HOSA Study Sheet
HOSA Study Sheet
HOSA Study Sheet
Current Progress;
Ready to go = 8/8
Need RW = 0/8
1st Study = 0/8
Wednesday:
Thursday:
Friday:
-rw docs II
Question Tendency:
- General understanding
- Situation -> name
- Name -> situation
- Specific/important concepts (:dissimulation in Forensic Psychology and Psychiatry)
- Title concepts (:forensic anthropologists in Forensic Anthropology)
- Classifications of Death
- Traumatic Deaths:
- Mechanical: force > tension of skin
- Sharp Force = incised (bleed to death)
- Blunt Force = lacerations (brain very damaged)
- Non-firearm: car collisions
- Drowning from blood in lungs
- Contusion: lots of blood outside vessels
- Hematoma: contusion + more blood
- Firearm (high or low velocity):
- penetrating (entrance, no exit) vs perforating (entrance,
exit)
- Distance of barrel to victim:
- Skin: laceration
- Gas blacken skin
- Carbon monoxide -> bright red
- Opps: barrel to skin increase
- Electrical:
- Low voltage -> ventricular fibrillation
- High voltage -> defibrillation: tetany
- Poration -> loss of limbs
- Classify Drugs & Poisons (roles: pharmacokinetics (ADME, how drug moves in body))
- Schedule 1 : high abuse, no medical (heroid, lsd)
- Schedule 2 : high abuse, medical (morphine, cocaine)
- Schedule 3 : low abuse (anabolic steroids)
- Schedule 4&5 : decrease risk (OTC)
- Non-medicinal
- Alcohol
- Law: explicit about blood alcohol levels
- GC
- > 350mg = death
- Cyanide
- Interrupts electron transport chain in mitochondria
- Quick death
- >2500ng/ml = death
- Carbon Monoxide
- converted-Heat form
- Binds hemoglobin tightly, no oxygen transport
- >60% = death
- Hydrocarbons
- Identification of drugs
- Botanical Examinations: physical char. -> natural drugs
- Most common in lab
- Marijuana
- Cystolithic hairs
- Duquenois-Levine test (color test for THC)
- hashish
- Peyote: cactus
- Mescaline
- Button, 1inch
- Mushrooms
- Opium
Forensic Anthropology
- Define F.A and job
- :applying theory & methods of anthro to forensics (most are specialized in
physical anthropology)
- Biological profile:
- Taphonomic assessment: assessment of the body’s condition in relation
to the environment in which it was found
-
- info about postmortem period (after death)
- Perimortem period: searching trauma evi. @ time of death
- Forensic taphonomy: outdoor death scene & postmortem process
- Forensic archaeology : recovery of scattered/buried
- Job:
- Consultants to medical examiners, coroners, law enforcement
- 1977: ABFA (american board of forensic anthropology): examine &
certify at postdoctoral level
- Osteology: bones
- Odontology: teeth (for forensic)
- Taphonomic Assessment:
- Taphonomic context = body condition by examine enviro around body
- Interpret condition of remains
- Postmortem (range)
- Location of death (here or not here)
- Chain of custody
- Taphonomic assessment
- Biological profile
- Identification characteristics and interpretation
- Description of trauma
- Expert witness, follow scientific neutrality
- Notable names
- Victor Bathahazard: Advanced finger, firearm, and hair analysis at the time
- Developed a probability model that showed that fingerprints were unique
- photographic method (for bullet guns & firearms)
- Alphonse Bertillon
- Anthromotery (bertillonage)
- 11 measurements, identify on card
- Replaced by fingerprinting
- 1st method to identify suspects/criminals
- Hans gross
- First forensic tb
- Edmond Locard
- Locard’s exchange principle
- Mathieu Orfila
- Toxicology
- Sherlock
- Public image
- Modern practice
- Scientific method (empirical evidence, data -> hypothesis)
- Adversarial system: arguing, opp of s.method
- Forensics: gives data, evidence, possible results (justified explanations)
- Contrite fallibilism: humility to not knowing
- Public Lab
- Private Lab
- accreditation; proof of pro or industrial standard
- Certification; scientist award
- Legal proceedings
- Civil
- Criminal
- Prosecution (files charges)
- Defendant (accused)
- Trier of fact (jury or judge)
- Grand jury (special, evidence allows further action)
- punishments
- Felonies
- Misdemeanors
- Subpoena
- Voire dire (state qualifications)
- Direct examinations: tell how to use evidence (q & a, descriptive)
- cross-examine
- Ethics
- AAFS: code of ethics
- Honesty, complete report of work
- Prosecutorial bias
- Frye standard: new methods are ok, large proportion of prof. Accept
- -> general acceptance
- Limits: ruling harder to define, restrictive of science innovation
- -> Federal Rules of Evidence: witness (qual, expert) if helps jury/judge better understand
- No state how witness is qualified?
