The Role of Forensic Science in Crime Scene Investigation
The scientific method begins with the identification of a problem. Questions are asked, data is collected, a hypothesis is formed and then tested. The scientific method is essentially no different from the kind of investigative work that investigators of a crime scene do on a daily basis. They a faced with a problem: a crime has occurred. The questions they must ask are: what happened, why, when, who was involved, where did it occur, and how did it happen? They collect data and using forensic science to analyze the data, they come up with a narrative that answers those questions (Shaler, 2011). Lab work helps to verify the story by providing more evidence that can give more details. This paper will show how the scientific method is applied to forensic science.
The forensic scientific method consists of five steps:
1. Acquisition of primary witness and other anamnestic evidence
2. Anticipation of future questions
3. Acquisition of physical evidence
4. Comparison of consistency of alleged events (hypothesis) with physical findings, obtaining additional data as needed
5. Assessment only to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty, recognizing the limitations of science (Young, 2020).
Forensic science is used to facilitate crime scene investigation. That is why the acquisition of primary witnesses as well as anamnestic evidence is important at the outset. Eye witness testimony provides the investigator with a sense of what happened based on what people saw. Anamnestic evidence gives an indication what people can recall about a situation.
In the scientific method, the first step is to observe and describe a situation. This allows the scientific researcher to understand what he is facing and what the environment contains. He lists everything he knows about the phenomenon so that he can look at all the facts and variables of a phenomenon and use this information to develop a thesis about what is going on. The same approach is taken with forensic science. The forensic scientist works closely with the crime scene investigator to ensure that the scientific analysis of data collected at the scene will inform the development of the investigator’s hypothesis.
The first step in forensic science is to observe and describe the scene. To analyze evidence, one must provide context. For example, the collection of fly larvae from the scene of a crime does not tell one much, but if it is collected from a corpse that was found floating in a shallow pool of water in the woods, it may say a great deal—such as how long the corpse had been...
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