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Fingerprint Analysis

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Title: Fingerprint Analysis


1
Fingerprint Analysis
  • (Famous Cases)

2
Fingerprint Analysis
  • Forensic investigators have been using
    fingerprint evidence as a source of
    identification of suspects for over a hundred
    years.

3
Fingerprint Analysis Ā 
  • Early work was by visual analysis of very obvious
    prints left at the scene of a crime

4
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Modern forensic scientists now have a range of
    techniques for finding prints, cleaning up and
    enhancing print images, and rapidly finding a
    match from a database using computer technology.
    Ā 

5
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Fingerprint evidence is seen as one of the best
    types of physical evidence linking a suspect to
    an object or location or for establishing
    identity.

6
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Therefore, the forensic investigator will always
    search for fingerprint evidence at the scene of a
    crime and at related locations, such as a
    suspect's home or car.

7
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • A fingerprint is the pattern of ridges and
    related characteristics found on the finger pads,
    the fleshy parts of the fingers used for touching
    and gripping.

8
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Each person's fingerprints are unique and stay
    unchanged throughout life.

9
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • According to Sir Francis Galton, the
    nineteenth-century English anthropologist, the
    chances of two fingerprints being identical are
    as small as 64 billion to one.

10
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • In over a century of forensic fingerprinting, no
    two prints have ever been found to be the same,
    even those of identical twins.

11
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Skin is never completely dry or clean grime,
    oil, and sweat on the finger pads create
    fingerprints whenever a person touches something.

12
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • That is why criminals, unless they are wearing
    gloves, leave fingerprints behind.

13
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • If their hands are bloodstained, then they will
    leave bloody fingerprints behind, an example of a
    patent (visible) print.

14
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Plastic prints are fingerprint impressions made
    in a soft material like soap or dust.

15
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Latent fingerprints are invisible, but the
    forensic scientist can visualize them though
    special lighting or with the application of
    chemicals.

16
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Fingerprints have been recovered from all kinds
    of surfaces, even plastic bags.

17
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • It would be very useful to be able to reliably
    detect fingerprints on human skin.
  • So far, this been very difficult to do if more
    than two hours have elapsed from the time the
    fingerprints were made.

18
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • Potential methods are being developed to recover
    fingerprints after longer time periods have
    elapsed.

19
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • A fingerprint found at the scene of a crime can
    be dusted with chemicals to make it easier to see
    and then lifted or photographed.

20
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • It is then compared with the fingerprints of
    known offenders stored in a computer database.

21
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • In the past fingerprints were classified
    according to the specific features that make up
    the unique pattern of each print.

22
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • With computerized storage and retrieval systems,
    however, classification is not really necessary
    as the computer can readily scan and match the
    whole pattern of thousands of prints.

23
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • The image of fingerprints found at the scene of a
    crime can readily be enhanced and clarified with
    scanning and digitizing technology.

24
Ā Fingerprint Analysis
  • This means that even partial prints can be of
    value in identifying someone at the scene of a
    crime.

25
Ā Famous Case 1
  • In 1892 Francesca Rojas, an Argentine woman,
    became the first person ever to be convicted on
    fingerprint evidence.

26
Ā Famous Case 1
  • When her two young children were found beaten to
    death, she tried to blame a man called Velasquez
    who vigorously denied the charge and, in any
    case, had a firm alibi.

27
Ā Famous Case 1
  • Investigator Juan Vucetich, who was intrigued by
    the relatively new technique of fingerprint
    analysis, found a bloody fingerprint on a bedroom
    door in Rojas' house.

28
Ā Famous Case 1
  • He sawed the portion away and then had the woman
    give an ink-print of her thumb.

29
Ā Famous Case 1
  • Even with only a basic understanding of
    fingerprint analysis, it was obvious to the
    investigators that the bloody print belonged to
    Rojas.

30
Ā Famous Case 1
  • She confessed to the crime when confronted, and
    admitted that she committed the murders to
    improve her chances of marrying her boyfriend,
    who was known to dislike children.

31
Famous Case 1
  • Rojas was sentenced to life imprisonment.

32
Famous Case 2
  • The brutal murder in 1905 of Thomas Farrow,
    manager of a shop in Deptford, near London, and
    his wife Ann was to become a milestone case in
    the use of fingerprint analysis in Britain.

33
Famous Case 2
  • Money had been taken and a thumbprint was found
    on the cash box.

34
Famous Case 2
  • The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) had
    already built up a file of fingerprints of known
    criminals, but this print did not match any of
    them.

35
Famous Case 2
  • A witness led the investigators to two brothers
    called Albert and Alfred Stratton.

36
Famous Case 2
  • A match was found between one of the men and the
    print found at the scene.

37
Famous Case 2
  • The court battle over the evidence was, however,
    lengthy.
  • Much hung in the balance as it was the first time
    fingerprint evidence had been used in a murder
    case in Britain.

38
Famous Case 2
  • After two hours of deliberation, however, the
    jury found the two men guilty and they were later
    hanged.

39
Famous Case 3
  • In 1910, Thomas Jennings was arrested on
    suspicion of the murder of Clarence Hiller in
    Chicago.

