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A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

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A BRIEF History of Forensic Science. 1248. A Chinese book, Hsi Duan Yu (the washing away of wrongs), Contains a description of how to distinguish drowning from strangulation. This was the first recorded application of medical knowledge to the solution of crime. 1784. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

Page 2: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1248• A Chinese book, Hsi Duan Yu

(the washing away of wrongs), Contains a description of how to distinguish drowning from strangulation.

• This was the first recorded application of medical knowledge to the solution of crime.

Page 3: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1784• In Lancaster UK, John Toms is

convicted of murder on the basis of the torn edge of a wad of newspaper in a pistol matching a remaining piece in his pocket.

• This was one of the first known documented uses of physical matching.

Page 4: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1813-1853• Mathiew Orfila, is considered the father of

modern toxicology. • He also made significant contributions to the

development of tests for the presence of blood in a forensic context and is credited as the first to attempt the use of a microscope in the assessment of blood and semen stains.

• His 1831 treatise was the first book to be devoted solely to the subject of exhumation and decomposition.

Page 5: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1835• Henry Goddard, one of Scotland Yard’s

original Bow Street Runners, first used bullet comparison to catch a murderer.

• His comparison was based on a visible flaw in the bullet which was traced back to a mold.

Page 6: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1863• The German scientist Schönbein first

discovered the ability of hemoglobin to oxidize hydrogen peroxide making it foam.

• This resulted in first presumptive test for blood.

Page 7: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1883• Alphonse BERTILLON, a French police

employee, identifies the first recidivist based on his invention of anthropometry.

• anthropometrics", a method with which to identify people based upon their individual measurements.

Page 8: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1889• Alexandre Lacassagne, professor of

forensic medicine at the University of Lyons, France, was the first to try to individualize bullets to a gun barrel.

• His comparisons at the time were based simply on the number of lands and grooves.

• A pioneer regarding bloodstain pattern analysis

Page 9: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1891• Hans Gross, examining magistrate and

professor of criminal law at the University of Graz, Austria, published Criminal Investigation, the first comprehensive description of uses of physical evidence in solving crime.

• Gross is also sometimes credited with coining the word criminalistics.

Page 10: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1892• (Sir) Francis Galton published

Fingerprints, the first comprehensive book on the nature of fingerprints and their use in solving crime.

Page 11: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1903• The New York State Prison system began

the first systematic use of fingerprints in United States for criminal identification.

• At Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, Kansas, Will WEST, a new inmate, is initially confused with a resident convict William WEST using anthropometry. They are later (1905) found to be easily differentiated by their fingerprints

Page 12: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1904• Edmond Locard gave rise to the forensic

precept that “Every contact leaves a trace.”• This became known as Locard's theory.• “Wherever he steps, whatever he touches, whatever he

leaves, even unconsciously, will serve as a silent witness against him. Not only his fingerprints or his footprints, but his hair, the fibers from his clothes, the glass he breaks, the tool mark he leaves, the paint he scratches, the blood or semen he deposits or collects. All of these and more, bear mute witness against him. This is evidence that does not forget. It is not confused by the excitement of the moment. It is not absent because human witnesses are. It is factual evidence. Physical evidence cannot be wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be wholly absent. Only human failure to find it, study and understand it, can diminish its value.”

Page 13: A BRIEF History of Forensic Science

1932• The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

crime laboratory is created.