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Stephen M. Bleay1 and Marcel de Puit2
1 Home Office Centre for Applied Science and Technology, Sandridge, UK
2 Ministerie van Veiligheid en Justitie, Nederlands Forensisch Instituut, Digitale Technologie en Biometrie, The Hague, The Netherlands
There are several books that deal with how latent fingermarks, and to some level the visualisation thereof, are used for identification purposes. To a great extent, the comparison and identification of latent fingermarks in criminal investigations remains their principal application.
In this book we will describe the chemistry (and other properties) of fingermarks in more depth and describe how fingermarks can be used for more than just identification purposes. We will describe how fingermarks may be deposited, the chemical and biological composition of the fingermark and its physical properties, the chemical and physical techniques used to visualise latent fingermarks and the importance of combining fingermark visualisation with recovery of other forensic evidence. Consideration is also given to the importance of communication between individuals visualising fingermarks and those responsible for their comparison and identification.
The traces that may be left by the contact between the palmar regions of hands and a surface are potentially the most informative forms of evidence available to the forensic scientist. The skin on the inside of the hands can flex and adapt to perform a wide range of manipulative tasks, and there are few actions (legal or illegal) that can be carried out without holding objects and/or touching surfaces. The nature of each of these contacts will be different, but in all cases Locard's exchange principle (Locard, 1934) applies, and there is the potential for the transfer of material between the hand and the surface.
In the context of crime investigation, there are many levels of information that can potentially be extracted from these areas of contact if it is possible for a forensic scientist to first locate and then enhance and analyse them.
At the coarsest level, the configuration of the palm and fingers during the contact with the surface and their position on it can provide useful contextual information about how the surface was touched or gripped. This can be particularly useful in corroborating or disproving particular accounts of events. Figure 1.1 illustrates a situation where the one individual claimed that an assailant had grasped his shirt, whilst the other individual claimed that he had merely pushed the wearer of the shirt away.
Figure 1.1 A contact (grab) mark on a black cotton shirt developed using vacuum metal deposition.
Reproduced courtesy of the Home Office.
The mark that has been revealed suggests that the fabric of the shirt has been gathered together by the hand, and therefore the account of the shirt being grasped by an assailant is more likely than a push with an open hand. Figure 1.2 shows two different orientations of fingermarks on a glass bottle.
Figure 1.2 The orientation of fingermarks on a glass bottle originating from different actions. (a) Bottle being held to drink from. (b) Fingermarks developed using aluminium powder after drinking. (c) Bottle being held as if to strike. (d) Fingermarks developed using aluminium powder after use as a weapon.
In the first case, the bottle has been held whilst drinking from the neck of the bottle. In the second case, the bottle has been gripped as if the bottle has been picked up for use as a weapon. Again, by examination of the configuration of the marks, it may be possible to infer how an item was handled, and this may become evidentially important.
Obviously, there are many more possible scenarios than the two examples presented here, and it should be noted that these are merely illustrative examples. In real casework the propositions (hypotheses) and subsequent examinations are likely to be more complex.
Revealing the distribution of a contaminant (an exogenous material) on the hand may also provide useful information that can be indicative of certain actions. In another example, the firing of a gun will result in the transfer of gunshot residue onto the hands (Figure 1.3). Although the hands can be swabbed to reveal the presence of gunshot residue, if its distribution across the hand can be shown, this may be far more useful in showing that it was much more likely that the gun was held and fired rather than the residue coming from accidental contact. This distribution of contaminant may also be subsequently reproduced in any marks left by the hand.
Figure 1.3 A white gelatin lift taken from the back of the hand taken after firing a gun and enhanced using a chemical selectively targeting traces of lead.
At a slightly finer level, a closer analysis of the areas of palm and finger contact can also reveal information about the events during the time of contact. Although many of these events may consist of single, light contacts, others may be of longer duration and may include movement of the hand or multiple contacts, for example, as a grip on an object is readjusted. By analysis of the traces left by the contacts, it is possible to obtain information about factors including the pressure applied during contact, slippage of the hand across the surface and whether multiple contacts have occurred (Figures 1.4 and 1.5). All of this information can add context to the case being investigated.
Figure 1.4 A sequence of fingermarks developed using aluminium powder showing evidence of slippage on the surface.
Figure 1.5 A sequence of fingermarks developed using aluminium powder showing evidence of multiple contacts on the surface.
At a finer level of analysis is the examination of the ridge detail that may be reproduced within the fingers and palmar regions of the contact area. These are the features that have traditionally been the primary source of information for identification of individuals. The information available has been described in terms of 'levels' of detail (SWGFAST, 2013), although in practice all of these levels are utilised by identification specialists whilst drawing conclusions about the identity of the donor of a mark.
'Level 1 detail' describes the pattern formed by the flow of the ridges, and three general patterns are generally used to define marks, these being the whorl, loop and arch (Figure 1.6). Further detailed definitions of the general patterns and variations of them have been previously described in specialist texts on fingerprint comparison and identification; this information is however beyond the scope of this book.
Figure 1.6 Examples of the principal types of fingerprint pattern. (a) The whorl. (b) The loop. (c) The arch.
'Level 2 detail' describes the features that arise due to disruptions in the flow of the ridges, which include ridge endings and bifurcations where a single ridge forks into two. Other features can be described in terms of combinations of ridge endings and bifurcations (Figure 1.7). These features are sometimes also described as 'minutiae' or 'Galton details'. Level 2 details are those that are most used by identification specialists during comparison and that are automatically marked up by fingerprint database algorithms for automated searching of fingerprints.
Figure 1.7 An area of a fingerprint showing a number of second-level details.
'Level 3 detail' includes features associated with friction ridges that may also exist within a fingermark and can be used in conjunction with first- and second-level details to infer identity. These features may include pores, the shape of ridge edges and discontinuities within the ridge (Figure 1.8). Permanent scars and creases within the mark may also sometimes be included in this category. The use of fingermarks in identification has been extensively covered in other publications, and it is not the intention of this book to deal further with the comparison and identification process. However, the second-level and third-level details in fingerprints do play a crucial role in the chemistry and other properties of the fingermarks they produce. They are, respectively, responsible for the distribution and the excretion of sweat over and from the skin.
Figure 1.8 A fingermark enhanced using white powder suspension showing level 3 details (in this case pores, illustrated using circles) in the ridges.
Even in cases where the hands and palms are protected with gloves, it may still be possible to obtain useful evidence from the contact area. Not all gloves are totally impervious, and migration of sweat through certain types of glove has been recorded...
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