Description
Crime Scene Investigation and Reconstruction
An Illustrated Manual and Field Guide
Author: Jayaprakash Paul T.
Language: EnglishSubjects for Crime Scene Investigation and Reconstruction:
Keywords
Crime scene; homicide; murder; death investigation; CSI; death investigator; sexual assault; crime reconstruction; crime scene photography; buried remains; exhumation; human remains; drowning; medical examiner; coroner; fire investigation; poisoning; forensic toxicology; blunt force trauma; sharp force trauma; Sequential Hypothesis; Scene Investigation; Crime Scene Investigation; Crime Scene Reconstruction; Forensic Science; Bloodstain Patterns; Cadaveric Spasm; Scene Investigator; DNA Analysis; White Arrows; Crime Scene Investigators; Ligature Mark; Hit Marks; Forensic Science Laboratories; Marked 1; Exit Wounds; Crime Scene Search; Forensic Science Practice; Field Guide; Black Arrows; Skid Marks; Ligature Material; Tin Sheet
Publication date: 10-2022
· 21x28 cm · Hardback
Publication date: 10-2022
· 21x28 cm · Paperback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Readership
/li>Biography
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Crime Scene Investigation and Reconstruction: An Illustrated Manual and Field Guide provides methodologies to help investigators to think broadly when seeking out evidence at a scene and, likewise, utilize all the information from a case?especially the observable physical evidence, besides what are collectable, in reconstructing events.
In the introductory chapters the author highlights the importance of crime scene reconstruction when answering the question ?How something could have happened?? From there, he goes on to explain the principles of exchange, identification, individualization and reconstruction. Here, the ?observe-hypothesize? model, proposed in this field-guide, is presented: outlining how every source of information ranging from laboratory reports, opinions from medical doctors, statements of witnesses, and confessions of suspects should be reconcilable with the evidence-based reconstruction made in the crime scene. In this, the author contends that qualified crime scene generalists are the ideal professionals to frame scientific hypothesis and to make reconstructions. Practical recommendations, based on best-practice general crime scene procedures are provided while the second half of the book illustrate and outline how to deal with various types of major crime scenes, including fire deaths, exhuming buried human remains, sexual assaults, death by electrocution, explosion, drowning, poisoning, hanging, and more.
Since a picture is a worth thousand words, over 400 collective photographs and sketches are included throughout the book to illustrate the observational methods that are described. In addition, the field-guide provides several easy-to-follow flow-charts to serve as checklists to aid scene investigation in major types of crime scene. In this, Crime Scene Investigation and Reconstruction: An Illustrated Manual and Field Guide will help investigators readily recognize similar manifestations in crime scenes and to apply and use such techniques appropriately in their own work.
Paul T. Jayaprakash’s experience in forensic science spans over 43 years. As a professional in Crime Scene Investigation and Crime Scene Management, he has examined more than 3000 crime scenes and offered reconstructions—including exculpatory types—in cases of homicides, suicides, explosions, fire-related death, structure fires, use of firearms, fall from height, among others. With specialization in Forensic Anthropology, he has carried out skull-face superimposition on 658 skulls and testified in courts in 110 murder cases (1992-2004). He has also been a professor at major universities until 2017. He has written several articles for peer-reviewed journals and frequently been an invited speaker. Additionally, he has won the Government of India Home Minister's Award for Outstanding Contribution in Forensic Biology in 2000. That is the highest award in Forensic Science in India.