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The%20Enforcement%20Function

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Title: The%20Enforcement%20Function


1
The Enforcement Function
  • Week Four/Five

2
Officer Safety
  • Momentarily Dangerous
  • Limited reaction time
  • Generally, limited to resources at hand
  • Basic skills are the most important
  • Skills are perishable

3
Basic Skills are Critical
  • Momentarily Dangerous
  • Limited reaction time
  • Generally, limited to resources at hand
  • Basic skills are the most important
  • Skills are perishable

4
Limited Resoucrs
  • Momentarily Dangerous
  • Limited reaction time
  • Generally, limited to resources at hand
  • Basic skills are the most important
  • Skills are perishable

5
Skills are Perishable
6
Deployment
  • Beats are an area
  • Deployment is number of officers assigned to area
    during a specific time.

7
Methods of Deployment
  • Intuitive
  • Workload
  • Calls for Service
  • Crimes
  • Traffic Accidents

8
Queuing Theory
  • Acceptable levels of service
  • 7 Minutes, 40

9
Police Discretion
  • B. Should I intervene
  • C. If I intervene, what do I do?

10
Bob the Drunk
11
Street level versus screen level
12
Criminal Investigations
  • All evidence is either is witness testimony.
  • Therefore, investigations rely on good witnesses.
  • Investigators are attempting to locate evidence
  • that a crime occurred (Corpus Delicti)
  • on the method used by the offender (Modus
    Operandi)
  • Link the offender to the victim
  • Link a person (victim, witness and offender) to a
    crime scene
  • Supports or disproves a statement
  • Identifies an individual

13
Forensics
  • A BROAD term, defined as the science and practice
    of examining physical evidence and applying the
    physical properties of that evidence to the
    resolution of legal issues, particularly
    identifying the commission, natures, and
    perpetrators of crimes.

14
Forensics
  • The word forensic comes from the Latin "forensis"
    - which means to debate. The word forensic then
    came to mean anything associated with a court
    proceeding, (since a lot of debate happens
    there). Forensic in front of any other discipline
    means the application of that discipline to a
    legal proceeding. Forensic science is the
    application of science to some court proceeding.

15
Criminalistics
  • One branch of forensic science that deals with
    the study of evidence of a crime

16
SO
  • Forensics is the presentation of scientific
    evidence
  • during a legal proceeding whereas criminalistics
    is
  • the study of the evidence of a crime.
  • Or
  • Forensics would be the receiving evidence and
  • giving an un bias conclusion of your findings.
  • Where i see criminalistics as being the use of
    these
  • findings with the combination of other evidence
    to
  • put together a case.

17
  • Forensic Psychologists and Psychiatrists
  • Forensic psychologists or psychiatrists may be
    called on to evaluate a murder scene to suggest a
    possible psychological profile of the killer.
    The FBI has done much work in developing such
    profiles of serial killers and will often send
    one of its experts to assist the local police.
  • Fingerprint Experts
  • Dactyloscopy, the scientific study of
    fingerprints, was first developed nearly a
    hundred years ago to identify convicts. When law
    enforcers realized that fingerprints are also
    left behind on all manner of surfaces, the use
    was extended to catching criminals as well. With
    some recent additions to the original bag of
    tricks, dactyloscopy is still an important weapon
    in the crime stopper's arsenal.

18
  • Crime Scene Photographers
  • A crime scene must be photographed from every
    angle to clearly show every detail, with emphasis
    on accurately recording the size and distance of
    objects. The crime scene photographer, whose work
    often involves the use of specialized cameras and
    film, may also be trained in fingerprint lifting
    and analysis, and may be called the
    Identification Officer or Identification
    Technician.
  • Forensic Pathologists
  • Forensic pathologists, employed by the office of
    the medical examiner, determine the time and
    cause of death in cases of suspected homicide or
    suicide. The medical examiner's office is also
    often responsible for local public health issues
    such as investigating suspected cases of plague
    or other highly dangerous infectious diseases.

19
  • Forensic Serologists
  • Forensic serology is the study of blood groups,
    blood, and other bodily fluids for identification
    purposes following a crime. Forensic serologists
    are also on the forefront of the new techniques
    of DNA fingerprinting, which offer the
    possibility of positive identification of an
    individual by any available body cells.
  • Forensic Dentists and Odontologists
  • Forensic dentists or odontologists examine the
    teeth of corpses for identification purposes or
    make casts of human bite marks in foods -
    sometimes in people - to match the bite with the
    biter.

20
  • Ballistics Experts
  • From the Roman ballista, a sort of heavy-duty
    slingshot, ballistics began as the study of the
    flight paths of projectiles. By extension,
    ballistics experts are now experts in the study
    of everything to do with firearms.
  • Forensic Chemists
  • Forensic chemists specialize in analyzing such
    things as tiny chips of paint to determine the
    color and manufacturer, as well as determining
    the identity of minuscule amounts of drugs, dyes,
    and other chemicals and random unidentified
    particles.
  • Forensic Geologists
  • Forensic geologists can determine such things as
    where the suspect or victim walked by examining
    soil samples taken from their shoes or feet.

21
  • Forensic Entomologists
  • Forensic entomologists are specialists in the
    study of insects.
  • Forensic Anthropologists
  • Forensic anthropologists can, from examining a
    pile of bones, supply a surprising amount of
    detail about what the person looked like.
  • Forensic Artists
  • Forensic artists can draw a likeness of a person
    based solely on eyewitness descriptions.
  • Forensic Sculptors
  • Their training and expertise is as important as
    that of the forensic specialists. Forensic
    sculptors can reconstruct faces, usually in
    modeling clay or on a computer.
  • Forensic Linguists
  • Forensic linguists analyze the content of written
    or aural communication to identify who is
    speaking and indicate the speaker's intent, and
    can determine whether two communications are from
    the same person.
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