When recovering biological evidence from a crime
scene it must be handled with extreme caution, as it is highly perishable. This
article discusses the recovery of hair and semen from bedding and clothing left
at the scene after a sexual assault. After an initial search of the scene—done
to locate the evidence—the evidence should be well photographed and videotaped.
Also, it should be noted that investigators must wear protective clothing—at
all times, no matter what evidence is being collected—changing them every time
new evidence is collected, as well as using tools, such as tweezers and so on.
Clothing
The clothing of the victim can contain vital clues,
such as trace material and biological evidence. Careful documentation of where
the clothes were found is important. Clothing should be examined at the scene
by forensic analysts, using a UV Light, Blue Light, or Forensic Light source to
identify stains. All biological evidence should be air-dried before being
packaged. Likewise, bed linens should be in the same manner. If there are
stains, they should be marked, air dried, then packaged by folding the edges
toward the center and placed in a paper bag. It is vital that investigators
avoid coughing, sneezing, and avoid touching their faces and other areas of
their body’s that might aid in contamination of the sample collected. All
stains collected should be accompanied by a control sample, which can be
obtained from an unstained area near the collected stain. Each item of semen
evidence should be packaged separately, and if transport of the entire
item—such as the whole bed—a portion around where the stain is located should
be cut out and sent to the lab, for practical purposes. All biological evidence
should be transported at room temperature.
Hair
All hair should be recovered from a scene. Hair
should be collected using gloved fingers or tweezers, placed in paper bindles
or coin envelopes, then placed in larger envelopes, which should be folded and
sealed, then labeled by the crime scene investigator. All biological evidence
must be packaged in paper bags or other “breathable containers” and not
airtight containers, which can cause growth of bacteria that can degrade the
evidence. The basic rule that most lab assistants follow for storage of
biological evidence is to refrigerate wet or liquid evidence and freeze dry
evidence. After a barcode is placed on the item, and corresponding bar code is
place on the property receipt, all DNA material should be placed into a
designated biohazard area.
In the Lab
Human hair can not only be inspected by tested for
DNA; it can also be compared to other
hair samples in order to determine whether or not two samples could have had a
common origin (by use of a comparison microscope). Using various testing
methods at the lab, such as the restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)
process or the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) process, DNA can be extracted
from semen, which can be examined and amplified in order to determine the
genetic profile of the individual who left it behind. Of course, if it is the
suspect’s semen, and no samples to compare it to, it should be held for safe
keeping, and hopefully investigators will find a suspect; at which time, the
investigators can take a DNA sample from the suspect and compare it to the
earlier collected sample.
Of course, once the original sample is collected,
investigators can first check the DNA data base run by the FBI, known as the
Combined DNA Index System (CODIS). The CODIS system is an electronic database that
houses DNA profiles that can identify suspects. As of April of 2012, CODIS
contained over 10 million offender profiles (NDIS Statistics, 2012).
Just fyi: I used your photo in my article National Academy of Sciences Finds FBI Forensic Analyses Unreliable - with full attribution. Excellent instructions for keeping the evidence clean and well-documented, by the way.
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