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Forensic Science, What is perception?, What are analytic skills?, What can…
Forensic Science
Possible Jobs
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Types of Evidence
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The process of Forensic Science
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Examples when Forensic science is used
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Importance of Evidence collection
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What is perception?
It's the point you look at things for example if you see a 6 on the floor someone may see a 9.
What are analytic skills?
The skill to draw information into smaller conclusions to draw conclusions.
What can affect our ability to observe?
What can affect our ability to observe is peoples ideas, a blindness by personal eager in the case, that there isn't much to observe, that we get false information, or we jump to conclusions before hand.
What is deductive reasoning?
Also called deductive logic is to find the logic in something to make a conclusion out of it.
What should be included in a sketch of a crime scene?
What should be included is the body (if one), the measurements of the room (if in one), and any weapons, fibers, aka. evidences found.
What can make someone a better observer?
What can make someone a better observer is, staying calm, not taking things personal, thinking through what your seeing, and having a clear mind at that moment.
What modern technology helps us do better sketches of a scene?
For example AR, can help us make it more realistic, photographs so the sketcher can have view of the crime scene even after cleaned up, and even computer data about buildings blue prints.
What is the goal of a crime scene investigation?
The goal of a crime scene investigation to me is to get evidence enough to find a culprit, make a culprit guilty, or even to help the police with the case so they can catch the criminal quickly.
What is the difference between fact and opinion?
The difference is a fact is backed up on evidence since it can be proved, while a opinion is a guess and cannot be proven.
What is a eyewitness, and how reliable is one?
A eyewitness is someone who saw for example the crime and could give us a insight at what she/he saw happen, but they can't be fully trusted and what they say is no way to prove its correctness, but to help it be more correct, if there's more than 1 eyewitness they get seperated so they don't start talking about what happened and poison the eyewitnesses witness.
When a crime is committed
When deduction is needed to notice something/prove something.
When a case needs to be seen from angles and is unclear to police and or witnesses.
Can be the desisive part of a case, evidence against a person is worth a lot since its more trustable than simple speech.
Can help, what i mean is for example someone steals jewerly from a house but leaves fibers and his ID. This evidence will be used to find the criminal. (This rarely happens, that a criminal drops his ID(Dumb Criminal :smiley:)
A forensics job is to collect all evidence and materials that can help the case so its really important and if not done it can be accompanied with bad problems.
There's Toxicologist that will take care to see for instance if the person was killed by poison, or if had inhaled something before death, that could had caused the death.
A DNA analyst is another course, it means you would compare DNA to see if the DNA in a crime scene is the same as the culprit, DNA comparison is more accurate than fingerprint so this is a good job course.
Finally, a not common one, Arson Investigators, these after a fire see if it was a accident or was caused intentionally, this isn't common but is a great career with good pay and may eger some.
There's Fragile or Transient Evidence that include; Hairs, fibers, Body Fluids(Blood, semen, silava), bare foot impressions, or even latent fingerprints.
There's also, Solid or Tangible evidence which includes; Firearms, Drugs and paraphernalia, Documents(Checks, notes,recipes), and even other weapons(Knives,clubs,etc).
Identify Scene dimensions
Establish Security
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Create a plan and communicate
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Conduct primary survey
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Document and Process scene
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Conduct secondary survey
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Record and preserve evidence
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