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DNA is hardly used in cases like burglary/robbery. One, because it takes too long and is too expensive - and you need something to compare it to otherwise it is useless; two, there is usually much better evidence at the scene like toolmarks/impressions and prints.I attended a talk with a real forensics person from the Hillsboro Police Department, and Dynamo is correct - they wear basically bunny suits and booties to not contaminate the scene. Not terribly fun for TV viewers! DNA results can sometimes take months or even years to come back, and they don't test every little thing because it is an expensive process, so unlike the show where they test every cigarette, every glass, that would not actually be done. Fingerprints are also manually evaluated first before being entered into the computer. The analyst selects the key points on the print he or she thinks are the identifying features of the print, and again, results are not instantaneous. You may have a 10-card on someone and a partial index finger print, but you don't know what finger you have, so the computer is running all 10 to compare, times however many people are in the database. TV shows you the art, but it really is more hard core science.
you're basically right
according to my teachers, the conditions of a crime scene (climate, illumination, etc) should not be altered... at least not without taking notes/pictures/videos first...
if the first personnel who arrives at the scene (police officers) have to alter something (for example, break the door to enter the scene) they must communicate it to the crime scene investigators.
In a episode of csi during a game hodges 'died' from a prefired bullet that was matched via ballistics to a destroyed weapon. It was fired from a small doohicky that presumably (please correct me if I'm wrong) left no extra striation markings.
1. What exactly was the doohicky and how does it work?
2. Is there a way to make or use something that can fire a prefired bullet without adding extra striation markings or distorting the ones already there longer range, say the distance from the roof of one building to the window of another in new york. Or is this only possible at short range?
3. If a prefired bullet is slightly misshapen through previous impact will this affect its trajectory or impact affect?
Don't worry no criminal intent here, just curious.
The transparent water-like liquid used for extracting blood from a crime scene/body/fabric? I'm wondering. :O