Crime Scene Management Scene Specific Methods.
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newark :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
2016.
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Colección: | New York Academy of Sciences Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Introduction and Use of this Text
- List of Contributors
- About the Companion Website
- Part I Crime Scene Principles
- Chapter 1 The Crime Scene Context
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 What is a crime?
- 1.3 The nature of the UK legal system
- 1.4 The legal system in England and Wales
- 1.5 Other courts
- 1.6 The judicial system in Northern Ireland
- 1.7 The Scottish legal system
- 1.8 Judicial processes that deal with causes of death
- 1.9 What constitutes evidence?
- 1.10 The chain of events in evidence gathering
- 1.11 The relationship between evidence gatherers and analysts
- 1.12 Health and safety considerations
- Suggested further reading
- Chapter 2 First Officer Attending
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 Response to incident report
- 2.3 Personnel involved in the investigative process
- 2.4 Recording and recovery of scientific evidence
- 2.5 Initial considerations of the First Officer Attending (FOA)
- 2.6 Dealing with the victim
- 2.7 Dealing with witnesses
- 2.8 Dealing with suspects
- 2.9 Dealing with the crime scene(s)
- 2.10 Documentation
- 2.11 Dealing with violent crime
- 2.12 Summary and conclusion
- Chapter 3 The Role of the Crime Scene Investigator
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Training the CSI
- 3.3 The responsibilities of a CSI
- 3.4 Forensic evidence
- 3.5 Request for CSI attendance at crime scenes
- 3.6 Actions when attending the crime scene
- 3.7 Initial scene assessment (including health and safety considerations)
- 3.8 Planning evidence recovery
- 3.9 Recording the evidence
- 3.10 The elimination process
- 3.11 Details of evidence recovered
- 3.12 Integrity, continuity and contamination
- 3.13 Packaging materials
- 3.14 Conclusion
- Part II Evidence-gathering Techniques
- Chapter 4 Police Photography, Video Recording, 3D Laser Scanning
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 General guidelines
- 4.3 Equipment
- 4.4 Exposure
- 4.5 Image quality/size
- 4.6 Depth of field
- 4.7 White balance
- 4.8 Image data
- 4.9 Flash photography
- 4.10 Room interiors
- 4.11 Vehicles
- 4.12 Evidential items
- 4.13 Recording injuries to the person
- 4.14 Night photography
- 4.15 Footwear impressions
- 4.16 Fingerprints
- 4.17 Recording video evidence at crime scenes
- 4.18 The use of digital images in court
- 4.19 3D laser scanning of scenes
- Suggested further reading
- Chapter 5 Fingerprints
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 The nature of friction ridge skin
- 5.3 The structure of friction ridge skin
- 5.4 Friction ridge growth
- 5.5 Principles of friction ridge identification
- 5.6 Comparison methodology
- 5.7 Chemical composition of latent prints
- 5.8 Identification of common locations for prints
- 5.9 The use of powdering techniques to enhance latent finger marks
- 5.10 Chemical development techniques
- 5.11 Laboratory and scene applications
- 5.12 Fingerprints in bodily fluids