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Runaway Jury

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The application of a broad range of sciences to answer legal questions. Used for both criminal and civil cases. Usually referred to as simply forensics' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Runaway Jury


1
Runaway Jury
  • How TV crime dramas effect American court rooms

2
Outline
  • Breakdown of the different fields and sensors
    used in forensics
  • TV versus Real Life
  • Case Study CSI Crime Scene Investigation
  • Effects of TV on the Court Room

3
Forensic Science
  • The application of a broad range of sciences to
    answer legal questions
  • Used for both criminal and civil cases
  • Usually referred to as simply forensics
  • Dates back to Aristotle

4
Forensic Psychiatry
  • A sub specialty of psychiatry that focuses on the
    legal aspects of the profession
  • Two major areas of criminal evaluation
  • Competency to stand trial
  • Mental state at time of offense
  • Not guilty by reason of insanity
  • in this case insanity is a legal and not a
    medical term

5
Trace Evidence
  • Evidence found at a crime scene in small but
    measurable amounts
  • Hairs
  • Fibers
  • Gunshot residue
  • Arson accelerants
  • Botanical materials

6
Trace Evidence Sensors
  • Compound polarized light microscope most
    commonly used
  • Scanning electron microscope
  • Gas chromatography
  • Mass spectrometry
  • Infrared spectroscopy

7
Fingerprints
  • Imprint made by the pattern of ridges on the pad
    of the human finger
  • No two fingerprints are exactly the same
  • Dactyloscopy is the science of comparing
    fingerprints
  • Three basic patterns arch, loop, and whorl

8
Fingerprint Sensors
  • Dusting power and brush
  • Magnifying glass
  • Computer image enhancement

9
Forensic Engineering
  • Investigation of materials, products, structures,
    or components that fail or do not operate as
    intended
  • Much more common in civil cases than criminal
  • Locate cause of problem for improvement
  • Insurance companies for liabilities

10
Forensic Engineering Sensors
  • Optical and Scanning electron microscopes
  • Spectroscopy
  • Simple hand lens

11
Forensic Chemistry
  • Application of chemistry principles to law
    enforcement
  • Explosives
  • Poisons
  • Controlled substances
  • Weight
  • Positive identification of substance

12
Forensic Chemistry Sensors
  • Gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer
  • Traveling time
  • Ion presence
  • Fourier Transform infrared spectrophotometer
  • Drug fingerprint

13
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis
  • Combines biology, chemistry, math, and physics to
    produce strong and solid evidence
  • Can be used to determine several characteristics
    of the crime committed
  • Variety of blood pattern categories

14
Bloodstain Pattern Categories
  • Passive bloodstains, force gravity
  • Passive drop, gravity alone
  • Drip pattern, blood dripping into blood
  • Flow pattern, change in flow due to gravity or
    movement of an object

15
Bloodstain Pattern Categories
  • Projected bloodstains, force energy transfer
  • Low, Medium, High Velocity Impact Spatter
  • Cast-Off
  • Gushing
  • Back Spatter
  • Expiratory Blood

16
Bloodstain Pattern Categories
  • Transfer/contact bloodstains, force
    touch
  • Wipe, object moves through existing stain
    altering its appearance
  • Swipe, transfer from moving source and the
    direction of travel may be determined by the
    feathered edge

17
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis
  • Can be used to determine
  • Mechanism that created the stain
  • Direction of travel
  • Area of origin
  • Basic type of object used
  • Minimum number of blows
  • Positioning of victim, suspect, and objects
  • Sequence of events

18
Bloodstain Pattern Sensors
  • Center around principles of physics
  • Determine
  • Angle of impact (software)
  • Point of convergence (2D)
  • Area of convergence (2D)
  • Area of origin (3D)
  • Generally collected using photography

19
DNA
  • Sometimes called the genetic fingerprint
  • Inherited from both parents, so biological
    connections can be confirmed
  • 1986 - First used to convict an criminal of
    murder in England

20
DNA and Sensors
  • Computerized databases
  • Ultraviolet scanners
  • Microarray scanner

21
OJ Simpson and DNA
  • Simpson was not the only thing on trial
  • It was also the most public trial of DNA
    fingerprinting
  • Most jurors actually did not consider the DNA
    results when reaching their verdict
  • Prosecution used two different labs with eight
    markers being tested

22
Forensic Anthropology
  • Applying physical anthropology and the study of
    the human skeleton in a legal setting
  • Usually applies to criminal cases when the
    remains are skeletonized or unrecognizable due to
    decomposition, burning, or mutilation
  • Cannot legally determine the cause of death but
    help identify the victim

23
Forensic Anthropology Sensors
  • Measurement instruments
  • Microscopes
  • X-rays

24
Forensic Facial Reconstruction
  • Process of recreating the face of an unidentified
    individual from skeletal remains through
    artistry, anthropology, and anatomy
  • Does not meet the Daubert Standard
  • Only used to reach a positive identification for
    the remains

25
Forensic Facial Reconstruction
  • Two-dimensional reconstructions
  • Portrait drawings based on radiographs, ante
    mortem photographs, and the skull
  • FACE and CARES computer software can now produce
    facial approximations quickly and can be edited
    easily
  • Three-dimensional reconstructions
  • Casts of remains and modeling clay
  • Can be enhanced with computer imaging

