      inform the detectives, firefighters, etc of the requirements for crime scene
       investigation.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 The sequence of operations required to intervene at the crime scene includes:
 1. aid to injured persons
 2. protection of the scene
 3. isolation and interview of witnesses
 4. preservation of traces
 5. cadaver management
 and these need to be done before the main crime scene processing can begin.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 Injured person: If an injured person is on the scene, first aid should be
 administered immediately even though valuable traces may be unavoidably lost or
 destroyed. Saving lives takes precedence over all other considerations. The first
 police on the scene should have requested medical assistance if necessary.
 If first aid to the injured is not immediately essential, the investigator should note:
 
     the victim's position on a simple sketch, how the victim is lying or sitting,
 
     the position of the hands, arms and legs, the condition of clothes, etc.
 All of these things will be affected by medical treatment of the injured person, so
 the evidence must be noted as soon as possible.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 Physical traces on injured person.
 It is also important to note whether the victim has anything on them such as hairs,
 fibres, etc. If necessary these traces must be immediately recovered.
 Physical traces visible to the naked eye most likely will be recovered from the
 victim's hands, or the victim's footwear.
2.1 Intervention at the scene.
 The investigator should:
      instruct emergency medical personnel how to enter the scene so as not to
       disturb it needlessly
      observe the actions of the medical personnel noting what objects they
       moved, and where they walked
      arrange for and custody of the clothing of the victim, which is usually cut off
       at the scene or in the hospital.
2.2 Safety.
 Many crime scenes present hazards to the health and safety of the investigator and
 to others present.
 These can include:
      biological hazards from dead or injured victims
      chemical hazards in clandestine laboratories or fire scenes
      structural collapse at fire and major disaster scenes
 as well as loaded guns, unexploded bombs, drugs, etc.
 It is the investigator's responsibility to protect themselves and others at the scene.
2.3 Access Control.
 Access Control is the most important step to protecting the Scene from everyone
 not directly involved with the investigation, including:
   
       other officers
   
       journalists
   
       curiosity seekers
   
       family members
 Any of these people may be present on the scene when the investigator arrives.
 These people must be identified, and the reason for their presence must be noted.
 They must be removed from the crime scene.
2.3 Access Control.
2.3 Access Control.
2.3 Access Control.
 At the same time as intruders are identified and removed from the scene, the
 perimeter must be secured. By simply locking a door or stringing rope or tape
 around the perimeter, an area can be marked as restricted.
 Even with devices such as barricades, crime-scene tape and ropes, an officer is still
 needed to take an active role in keeping people away.
2.3 Access Control.
 Indoor Crime Scene: If the scene is indoors, the barricade should include not only
 the central scene (e.g. a room), but also the whole house and the probable entry
 and exit paths used by the criminal. This can include:
      ground outside a window,
      rooms through which the criminal had to pass,
      stairs,
      driveway, etc.
2.3 Access Control.
 Outdoor Crime Scene: If the location is outdoors, an ample area should be roped
 off to include the path taken by the criminal to and from the central scene. Use
 trees, police cars or poles to define the roped off area.
 For outdoor scenes, an officer on duty to keep out intruders is even more important
 than for indoor scenes. There will almost always be challenges to the security of
 the scene.
 All protective measures must be taken as early as possible to prevent valuable or
 vital traces from being destroyed. It is also important that barricades be sufficiently
 extensive from the start of the investigation. There is no second chance with crime
 scenes. Traces outside the barricades will be lost.
2.3 Access Control.
2.4 Witness/Suspect Control.
 Isolation and interview of victim/suspect.
 Each person present at a scene must be identified and separated from others.
 The interview is the responsibility of the detective in charge. Training and
 experience are important to run a good interview. Attentive listening by the
 forensic scientist can sometimes be the key to the investigation.
 Deciding who needs to be interviewed is a vexed question. It is not possible to
 interview everyone who could possibly be interviewed at scene.
2.4 Witness/Suspect Control.
 As a matter of course, the following people will need to be interviewed. There
 may be other interviews required, depending on circumstances.
