Criminal investigation

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    The forensic scientists usually use a variety analytical methods to collect evidence from crime scene, then to determine exactly what happened in there and who may participate in criminal activities. DNA identification is one of the most reliable and powerful tools for forensic investigation to find out criminal. This is because DNA shows the uniqueness of the individual, even “monozygotic twins are genetically not absolutely identical.” (Elmar S. et al, 2013). In 1984, a professor Alec Jeffrey

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    The role of crime scene investigator is the most challenging and complicated, albeit the roles of the criminalist and responding officers cannot be taken for granted. The investigator here is like a supervisor – s/he supervises the investigation, or how each part of the evidence connects with the other parts, and in collaboration with the responding officers and criminalist try to re-enact the scene. It appears at first glance that the victims were raped before they were killed; the scenes were blood

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    1. Q: In what ways have our historic roots affected the manner in which criminal investigations are conducted in the United States today? A: The organizational structure of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, found in 1850 by Allan Pinkerton and the first of its kind in the US, was later adopted by the FBI. As with the Pinkerton Agency, the FBI began to take on cases that local law enforcement were too limited in resources to handle on their own. In addition, Pinkerton created what was

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    Criminal Investigation

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    Criminal Investigation Research Paper Crime Scene Investigator Crime Scene Investigator POSITION A crime scene investigator is responsible for multipart crime scene investigations, evaluation of the crime scene, various types of equipment along with developing, securing, and packaging physical evidence for scientific evaluation and comparison (U.S. Department, 2007). Detailed reports on the observations and activities at the scene next to testimonies in court regarding the findings and

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    Forensic biology is very important to many criminal investigations by being able to use scientific evidence in entomology, odontology, anthropology, DNA testing, serology, toxicology, microbiology, and pathology. These different subfields are to provide an unbiased result that can identify a suspect, a victim, eliminate a suspect, exonerate the wrongly accused, corroborate a timeline of events, establish a time and cause of death, or even identify a weapon. Forensic biology should be applied to

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    behind including force of entry, fingerprints, footprints, DNA and so forth. Once evidence is collected, it is sent to the laboratory where it is tested on to eliminate potential suspects in the crime scene. Forensic DNA analysis has been used in investigations since the late 1980s. According to Forensic Magazine, the first use of DNA testing within the courts happened in England. Police force had asked molecular biologist Alec Jeffreys to use DNA to verify a confession of a suspect in two-rape murders

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    1. What are the four types of evidence in a criminal investigation? The four types of evidence are physical evidence, documentary evidence, demonstrative evidence, and testimony. Physical evidence is defined as tangible objects such as weapons, trace evidence, blood or fibers, and fingerprints. Documentary evidence is any type of written or recorded evidence, such as a telephone conversation recording. Demonstrative evidence is evidence that is used to to help recreate or illustrate a crime

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    extremely important in an ongoing crime scene investigation procedure. Note taking creates a permanent record of an officer's observations, and activities of themselves and others during a crime scene investigation; correct note taking can greatly impact the outcome of an investigation. Notes are used in the court to not only act as an memory refresher, but it can also back up officers, and witnesses testimonies in court. Without note taking, investigation processes would become much harder to carry

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    involve being trusted by the government. So, the careers I would want to do when I’m older are, “Criminal Investigators and Special Agent,” “Lawyer,” and “Immigration and Customs Inspector.” The first career I found that interested me was Criminal Investigators and Special Agents. People who work as them get paid $38.40 an hour and $79,870 yearly. What they have to do is prepare reports on investigation findings. As well as, investigate crimes and record evidence mostly with equipment’s such as cameras

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    Solvability factors absolutely should be used during a criminal investigation in order to help solve a case. Now, depending on the crime and the level of the solvability factors, I believe they should be placed in an order of importance so that investigators can focus on the higher level of importance crimes. I think that heinous crimes such as murder, sexual assault, rape, and even robbery should be investigated regardless of the solvability factors because these are the most serious crimes against

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