26
Forensic Facial Reconstruction
27
Information Forensics
  • Investigation into systemic processes that
    produce information
  • Tends to focus on business, technology, and
    legacy systems
  • Fraud
  • Abuse
  • Mistakes
  • Sabotage

28
Information Forensics
  • Bioinformatics
  • Cryptography
  • Musicology
  • Trace
  • Major Specialty area Forensic Accounting

29
Forensic Entomology
  • Appling the study of insects and arthropods to
    legal issues
  • Arthropod involvement in various crimes including
  • Murder/Suicide
  • Rape
  • Physical abuse
  • Contraband trafficking

30
Forensic Entomology
  • Most insects involved in criminal investigations
    are necrophagous
  • Four primary insect orders
  • Diptera first on the scene
  • Coleoptera
  • Acari
  • Hymenoptera last, normally eat insects eating
    the corpse

31
Forensic Entomology Sensors
  • Dissection microscope
  • Electron light microscope
  • Variety of Lenses and chemicals

32
Case Study CSI
  • One of the most watched shows in television
    history
  • Has several spin off shows all of which are
    usually in the top spot in their time slot
  • Different from other crime dramas such as Law and
    Order because it follows the story more through
    forensics than it follows people and the court
    proceedings

33
Case Study CSI
  • Benefits produced by CSI
  • Increased or even created public interest in
    forensic science
  • Majors relating to forensics are some of the
    fastest growing in the nation
  • Some institutions have even added forensic depts
  • Improved understanding of the importance of
    science in our every day lives

34
Case Study CSI
  • Problems created by the program
  • However, several myths have been created and
    reinforced through the popularity of the show
  • Myths range from the actual responsibilities of
    the criminalists to the speed at which results
    can be produced
  • Influencing real court rooms in whats termed
    The CSI Effect

35
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 1 Laboratory Personnel can examine
    evidence as soon as it gets to the lab
  • Usually takes months before time permits an
    examination of the evidence due to back logs and
    quality control procedures
  • Only exception are high priority cases

36
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 2 One person can examine all types of
    evidence
  • There are no generalists in todays forensics
  • The expertise required for each section of
    forensics sometimes requires one piece of
    evidence to be examined by more than one
    individual

37
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 3 Fingerprints susceptible to testing and
    identification are always found
  • Finding identifiable fingerprints that can be
    collected and are of a high enough quality to do
    an automated search are rare
  • Normally fingerprint comparison must be done by
    hand

38
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 4 Testing for drugs and chemicals in blood
    is quick and easy
  • Numerous drugs, botanicals, chemicals that can be
    presented at any given crime scene
  • Numerous instruments to identify these various
    compounds
  • Process often takes weeks or months to complete

39
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 5 The cooperative crime scene
  • The perfect evidence is rarely there
  • Technology has greatly improved evidence
    collection but no technological advancements can
    find nonexistent evidence
  • Time between occurrence and discovery of the
    crime is the biggest factor

40
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 6 The fully equipped crime lab
  • TV forensic labs are always fully equipped with
    the most up to date technology
  • Even the labs with the largest budgets cannot
    afford to have the same lab quality as the labs
    on TV dramas
  • Shortages occur with building space, funds,
    equipment and proficient personnel

41
Case Study CSI
  • Myth 7 Use and availability of some sensors
  • Some of the sensors used are actually prototypes
    still in the developmental stages and are not on
    the market yet
  • The accuracy and power of some sensors has been
    enhanced beyond what they are currently capable
    of detecting

42
CSI and the Courtroom
  • Experts have noticed the rise of the CSI Effect
    in courtrooms
  • Trend in which TV shows increase the expectations
    of victims and jury members concerning forensic
    evidence and the level of crime scene
    investigation
  • Trials are being presented differently at trial

43
CSI and the Courtroom
  • From the criminals perspective
  • Increase in crime scenes where the evidence has
    been tampered with or completely destroyed
  • Burning scenes
  • Using bleach
  • Vacuuming carpet and removing the vacuum cleaner

44
CSI and the Courtroom
  • Criminal Perspective Case Study
  • Murder Case in Trumbull County, OH
  • Mother and daughter murdered
  • Used bleach to wash hands
  • Covered car interior with blankets preventing
    transfer
  • Burned bodies, clothes, and other potential
    evidence
  • Attempted to sink remaining evidence in a lake

45
CSI and the Courtroom
  • Juror perspective
  • Expect to see solid physical evidence indicating
    the defendant
  • Likely to ignore circumstantial evidence
  • Always assume DNA evidence should be found at the
    scene
  • If physical evidence is found, it is now much
    less likely to be questioned by jurors

46
CSI and the Courtroom
  • Juror Perspective Case Study
  • Robert Blake Case
  • Quote from juror I would have liked more of the
    kind of evidence I have seen in the cases on
    CSI, I just expected more
  • Dismissed circumstantial evidence
  • More often than not, there is little physical
    evidence linking defendant directly to the crime
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