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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 6 page paper that provides an overview of forensic serology. Blood and semen-testing techniques are explored, as well as fingerprinting. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFserolo.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
initially notified. The role of crime scene investigation is to carefully preserve the state of the crime scene as closely as possible to when the crime happened, analyze the scene
for subtle indicators of how the crime was carried out, and ideally derive "hard evidence" that might be used to authoritatively reconstruct the event for a jury in a court
of law. Sometimes, the evidence produced by crime scene investigation will help the prosecution; at other times, it might help to exonerate a suspect and prove his or her innocence.
The outcome of a case is of no concern to crime scene investigators; their only concern is the fundamental objective truth at the center of the case, and reconstructing that
truth through clues and the collection of evidence. This being the case, the more incontrovertible and scientific in nature the evidence is, the better. For this reason, crime scene investigators
use techniques such as forensic serology in order to acquire higher quality evidence from crime scenes. Forensics serology can be used to acquire evidence from a number of bodily sources
that may well be recovered from the crime scene, such as blood, semen, or fingerprints. This paper will explore how forensic serology and biological evidence are used in crime scene
investigation. This paragraph helps the student give a brief overview of forensic serology. Serology is but one tool used by forensics examiners at a crime scene. While investigators might employ
the principles of forensics in conducting analyses of environmental damage, the positioning of bodies, or vehicular tracks (to give but a few examples), the term forensic serology is used specifically
to refer to the process of analyzing bodily fluids for forensics purposes. As such, all evidence produced through serology is regarded as "biological evidence", which can be critical to a
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