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Showing posts from May, 2008

Crime Scene Investigator

At any scene of a crime or occurrence, there will be many pieces of evidance that, if correctly identified and interpreted, can lead the investigator to identify the offender. Having protected the scene and protected the individual pieces of evidence, the next stage of the process is to record and, wherever possible, collect the evidence. Whether it is recorded or collected will depend, to a large extent, on the nature of the evidence. Physical evidence falls into one of two categories; evidence that can not be easily collected or taken away from the scene and evidence that can be bagged, boxed, and preserved for later analysis. Some physical evidence has attributes that fall into both categories. links; http://www.theflpi.com/ http://www.pimagazine.com/books/criminal_investigation_professional_investigator.htm http://www.icsia.org/ http://www.free-ed.net/sweethaven/CrimeJustice/CSI/default.asp http://www.eaglecrimescenes.com/book.htm