Psychological evidence is information that
can provide and insight to the mind of the
offender such as evidence of
intent/pre-planning or a spur-of-the-moment
crime of passion. It can also refer to the level
of violence displayed in the crime, which has
implications for trial/sentencing.
Weapons brought to the scene can indicate intent
compared to an apparently unplanned weapon e.g.
heavy vase in a home, evidence of an attempt to clean
the crime scene and remove physical evidence (e.g.
weapon not at the scene; blood cleaned from scene),
multiple injures on the victim/blood splatter patterns
indicating frenzied attack or the use of
strangulation/single wound with weapon brought to
the scene.
Identification of Unknown substances
Illegal drugs, poison, anthrax
Providing investigative leads
THIS LEADS TO THE
RECONSTRUCTION OF
THE CRIME
Processing the Crime Scene
Requires teamwork by
crime scene personnel and
investigators
Detectives, lab scientists,
patrol officers, medical
examiners, crime squad
and crime scene tech
Individual processing the
scene depends on the
state/community
First Officer on the Scene
• Assist the victim(s) and
provide immediate
medical assistance (even
if evidence is destroyed in
process).
• The deceased victim(s)
are not cleaned up until a
Forensic Officer checks for
trace evidence including
bloodstains, hair and
other evidence.
• Witnesses and suspects
are found, detained and
kept separate to avoid
transference of trace
evidence.
• Crime scene is protected
(perimeter marked with tape to
enable logging and recording of
visitors).
• NOTE any
changes made to
the crime scene.
Securing the Crime Scene
Anyone entering the crime
scene will deposit and
remove evidence. (Locard
Exchange Principle)
Secure the scene with
physical barriers
One officer assigned to
prevent entrance of
unwanted personnel
Log kept of
disturbances to
scene
Crime Scene Survery
After the scene is
secure, the
investigator and first
responder do a
“walk-through”
Prepare an initial
reconstruction
Note any
temporary
evidence
Note points of entry/exit that
require attention
Access scene for personnel,
precautions, and equipment needed
Crime Scene Documentation
Taking Notes
Record activities including:
Notification of personnel,
arrival Information, scene
Description (environment,
evidence), victim Description
Videotaping
Introduce with case number, date, location, begin
with surroundings (include entrance/exits), tape
Evidence (wide angle, close-up), victims viewpoint. Do
not: Narrate the video or discuss contents, edit original
video
Photographing
Take examination quality
photographs (used by
experts to interpret
evidence), every photo
should be recorded in a
log, take with and without
a scale
Sketching
Goal is to record exact position of all evidence to aid
in reconstruction, rough sketches can be refined into
final sketches, three techniques of measurement are
used: triangulation, baseline and polar coordinates.
Searching the crime scene
After scene documentation, a more thorough search of
the scene is completed, systematic search ensures no
piece of physical evidence is missed
Collection of Physical Evidence
One individual designated as evidence
collector, temporary, fragile, or easily lost
evidence should be collected first, evidence
placed in primary and secondary
containers
Liquid or volatile evidence placed in airtight
containers, biological evidence placed in
non-airtight container and allowed to dry,
each item packaged separately
Crime Scene Reconstruction
Initial evidence leads to the
formation of Hypotheses (guesses
as to what happened)
Hypotheses are tested by
additional analyses
Disproved hypotheses are
thrown out, leaving a
reconstruction theory
the difference between
organised and disorganised
criminals
Organised: Crime is planned; attempt to
control victim; leaves few clues; victim a
targeted stranger; above average IQ;
socially/sexually competent; usually living
with partner; experiencing anger/depression
at time of the offence; follows media
coverage of offence.
Disorganised: little planning or
preparation; random disorganised
behaviour; minimum use of restraints;
little attempt to hide evidence at crime
scene; lives alone, near crime scene;
sexually and socially inadequate;
experiences severe forms of mental
illness; physically or sexually abused in
childhood; frightened/confused at time
of attack.
two difference approaches to
offender profiling
Top-down approach: used by the FBI in America.
Uses a large database of previous information to
help solve similar crimes. Looks for statistical
patterns and trends. Associated with Robert Ressler
among others.
Bottom-up approach as used in the UK.
Connects the behaviour at the crime scene with
everyday behaviour of the offender. Associated
with the work of Professor David Canter.