Good Field Practice — Processing a Crime Scene
201
several lots to be dumped in another yard, the obvious crime scene. It is not
uncommon for a crime to encompass more than one geographic area. For
example, in
People v. Simpson
,* at least three scenes were identified: his house
(on Rockingham Drive), her house (on Bundy Drive), and his white Ford
Bronco.
Not only may multiple scenes be associated with the crime, we must
consider their relationship in time and space. The original crime scene where
the murder took place may be located and secured in fairly short order, but
the path between the two crime scenes (e.g.,
People v. Simpson
, the drive
between the two houses in the Bronco), which may hold valuable blood,
fiber, or print evidence, may
never be recognized, much less secured. Even
if the connection between the two crime scenes is finally established, the path
between them may have already been so compromised that any evidence
collected cannot be presumed to relate to the crime (e.g., in
People vs. Sim-
pson
, credit card receipts from the Bronco were stolen by the tow truck driver,
potentially compromising blood evidence eventually recognized in the vehi-
cle (
People v. Simpson,
July 19). Multiple scenes, and boundaries defined out
of practicality, are only two of the limitations of crime scene work that must
be understood and acknowledged. In these days of easy mobility, a crime
may encompass several different scenes of varying environments, which may
easily cross interstate or even international borders.
Once the commission of a crime has been
established and the scene
secured, the criminalist must look toward eventually translating the legal
questions into science questions. The goal is always to establish links between
evidence and reference items (
classification
or
individualization
),
associations
between different source and target items, and sometimes a
reconstruction
of
the events. Because association is prerequisite to reconstruction, procedures
at the crime scene aim to preserve the integrity of evidence items and infor-
mation about their relationships to each other. Remember that reconstruc-
tion does not mean generating a moment-by-moment videotape; rather, it
refers to ordering items and events in space and time. Any
number or manner
of circumstances may confound any step in this process. Crime scene per-
sonnel are charged with preserving the scene and the evidence so that, no
matter what may have occurred previous to recognition of the scene as a
crime scene, any further deterioration or compromise of the evidence is
minimized. The reconstruction will almost never be concluded at the scene.
It will often not be completed until months or, not uncommonly, years later,
when all of the analyses have been completed, the hypotheses articulated,
*
We refer to the case of
People v. Simpson
throughout this chapter because the circum-
stances are well known and the transcripts readily available. Certainly, similar situations
are represented in other less well-documented cases.
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202
Principles and Practice of Criminalistics
and the assumptions identified. This is only one of the reasons documenta-
tion must be carried out extensively and compulsively.
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