      Victims who are capable of being interviewed
      Other civilians present at the time of the incident
      Other civilians who came to assist after the incident
      Professionals who attended (fire, ambulance, police)
2.5 Preservation of Evidence.
 Once the crime scene has been secured, it is critical that no-one enters without a
 specific purpose. The access points to the scene in particular are a source of traces
 from the perpetrator.
 In major scenes, the access control should include a list of every person who enters
 the scene. This should be maintained by the officer in charge of the perimeter.
 The list should include person, time of entry, and purpose of entry. This has
 proved critical in some court cases.
 There may be transient traces at the scene. These are traces that are progressively
 destroyed as time passes (smells, hot evidence, cold evidence). During the
 preservation stage of the crime scene operations, any transient traces should be
 documented and collected.
2.5 Preservation of Evidence.
 Outdoor Scenes: In outdoor crime scenes it is vital that traces are protected
 from the elements if they cannot be collected immediately. A tent or canopy may
 be required, as may sandbags in the event of rain.
 In general, there will be pressure on the investigator to release an outdoor crime
 scene for use by the public. For example, a main road can only be kept closed for
 a limited period. The investigator must be satisfied that crime scene processing is
 complete before a scene is reopened to the public.
2.6 Cadaver Management.
 A cadaver should not be touched and should be protected as with other traces. The
 corpse should not be covered with a blanket, because it can destroy relevant
 physical evidence and bring foreign irrelevant traces.
 In outdoor situations with poor weather the corpse can be protected by a plastic
 foil, or (better) a tent.
 A forensic pathologist must attend the scene. The investigator must liaise closely
 with the pathologist at each stage of the crime scene processing.
2.6 Cadaver Management.
 The exact position of the corpse must be noted.
 In agreement with the forensic pathologist, traces present on the cadaver should be
 collected immediately at the scene (after documentation of its position on the
 corpse!). This includes hairs and fibres, paint, soil, etc.
 The hands should be protected with paper bags, due to the high probability of
 contact between victim and suspect. If a rope has been used (suicide or murder), it
 must not be cut and the knot must not be untied. Clothing and jewellery should
 not be removed from the corpse at the scene.
3.1 Notetaking.
 Notetaking forces the investigators to commit their observations to writing. It
 enables them to keep a detailed record of everything they say and do.
 The crime scene setting, the layout and conversations that occur on the scene may
 seem trivial or obvious at the time, but are impossible to recall years later at a trial.
 The notes are the investigator's only chance to provide accurate information to the
 court.
3.1 Notetaking.
 Notes should:
  be taken in a chronological order,
  detail, step by step, each and every action the officer makes,
  detail observations made at the scene, moving from the general to the particular
  be written in a clear and legible fashion, and
  be as specific and accurate as possible.
3.1 Notetaking.
 At the maximum, two investigators should be present at the crime
 scene. The first one carries out the photography, search work etc and the second
 one takes the notes.
 With this approach, you work in tandem and you maximise the work.
 Unless the scene is very large, additional investigators lead to
 decreased efficiency and increased trampling of evidence.
3.1 Notetaking.
 Notes should include the following information :
 1. the date and time the crime was first reported to the police,
 2. the time of the first arrival on the scene by the investigator,
 3. the time of each step carried out during the crime scene processing,
 4. the time the crime scene investigation was concluded,
3.1 Notetaking.
 5. the location and a brief description of the area,
 6. the weather and the light conditions when performing the crime scene
 investigation,
 7. the location of each piece of evidence found with relevant information (name of
 the officer who recovered it, result of fingerprint search, etc.),
 8. the location of each picture taken during the investigation,
3.1 Notetaking.
 9. a brief description of the crime or event that led to the investigation,
 10. the name of the person who ordered the crime scene investigation
 11. the names of all officers, witnesses, investigators, and special personnel at the
 crime scene,
 12. the names of the persons who conducted the crime scene search, and who took
 the photographs, fingerprints, sketches, etc.,
3.1 Notetaking.
 13. a description of the primary crime scene (i.e. the location of the body and
 accompanying detailed description,
 14. all modifications which occurred (e.g. moved items, shut doors, etc.)
