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Fingerprint Analysis Fingerprint Analysis (Famous Cases)

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Fingerprint Analysis . (Famous Cases). Fingerprint Analysis . Forensic investigators have been using fingerprint evidence as a source of identification of suspects for over a hundred years. Fingerprint Analysis  . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fingerprint Analysis

Fingerprint Analysis Fingerprint Analysis

(Famous Cases)

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Fingerprint Analysis Fingerprint Analysis

• Forensic investigators have been using fingerprint evidence as a source of identification of suspects for over a hundred years.

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Fingerprint Analysis  Fingerprint Analysis  

• Early work was by visual analysis of very obvious prints left at the scene of a crime

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• Modern forensic scientists now have a range of techniques for finding prints, cleaning up and enhancing print images, and rapidly finding a match from a database using computer technology.  

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Fingerprint evidence is seen as one of the best types of physical evidence linking a suspect to an object or location or for establishing identity.

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Therefore, the forensic investigator will always search for fingerprint evidence at the scene of a crime and at related locations, such as a suspect's home or car.

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A fingerprint is the pattern of ridges and related characteristics found on the finger pads, the fleshy parts of the fingers used for touching and gripping.

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Each person's fingerprints are unique and stay unchanged throughout life.

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According to Sir Francis Galton, the nineteenth-century English anthropologist, the chances of two fingerprints being identical are as small as 64 billion to one.

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In over a century of forensic fingerprinting, no two prints have ever been found to be the same, even those of identical twins.

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Skin is never completely dry or clean; grime, oil, and sweat on the finger pads create fingerprints whenever a person touches something.

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That is why criminals, unless they are wearing gloves, leave fingerprints behind.

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If their hands are bloodstained, then they will leave bloody fingerprints behind, an example of a patent (visible) print.

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Plastic prints are fingerprint impressions made in a soft material like soap or dust.

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Latent fingerprints are invisible, but the forensic scientist can visualize them though special lighting or with the application of chemicals.

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Fingerprints have been recovered from all kinds of surfaces, even plastic bags.

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* It would be very useful to be able to reliably detect fingerprints on human skin.

* So far, this been very difficult to do if more than two hours have elapsed from the time the fingerprints were made.

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Potential methods are being developed to recover fingerprints after longer time periods have elapsed.

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A fingerprint found at the scene of a crime can be dusted with chemicals to make it easier to see and then lifted or photographed.

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It is then compared with the fingerprints of known offenders stored in a computer database.

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In the past fingerprints were classified according to the specific features that make up the unique pattern of each print.

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With computerized storage and retrieval systems, however, classification is not really necessary as the computer can readily scan and match the whole pattern of thousands of prints.

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The image of fingerprints found at the scene of a crime can readily be enhanced and clarified with scanning and digitizing technology.

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This means that even partial prints can be of value in identifying someone at the scene of a crime.

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In 1892 Francesca Rojas, an Argentine woman, became the first person ever to be convicted on fingerprint evidence.

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When her two young children were found beaten to death, she tried to blame a man called Velasquez who vigorously denied the charge and, in any case, had a firm alibi.

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Investigator Juan Vucetich, who was intrigued by the relatively new technique of fingerprint analysis, found a bloody fingerprint on a bedroom door in Rojas' house.

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He sawed the portion away and then had the woman give an ink-print of her thumb.

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Even with only a basic understanding of fingerprint analysis, it was obvious to the investigators that the bloody print belonged to Rojas.

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She confessed to the crime when confronted, and admitted that she committed the murders to improve her chances of marrying her boyfriend, who was known to dislike children.

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Rojas was sentenced to life imprisonment.

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• The brutal murder in 1905 of Thomas Farrow, manager of a shop in Deptford, near London, and his wife Ann was to become a milestone case in the use of fingerprint analysis in Britain.

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• Money had been taken and a thumbprint was found on the cash box.

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• The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) had already built up a file of fingerprints of known criminals, but this print did not match any of them.

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• A witness led the investigators to two brothers called Albert and Alfred Stratton.

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• A match was found between one of the men and the print found at the scene.

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• The court battle over the evidence was, however, lengthy.