Daubert Standard
- Judge responsible (gatekeeping)
- Daubert hearings (decisions made)
- Daubert trilogy: daubert case, joiner case (data -> daubert Criteria, relevance test),
kumho tire case (all relevant experts)
Legal classification:
- Inculpatory evidence: establishes guilt (favorable to either prosecution of defendant)
- Exculpatory evidence: excludes, exonerates
- Direct evidence: (e.g eye-witness)
- Circumstantial evidence: (e.g dna test from blood in crime scene)
- Reconstruction evidence: events before, during, after crime
- Associative evidence: associate/disassociate suspect (Any evidence that can link a
person to the scene) (e.g fingerprints, blood and bodily fluids, weapons, hair, fibers)
Suspect classification:
- Class characteristic
- Individual characteristic
Scientific Groupings:
- Biological Evidence
- Chemical Evidence
- Trace evidence
- Questioned documents (handwriting)
- Impression evidence
- Fingerprint evidence
- Firearm and tool mark evidence (fired bullets, cartridge casings, shells)
Forensic Entomology
- :study of insects
- Medico-legal ent. : insects with body (human/animal) in legal context
- F. path (rigor, algor, livor mortis): 24-48 hrs
- Ento works even with more time passed
- Insects colonize immediately
- Rate of development + species dynamics -> minimum time/avg rate of
development
- Uses of Methods
- Time estimate: linear relationship (time vs development data); oldest
insect stage, meteorological conditions, microclimatic (temp/weather of
region) -> how long insects feeding -> how long victim died
- Less than actual time of death
- Min or avg development rates
- Unknown factors: body -> wrapped -> buried -> killed
during winter (delayed)
- Moved body (primary, secondary scene)
- When moved, body will bring insects from original site (urban ->
forest)
- # of days at death scene; # at dump scene
- Time interval for disturbance
- Wound location: no wound -> natural orifices (adult skin too tough); oldest
maggots wound -> wound area (maggot aging)
- Linking Suspect: locard’s principle
- Drug Use (entomotoxicology): qualitative; limits when quantifying -> tests
of insects (impact development
- DNA Identify: the species; human DNA from insect feeding on victim
- Abuse: unhealed wound/bed sore/drying tissue/poor personal hygiene ->
insects (myiasis: larva infect) -> length of time neglected
No insects on body: too early in year, too cold for insects, body at scene for short time
Downsides: temperature (exact is unknown), season (spring, summer and fall), no insects
- Interpretation
- Target surface: (smooth: no-little spatter (tile); rough: create significant spatter
(wood)
- Directionality:
- Narrow end of elongated bloodstain = direction of travel
- Area of convergence (2d, area: string method)
- Area of origin: (3d, location: angles, string method)
- @ 90 degrees (circular); <90 elliptical
- w/l < 1 (arc sine of impact angle)
- Circular = 1; impact angle 90
- Spatter:
- Quantity of blood, force of impact, texture of surface impacted
- Secondary Mechanism (satellite spatter)
- :when striked rough surface
- Blood drop volume
- Freshness
- Surface texture
- Distance of vertical to impact
- Drip patterns (horizontal surface)
- Splashed bloodstain pattern
- Impact Mechanism (gunshot, beating/stabbing, power tools)
- Misting: minute spatters < 0.1mm (wide range)
- Can occur by: gun, explosions, high-speed machinery, and
high-speed automobile collisions
- Back spatter (entrance wound)
- Forward spatter (entrance wound < exit wound)
- Beating/Stabbing
- 1-3mm in diameter
- Exposed blood exist prior (bloodied area no need to
receive impact)
- Sharp or blunt, # of blows
- Not always possible to distinguish
- Projection Mechanism (cast-off, arterial, expirated)
- Castoff blood patterns: blows to same wound area (blood
accumulation)
- Projected bloodstain patterns occur when blood is
projected or released as the result of force exceeding that
of gravity
- Exhibits numerous spine-like projections with
narrow streaking
- Expirate bloodstain patterns (blood in lungs; might be
diluted)
- May appear diluted if mixed with sufficient saliva or
nasal
- secretions
- ● May be visible air bubbles within
- the stains from air from the
- airway called vacuoles
- ● Presumptive indicator of
- expirated blood but not
- conclusive proof
- Arterial Bloodstain Patterns: artery is breached and blood
projects from it in varying amounts
- Analyst should verify their hypothesis
- of an arterial bloodstain pattern with
- the autopsy or forensic pathologist
- Transfer Bloodstain Patterns: object wet with blood comes
into contact with an object or secondary surface,
- Identification of Suspect
- Whose blood is on the garment?
- How was the blood deposited onto the garment?
-
- Other possible fluids
- Forensic serology is the examination and analysis of body fluids in a legal context
- Azoospermia is semen lacking spermatozoa
- Seminal acid phosphatase (SAP)
- prostate-specific antigen
- (PSA) is the generally accepted standard for confirmatory test
- for semen
-
- Presumptive and Confirmatory tests
- Catalytic Colour Tests
- chemical oxidation of a chromogenic substance
- Benzidine (Alder Test)
- seldom used now
- Tetramethylbenzidine and Hemastix
- portable with the use of
- Hemastix for convenience and safety at crime scenes
- Phenolphthalein (Kastle-Meyer Test)
- Chemiluminescence and Fluorescence
-