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
 One picture is worth a thousand words. The purposes of photographs are:
  they aid in refreshing the memories of witnesses and investigators,
  they show the relationship of items of evidence at the crime scene, and
 they help to convey the crime scene and the circumstances of the crime to the
 jury.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
 Photos should be taken moving from the general to the particular:
 1. location photographs, ie surrounding areas in each direction, other areas of
 interest in proximity to the primary scene, etc.,
 2. witness photographs, ie overall photos of the crime scene  they depict the scene
 as it would be observed by a witness. Long-range and intermediate-range
 photographs should be taken,
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
 3. close-up photographs, ie photographs of every trace located should be made
 prior to removing the item or changing it in any way (e.g. shoe prints, bloodstains,
 weapons, etc.). One shot without a scale, and then one with a scale should be
 taken.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
 Film or Digital? Digital images can be altered undetectably. This raises the
 possibility of fraudulent evidence being presented to the courts.
 The image processing tool that is especially of concern to the legal system is the
 Clone Tool of Photoshop, or equivalent tools in other software. This tool allows
 pieces of the image (backgrounds, textures, etc) to be pasted over other parts of the
 image.
 Concerns about the fraudulent use of digital images has led to challenges to the
 admissibility of evidence in courts in the U.S., and Australian police forces
 delayed the introduction of digital photography because of those challenges.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
3.2 Crime Scene Photography.
 Guidelines for Digital Photography: Guidelines have been introduced to combat
 the problems of digital alterations to photographs. These guidelines have been
 accepted by courts in the U.S. and in Australia. If the crime scene investigator
 adheres to the guidelines, digital photos will be admissible in court.
 The Australian guidelines are available on the NIFS (National Institute of Forensic
 Sciences) website.
3.3 Crime Scene Sketching.
 A crime scene sketch should be routinely made. Sketches and photographs
 complement each other. Sketches clarify the appearance of the crime scene and
 make the scene easier to comprehend.
3.3 Crime Scene Sketching.
 They help persons who were not present, such as prosecutors, courts and juries, to
 better understand what the scene looked like. Sketches offer a permanent record of
 the relationship of items at the scene to each other.
 Most sketches are plan views of the locality, the scene layout, etc. Elevation views
 may also be useful, depending on the scene. A sketch depicts the overall layout of
 the location more easily than can be accomplished by a single photograph.
 Sketches allow for selectivity.
 The sketch may be drawn purposely to leave out extraneous and confusing details
 that would be recorded in a photograph. Sketches combine the best features of
 photographs and crime scene notes.
3.3 Crime Scene Sketching.
3.3 Crime Scene Sketching.
 An existing map or blueprint may be used. Computer software (Computer-Aided
 Design CAD) is also available to render drawings of the crime scene in two and
 three dimensions. CAD programs have been used to, eg depict trajectories in
 shooting scenes.
3.4 Crime Scene Videos
 Video has the advantage of depicting the scene more graphically.
      The filming should begin outside an indoor crime scene or with an overall
       shoot of an outdoor location.
      The investigator should narrate the videotape and the narration should
       include the name of the speaker, time, location, case number, and other
       pertinent identifying information.
      The investigator should be selective, zooming in on critical areas and
       pieces of evidence after giving a wide picture of the crime scene as a
       whole.
3.4 Crime Scene Videos
 The crime scene video constitutes evidence. As such, it must be handled by the
 investigator using the same standards of care and documentation as other evidence.
 A digital video must be treated in the same way as digital photos, that is,
      the original must not be altered
      enhancements to a copy should be documented in enough detail to allow an
       expert to repeat the process
4.1 Searching the Crime Scene.
 The inspection should take a path other than the presumed way taken by the
 offender(s).
