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Crime Scene Technician Certificate
Criminal Justice Associate - Crime Scene Evidence
Request Free Information. A Criminal Justice Associate’s Degree with a specialization in Crime Scene Evidence will prepare you for a career, which will make you an expert once you enter the scene of a crime.
A.S. in Criminal Investigations
Request more information.
The Criminal Investigations program offers the fundamentals of crime
scene investigation science and theory. After training in this program,
graduates may work in federal, state and local governments, forensic
laboratories, medical examiners offices, hospitals, insurance companies,
universities, arson investigation units, homicide investigations, or
laboratories. Graduates may also be employed as independent forensic
science consultants, fingerprint technicians, print examiners, forensic
investigators, evidence technician, or in private investigation.
Describes the different objections used in court rooms regarding criminal evidence.
Collection and Preservation of Evidence Once the crime scene has been thoroughly documented and the locations of the evidence noted, then the collection process can begin. The collection process will usually start with the collection of the most fragile or most easily lost evidence.
Evidence Collection GuidelinesThis document provides evidence collection guidelines for the several types of evidence including; Blood Stains, Hair, Fibers and Threads, Paint, Flammable Liquids, Tool Marks, Questioned Documents, and Latent Fingerprints
No matter how much someone tries to clean up a crime scene, something is generally left behind. It may not always be detected, but it's difficult to take any kind of violent action without shedding something.
Proper Tagging and Labeling of Evidence for Later Identification The primary purpose for the crime scene investigator or evidence recovery technician, in tagging and marking items of evidence is so that he/she will be able to easily identify those items at a later date. The tagging, labeling and marking of the evidence adds credibility and control to our ability to identifying the item.
Bite Marks as Evidence to Convict Some people think that the role of a dental expert in the investigative process of crime solving is to identify victims—especially burn victims--by their dental records. In fact, the dental expert, or forensic odontologist, has numerous roles, one of which is to match the bite-mark impressions on a victim to the tooth structure of suspects.
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