The Crime Scene: A Visual Guide provides visual instruction on the correct way to process a crime scene. While the primary crime scene comprises the area from which most of the physical evidence is retrieved by crime scene investigators (CSIs), forensic scientists, or law enforcement personnel, this book also covers secondary and often tertiary crime scenes, all locations where there is the potential for the recovery of evidence.
By using photographs and other diagrams to show proper and improper procedures, the reader will learn how to identify the correct principles required to process a scene. The book presents chapters on the investigation, the varying types of documentation, and the tactics used to connect events through crime scene reconstruction using evidence
The book's authors have a combined experience of over 70 years in crime scene investigation as primary responders and consultants giving testimony in all levels of the U.S. court system. In addition, both teach forensic science and crime scene investigation at the university level.
Key Features
- Coverage of techniques, documentation and reconstruction at a crime scene
- Shows side-by-side comparison of the correct process versus the incorrect process
- Online website will host: videos and additional instructional material
PartI I: Preliminary PreparationsChapter 1: Crime Scene InvestigationsChapter 2: Initial On-Scene Procedures
Part II: Making a Scene Relevant-DocumentationChapter 3: Notes and VideographyChapter 4: Crime Scene PhotographyChapter 5: Crime Scene Sketching and MeasurementsChapter 6: Searching for Evidence
Part III: Concluding Processes.Chapter 7: Reconstruction ActivitiesChapter 8: Emerging TechnologiesChapter 9: Concluding Thoughts
- Houck, The Science of Crime Scenes, Academic Press, Jul 2012, 9780123864642, $99.95
- Lee, Henry Lee’s Crime Scene Handbook, Academic Press, Jul 2001, 9780124408302, $102.00
- Miller, Crime Scene Investigation Laboratory Manual, Academic Press, Feb 2014, 9780124051973, $59.95