• Much hung in the balance as it was the first time fingerprint evidence had been used in a murder case in Britain.

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• After two hours of deliberation, however, the jury found the two men guilty and they were later hanged.

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• In 1910, Thomas Jennings was arrested on suspicion of the murder of Clarence Hiller in Chicago.

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• The main evidence against him was fingerprints, and four experts testified at his trial.

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• However, fingerprint evidence was still relatively new and Jennings brought an appeal questioning its admissibility.

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• In a landmark judgment, the Illinois Supreme Court upheld the conviction, saying that fingerprints were indeed a reliable form of identification.

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• Jennings was sentenced to death and executed on February 16, 1912.

• He was the first person in the United States to be convicted of murder on fingerprint evidence.

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• Fingerprint analysis also played a role in convicting the man responsible for an audacious theft.

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• On August 21, 1911, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris.

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• There was a clear fingerprint on the glass that had protected the painting.

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• Fingerprint pioneer Alphonse Bertillon spent many months trying to match the print to samples in his collection but to no avail.

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• Two years after the theft, police arrested Vicenzo Perugia in connection with the crime.

• His prints matched those from the crime scene.

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• Ironically, Perugia's thumbprint had been in Bertillon's collection all the time, but it was of his right thumb.

• The one left on the glass in the Louvre was from his left thumb.

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• Criminals soon realized that fingerprints could be used to convict them and took evasive measures.

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• Some used gloves but others, like John Dillinger, a gangster who terrorized the Chicago area in the 1930s, went further.

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• While on the run from authorities, he had a plastic surgeon burn off the outer layer of his fingertips with acid, in the belief that this would erase his fingerprints for good.

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• A tip off put the FBI on Dillinger's trail, they confronted him and shot him dead.

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• In the morgue, they discovered Dillinger's attempts to burn away his this fingerprints.

• He had not succeeded.

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• Fingerprints usually grow back and, in any case, go down through several layers of skin.

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• Early fingerprint investigators had a tough job sorting manually through print records.

• Today, matching is accomplished with the aid of high-speed computers.

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• The FBI began to automate print analysis in the 1960s with AFIS, the Automated Fingerprint Identification System.

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• The AFIS computer scans and digitally encodes fingerprint records into a database.

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• It can match a sample, either a ten-print set or a single or partial print, by searching the database.

• Early versions of AFIS searched hundreds to thousands of prints a second; now the speed is up to 500,000 prints per second.

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• One notable success for AFIS was catching Richard Ramirez, a notorious killer known as the Night Stalker.

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• He had committed a number of brutal rapes and murders throughout Southern California between 1984 and 1985, entering victims' homes at night and cutting the phone line.

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• He would shoot any men present before raping their spouse, often in the same bed where the corpse was.

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• His final crime involved a couple in Mission Viejo, where he shot the man and raped the wife.

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• Fortunately, both survived and the woman saw Ramirez' car, while another witness got the number of the vehicle.

• The stolen car was found abandoned and a partial fingerprint was recovered from the vehicle.

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• The Los Angeles Police Department had just begun to use an AFIS system that could compare more than 60,000 prints per second and they found a match for the print in the car within minutes.

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• A photo of Ramirez, a 25-year-old drifter from El Paso, went out in the papers and he was recognized within a day by residents in east Los Angeles, who overpowered him when he tried to steal another car.

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• He was convicted by a jury and, on November 7, 1989, was given 19 death sentences.

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• Palm prints contain even more detail on them than fingerprints, and helped solve the kidnap and murder of 12-year-old Polly Klaas in 1993.

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• The girl was enjoying a pajama party with friends at her home in Petaluma, California, when a man appeared through an open window with a knife and carried her off.

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• The FBI used special light sources and fluorescent powder to locate an otherwise invisible palm print on a bunk bed.

• They also had a description of the intruder from the other girls.

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• Torn children's clothing was found a few weeks later near a site where a man's car had rolled into a ditch.

• That man was Richard Allen Davis, who had two previous convictions for kidnapping.

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• A fingerprint expert was able to match the FBI's palm print found at the scene of the crime to Davis, who then confessed and showed police where Klaas' body was.

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• He was sentenced to death in 1996 for kidnapping and murder.