40
Famous Case 3
  • The main evidence against him was fingerprints,
    and four experts testified at his trial.

41
Famous Case 3
  • However, fingerprint evidence was still
    relatively new and Jennings brought an appeal
    questioning its admissibility.

42
Famous Case 3
  • In a landmark judgment, the Illinois Supreme
    Court upheld the conviction, saying that
    fingerprints were indeed a reliable form of
    identification.

43
Famous Case 3
  • Jennings was sentenced to death and executed on
    February 16, 1912.
  • He was the first person in the United States to
    be convicted of murder on fingerprint evidence.

44
Famous Case 4
  • Fingerprint analysis also played a role in
    convicting the man responsible for an audacious
    theft.

45
Famous Case 4
  • On August 21, 1911, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa
    was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris.

46
Famous Case 4
  • There was a clear fingerprint on the glass that
    had protected the painting.

47
Famous Case 4
  • Fingerprint pioneer Alphonse Bertillon spent many
    months trying to match the print to samples in
    his collection but to no avail.

48
Famous Case 4
  • Two years after the theft, police arrested
    Vicenzo Perugia in connection with the crime.
  • His prints matched those from the crime scene.

49
Famous Case 4
  • Ironically, Perugia's thumbprint had been in
    Bertillon's collection all the time, but it was
    of his right thumb.
  • The one left on the glass in the Louvre was from
    his left thumb.

50
Fingerprint Analysis
  • Criminals soon realized that fingerprints could
    be used to convict them and took evasive measures.

51
Famous Case 5
  • Some used gloves but others, like John Dillinger,
    a gangster who terrorized the Chicago area in the
    1930s, went further.

52
Famous Case 5
  • While on the run from authorities, he had a
    plastic surgeon burn off the outer layer of his
    fingertips with acid, in the belief that this
    would erase his fingerprints for good.

53
Famous Case 5
  • A tip off put the FBI on Dillinger's trail, they
    confronted him and shot him dead.

54
Famous Case 5
  • In the morgue, they discovered Dillinger's
    attempts to burn away his this fingerprints.
  • He had not succeeded.

55
Famous Case 5
  • Fingerprints usually grow back and, in any case,
    go down through several layers of skin.

56
Fingerprint Analysis
  • Early fingerprint investigators had a tough job
    sorting manually through print records.
  • Today, matching is accomplished with the aid of
    high-speed computers.

57
Fingerprint Analysis
  • The FBI began to automate print analysis in the
    1960s with AFIS, the Automated Fingerprint
    Identification System.

58
Fingerprint Analysis
  • The AFIS computer scans and digitally encodes
    fingerprint records into a database.

59
Fingerprint Analysis
  • It can match a sample, either a ten-print set or
    a single or partial print, by searching the
    database.
  • Early versions of AFIS searched hundreds to
    thousands of prints a second now the speed is up
    to 500,000 prints per second.

60
Famous Case 6
  • One notable success for AFIS was catching Richard
    Ramirez, a notorious killer known as the Night
    Stalker.

61
Famous Case 6
  • He had committed a number of brutal rapes and
    murders throughout Southern California between
    1984 and 1985, entering victims' homes at night
    and cutting the phone line.

62
Famous Case 6
  • He would shoot any men present before raping
    their spouse, often in the same bed where the
    corpse was.

63
Famous Case 6
  • His final crime involved a couple in Mission
    Viejo, where he shot the man and raped the wife.

64
Famous Case 6
  • Fortunately, both survived and the woman saw
    Ramirez' car, while another witness got the
    number of the vehicle.
  • The stolen car was found abandoned and a partial
    fingerprint was recovered from the vehicle.

65
Famous Case 6
  • The Los Angeles Police Department had just begun
    to use an AFIS system that could compare more
    than 60,000 prints per second and they found a
    match for the print in the car within minutes.

66
Famous Case 6
  • A photo of Ramirez, a 25-year-old drifter from El
    Paso, went out in the papers and he was
    recognized within a day by residents in east Los
    Angeles, who overpowered him when he tried to
    steal another car.

67
Famous Case 6
  • He was convicted by a jury and, on November 7,
    1989, was given 19 death sentences.

68
Famous Case 7
  • Palm prints contain even more detail on them than
    fingerprints, and helped solve the kidnap and
    murder of 12-year-old Polly Klaas in 1993.

69
Famous Case 7
  • The girl was enjoying a pajama party with friends
    at her home in Petaluma, California, when a man
    appeared through an open window with a knife and
    carried her off.

70
Famous Case 7
  • The FBI used special light sources and
    fluorescent powder to locate an otherwise
    invisible palm print on a bunk bed.
  • They also had a description of the intruder from
    the other girls.

71
Famous Case 7
  • Torn children's clothing was found a few weeks
    later near a site where a man's car had rolled
    into a ditch.
  • That man was Richard Allen Davis, who had two
    previous convictions for kidnapping.

72
Famous Case 7
  • A fingerprint expert was able to match the FBI's
    palm print found at the scene of the crime to
    Davis, who then confessed and showed police where
    Klaas' body was.

73
Famous Case 7
  • He was sentenced to death in 1996 for kidnapping
    and murder.
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