ADMJ 1100 Study Guide - Summer 2018, Comprehensive Midterm Notes - Forensic Science, Trace Evidence, Semen

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ADMJ 1100
MIDTERM EXAM
STUDY GUIDE
Fall 2018
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CSI
Chapter 1 Lecture Slides
Physical Evidence
Forensic Science: application of science to the law (notably within the context of the criminal
justice system
Criminalistics: branch of forensics, specialists trained in recording, identifying, and interpreting
physical evidence
Criminal Investigation: process of discovering, collecting, preparing, identifying, and presenting
evidence to determine what happened and who is responsible
- Reconstructive process that uses deductive reasoning (logical process in which a
conclusion follows from specific facts = reasoning backwards)
Alphonse Bertillon
- Founder of criminal identification
- Identification should be based on unchanging physical characteristics
- Anthropometry: method of identification (human body was measured in 11 places)
o Height, trunk, reach, left foot
Portrait Parle (speaking card): used for suspect identification with descriptions of the human
head and features
- Outgoth of Betillios sste
Edmond Locard
- Prior to the 19th century, witness testimony was favored over physical evidence
- Locad’s Echage Piciple: he thee is otat etee to ites, thee ill e
a ehage
o Criminal leaves trace evidence and takes away something from the crime scene
Types of Evidence
- Direct Evidence: evidence that proves a fact without the necessity of inference or a
presumption, and, when true, conclusively establishes that fact
o i.e. video, audio, and DNA
- Circumstantial Evidence: involves a series of facts that tends, through inference, to
prove a fact at issue
o Tends to incriminate a person (does not directly prove that the suspect
committed the crime)
o Set of circumstances from which an assumption can be made
i.e. indirect evidence, suspect interviews, and testimonial evidence
- Testimonial Evidence: oral or written evidence given by a lay person or expert witness
o A lay witness is a witness to the crime who is interviewed by police and picks the
suspect out of a line-up
o An expert witness is someone who testifies on matters within their field of
expertise
i.e. a doctor testifying about analysis of an x-ray
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o Can be direct or circumstantial evidence
- Physical Evidence: physical objects that are linked to the commission o a crime
o Must be recognized as potential evidence, collected in an appropriate manner,
and preserved properly
o Can be direct or circumstantial evidence
o Class Characteristics of Physical Evidence: physical qualities shared by a group of
like ites
Class-only types of evidence are those which cannot be linked to a single
source
May be shown to be like or consistent with a questioned source,
although not uniquely identifiable with that source
Criminal cases based solely on class evidence are more difficult to
prove and require more work
This evidence may be used to conclusively eliminate a suspected
source
i.e. threads used in a common jacket, chemical structure of a
batch of heroin, manufacturer of a firearm, ABO typing of a blood
sample
o Individual Characteristics of Physical Evidence: physical qualities that are unique
to an individual evidence item
Individualization: a pattern of class and individual characteristics
establishes the individuality of a specific object
Process usually involves the comparison of the questioned item to a
known item
i.e. a fingerprint, the striation marks on a fired bullet, the wear marks of a
used pair of shoes, the DNA code for a blood sample
Comparison Standards and Controls
- Questioned Item: an item with an unknown source that is to be compared with a known
source (usually collected from the crime scene, the victim, or the suspect)
- Known Source: evidence that originates from a known, acknowledged, or accounted for
source to be compared to the questioned evidence (gun recovered from suspect)
- Exemplar: type of known evidence collected from a known individual to be used for
comparison
The Comparison Process
When, Questioned item = Q and Known item = K
1. The class characteristics of Q do not agree with those of K
a. K is eliminated as the source of Q
2. The class characteristics of Q agree with those of K
a. If Q has only class characteristics, K may be the source of Q
3. The class characteristics of K and Q agree, but there is no agreement of individual
characteristics
a. K may not be the source of Q (inconsistent)
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Document Summary

Forensic science: application of science to the law (notably within the context of the criminal justice system. Criminalistics: branch of forensics, specialists trained in recording, identifying, and interpreting physical evidence. Criminal investigation: process of discovering, collecting, preparing, identifying, and presenting evidence to determine what happened and who is responsible. Reconstructive process that uses deductive reasoning (logical process in which a conclusion follows from specific facts = reasoning backwards) Anthropometry: method of identification (human body was measured in 11 places) Identification should be based on unchanging physical characteristics: height, trunk, reach, left foot. Portrait parle (speaking card): used for suspect identification with descriptions of the human head and features. Prior to the 19th century, witness testimony was favored over physical evidence. Loca(cid:396)d"s e(cid:454)cha(cid:374)ge p(cid:396)i(cid:374)ciple: (cid:862)(cid:449)he(cid:374) the(cid:396)e is (cid:272)o(cid:374)ta(cid:272)t (cid:271)et(cid:449)ee(cid:374) t(cid:449)o ite(cid:373)s, the(cid:396)e (cid:449)ill (cid:271)e a(cid:374) e(cid:454)(cid:272)ha(cid:374)ge(cid:863: criminal leaves trace evidence and takes away something from the crime scene.

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