Brazoria County Sheriff's Office
Identification Division
Crime Scene Investigation |
General Information
The purpose of crime scene investigation is to help
establish what happened (crime scene reconstruction) and to identify the responsible
person. This is done by carefully documenting the conditions at a crime scene and
recognizing all relevant physical evidence. The ability to recognize and properly collect
physical evidence is oftentimes critical to both solving and prosecuting violent crimes.
It is no exaggeration to say that in the majority of cases, the law enforcement officer
who protects and searches a crime scene plays a critical role in determining whether
physical evidence will be used in solving or prosecuting violent crimes.
Despite Hollywood's portrayal, crime scene investigation is a difficult and time consuming
job. There is no substitute for a careful and thoughtful approach. An investigator must
not leap to an immediate conclusion as to what happened based upon limited information but
must generate several different theories of the crime, keeping the ones that are not
eliminated by incoming information at the scene. Reasonable inferences about what happened
are produced from the scene appearance and information from witnesses. These theories will
help guide the investigator to document specific conditions and recognize valuable
evidence.
Documenting crime scene conditions can include immediately recording transient details
such as lighting (on/off), drapes (open/closed), weather, or furniture moved by medical
teams. Certain evidence such as shoeprints or gunshot residue is fragile and if not
collected immediately can easily be destroyed or lost. The scope of the investigation also
extends to considerations of arguments which might be generated in this case (suicide/self
defense) and documenting conditions which would support or refute these arguments.
In addition, it is important to be able to recognize what should be present at a scene but
is not (victim's vehicle/wallet) and objects which appear to be out of place (ski mask)
and might have been left by the assailant. It is also important to determine the full
extent of a crime scene. A crime scene is not merely the immediate area where a body is
located or where an assailant concentrated his activities but can also encompass a vehicle
and access/escape routes.
Although there are common items which are frequently collected as evidence (fingerprints,
shoeprints, or bloodstains), literally any object can be physical evidence. Anything which
can be used to connect a victim to a suspect or a suspect to a victim or crime scene is
relevant physical evidence. Using the "shopping list" approach (collecting all
bloodstains, hairs, or shoeprints) will probably not result in recognizing the best
evidence. For example, collecting bloodstains under a victim's body or shoeprints from
emergency personnel will rarely answer important questions. Conversely, a single
matchstick (not usually mentioned as physical evidence) recovered on the floor near a
victim's body can be excellent physical evidence since it can be directly tied to a
matchbook found in a suspect's pocket.
Since a weapon or burglar tool is easily recognized as significant physical evidence, it
is frequently destroyed by the perpetrator. Sometimes the only remaining evidence is
microscopic evidence consisting of hairs, fibers, or other small traces the assailant
unknowingly leaves behind or takes with him. Although this evidence is effectively
collected when the clothing of the victim or suspect is taken, protocols (involving tape
lifts) should be in place to process nude bodies so as not to lose this fragile evidence.
The following pages will discuss how crime scene duties can be divided among personnel,
procedures for crime scene search, and finally basic crime scene documentation.
Guide to Crime Scene Investigation |
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Personal Duties and Responsibilities
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Organization and Procedures for Search Operations
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| Collection and Preservation of Evidence |
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Examination and Documentation of the Crime Scene
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Collection and Preservation of Evidence
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Special Considerations for Sexual Assault Evidence
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| Evidence Collection Guidelines |
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Evidence Collection Guidelines
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