 Nothing should be moved initially unless absolutely necessary. If it becomes
 necessary to remove any object, its exact location should be noted.
 The basic rule of searching is to be systematic. The entire crime scene will be
 searched. Any trace that is found has its location marked (with, eg a number) and
 the searchers then move on with the search. Traces are not processed until the
 entire scene has been searched, excepting transient traces.
4.1 Searching the Crime Scene.
 The scope of the search is usually determined by a theory or hypothesis agreed on
 by the investigators, based on their initial observations on the scene. The
 investigators must keep in mind that their theory is provisional. If new evidence
 emerges that suggests a different sequence of events, they must be willing to
 reassess and modify their theory as new facts dictate.
 The method selected for the search of the crime scene is usually determined by the
 size, location and complexity of the scene.
 Practically speaking, it doesn't really matter which search method is selected, as
 long as the search is systematic, complete and does not destroy the evidence that is
 the subject of the search.
4.2 Searching the Crime Scene.
 The best places for locating traces are nearest to where the critical act occurred.
 Other areas related to the primary crime scene must not be overlooked, for
 example:
      the point of forced entry
      the route of escape
      the suspect (clothing, hands, body, hair. etc.)
      the location where a weapon is or may be located
4.2 Searching the Crime Scene.
    a vehicle that was used in the crime
    the suspects residence
    the location where the assault took place
    the location where a body was moved from
4.2 Search Materials.
 Providing an exhaustive list of materials used in a scene search is unrealistic
 because it depends on the resources of each police service. However, the baseline
 has to be that evidence can be located, secured and collected without
 contamination or loss.
 That implies that a lighting system will be required, as well as enhancement
 systems, collection tools and packaging.
4.2 Search Materials.
 Lighting system: different types of light are used at the crime scene:
      hand torch
      Polilight
      Crimelite
 The specialised forensic light sources have the advantage that they can provide
 defined wavelengths of light in a powerful beam. This can enhance contrast
 between evidence and background during a search.
4.2 Search Materials.
4.2 Search Materials.
4.2 Search Materials.
4.2 Search Materials.
 In addition to the lighting systems, many tools can be used in the
 search for traces:
      magnification system (eye glass, magnifying glass, etc)
      metal detectors
      vapour detectors (portable instruments or canines, especially in fire scenes)
      luminescent sprays for biological fluids, drugs, fingerprints explosives
       residues,
      markers (numbers, letters,..)
4.2 Search Materials.
4.3 Collection of traces.
 Materials required for the collection of evidence: All types of tools can help to
 collect traces:
 There is an absolute necessity to wear gloves at all times during the collection of
 traces. Current protocols require a change of gloves for each piece of evidence
 that is handled.
 Tweezers are the most important tool in the investigator's toolkit. They allow
 small items to be handled without destruction.
 Scalpels are useful for dry traces attached to a surface, eg blood stain on a floor.
4.3 Collection of traces.
 Packaging Choice: The packaging used will depend on:
      quickness of collection
      size and fragility of the evidence
      avoidance of contamination for the evidence type, especially DNA
      specialised requirements, eg airtight for arson samples
4.3 Collection of traces.
 What needs to be collected from the scene?
      Collecting everything is impossible and unnecessary, but
      leaving evidence behind is a catastrophe.
 A hypothesis and a systematic search will guide the decision on what to collect.
 Preservation of integrity:
 Avoid contact between collected traces and the crime scene. Do not store collected
 traces nearby while working on the scene.
4.4 Chain of Custody.
 The court will require proof that the evidence collected at the crime scene and that
 being presented in court is the same. To prove that the integrity of the evidence has
 been maintained, a chain of custody is maintained.
 This form shows who had contact with the evidence, at what time, under what
 circumstances, and what, if any, changes were made to the evidence.
4.4 Chain of Custody.
 Each item must be recorded on the chain of custody form as it is packaged:
      code of the sample,
      date and time of the packaging
      who was responsible for the packaging of the sample
 Each person who subsequently handles the package signs the form and adds
 details about the actions taken.