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| hair, tissue, bones, teeth, blood, semen, or other bodily fluids |
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| chronological documentation or paper trail that records the sequence of custody, control, transfer, analysis, and disposition of physical or electronic evidence |
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| evidence that relies on an inference to connect it to a conclusion of fact—such as a fingerprint at the scene of a crime |
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| Crime scene search patterns |
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| A search method in which the crime scene is divided into smaller sections (zones or quadrants) and team members are assigned to search each sections |
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| A flashlight, Latex gloves and paper shoe covers, A magnifying glass and tweezers for collecting trace evidence, A pen, logbook, and sketchpad |
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| Murder, Manslaughte, Rape, Arson,Terrorism, Domestic violence, Gang violence, Kidnapping |
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| Cross examination: the examination of a witness who has already testified in order to check or discredit the witness's testimony, knowledge, or credibility — compare direct examination |
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| Evidence that stands on its own to prove an alleged fact, such as testimony of a witness who says she saw a defendant pointing a gun at a victim during a robbery |
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| tems that are used to mark and illustrate items of evidence at a crime scene |
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| edicated storage space existing for the sole purpose of warehousing digital evidence and other evidentiary items |
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| the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid |
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| Forensic Medical Examiner, Forensic Engineer., Forensic Accountant, Crime Scene Investigator, Crime Laboratory Analyst |
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| any item that comes from a nonliving origin, while biological evidencealways originates from a living being |
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| a qualitative analysis that allows to identify, or confirm, the presence of a substance in a sample |
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| Digital Printing, Offset Printing, Flexography, Screen Printing |
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| Procedure of evidence collection |
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| This evidence is collected by crime scene investigators (CSIs) and Law enforcement. The location of a crime scene can be the place where the crime took place, or can be any area that contains evidence from the crime itself |
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| visually documents the setting of a crime as it appeared when it was discovered |
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| Fibers, hair and other such microscopic evidencewhich relates to the commission of a crime |
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