Transcript Luminescent
Forensic Fingerprints
CHE 113 Forensic Science
Copyright 2004, James T. Spencer
1
Forensic Fingerprints
•1000 BCE; archaeological evidence of ancient
Chinese and Babylonian civilizations using
fingerprints to sign legal documents.
•Early 1880's - William Herschel, Chief
Administrative Officer of Bengal used thumb
impressions to identify workers.
•1880 - Dr Henry Faulds, an English physician
working in Tokyo, published a letter in the journal
Nature suggesting the use of fingerprints for
identification purposes.
2
1892 - After some years of research the English
scientist Sir Francis Galton published a book entitled
Finger Prints in which was laid out a method of
classification of fingerprints.
1897 - Indian Police officer Sir Edward Henry
proposed a modified classification system which was
adopted by Scotland Yard in 1901 and is still the basis
of the systems used in most English speaking
countries.
1901 - First official use of fingerprints in the USA by
the New York City Civil Service Commission.
1930 National fingerprint file set up in America by
the FBI.
3
Fingerprints
Fingerprints form by contact of friction ridges on hands, feet, or lips
with an object (called 'friction' ridges because of their biological
function to assist in our ability to grasp and hold onto objects approximately 2,700 ridge "units" per square inch of friction skin).
Pore openings present on
surface of the friction ridges.
Fingerprints are formed
underneath the skin in the
dermal papilae. As long
as that layer of papilae is
there, fingerprints will
always come back, even
after scarring or burning.
Prints are left because
a body is constantly
secreting water, oils, etc.
through pores.
4
Latent Leather Glove Print
Forensic Fingerprints
•
•
•
•
Your fingerprint patterns are hereditary.
They are formed before a person is born.
They are unique and they never change.
Gloves don't necessarily stop
fingerprints. Prints can be left through
surgical gloves. Gloves can also be turned
inside out to yield fingerprints from the inside
surfaces.
• Leather gloves leave prints that is unique to
that glove and no other - leather comes from
cow skin, sim.to human skin). Even cloth
gloves, such as mittens, can leave a distinctive
print that can be traced back to the mitten that
made it.
Ref. Leather Glove Print
5
Fingerprint Basics
A fingerprint is an individual characteristic.
– Not the shape of the print that is individual, but
rather the number, location and shape of specific
ridge characteristics (also known as minutiae).
– Most courts require 14-16 matched minutiae for a
positive match.
A fingerprint will remain unchanged during an
individual's lifetime.
Fingerprints have general ridge patterns that permit
them to be systematically classified.
6
Forensic Fingerprints
Three basic fingerprint
patterns: Loops, Arches
and Whorls.
Arches; 5 % population
Loops; 60 - 65 %
Whorls; 30 - 35 %
People of African ancestry
tend to have frequent arches.
People of European
background have frequent
loops.
People of Asians/Oriental
ancestry tend to have a fairly
high frequency of whorls.
7
Fingerprints
Within these patterns are minutia points - about thirty different
types of minutiae points, and no two people have the same types
of minutiae in the same number in the same places on their
fingertips.
8
Loops
1 or more ridges entering from the side of the print,
recurving and exiting from the same side. Opens
toward little finger its ulnar and toward thumb it’s
radial.
Pattern area
surrounding
the loop is a
type line.
Delta
surrounded by
type lines. All
loops have at
least 1 delta.
9
Types of Arches and Whorls
Arches
Whorls
10
Forensic Fingerprints
11
Classification
Primary Classification:
– Henry (FBI) System - all prints fall into one
of 1024 groups
• Pair up fingers on hands
• Determine whorls (list numerically)
• 10 finger system
Automated Fingerprint Ident. Systems
– Uses automated scanning devices.
12
Similar Types
Lip Prints (glasses, cigarettes, napkins, etc.).
Ear Prints (windows, doors and walls).
13
Types of Prints
Latent Prints - invisible to the naked eye and
must be developed to see.
Visible Prints
Plastic Prints - impressions of fingerprints in
soft media (soap, wax, etc.)
Fingerprint in
putty common
in burglaries.
14
Visualizing Fingerprints
Most important method of detecting latent prints is to dust
using a fine powder that adheres to the traces of oil and
sweat.
– Aluminum dust, which is grey and highly visible on dark and
mirrored surfaces.
– Carbon black for white surfaces.
– Luminescent powders which fluoresce under ultraviolet
light.
– Magnetic Powders.
– Other Colors are available.
Dusting is suitable for hard and/or non-absorbent surfaces, for
porous surfaces like paper or cloth another approach is needed.
15
Dusting
Carbon, Metal, Magnetic Powders
On Styrofoam
16
Luminescence
Excitation of a molecule can happen in several ways including
absorption of light or as a result of a chemical reaction. An
excited molecule will lose energy with the electron falling back
down the energy staircase to the ground state. For some
molecules the excess energy is lost in the form of light, it is this
process that is known as luminescence.
17
Luminescence
A common application of luminescence is washing powder that
contains optical brightener. The optical brightener is a
fluorescent dye that shows a blue luminescence when excited by
the ultraviolet radiation present in sunlight.
Luminescence is used forensically to detect fingerprints, it also
found application in de-bunking the fake Hitler diaries.
18
Luminescence
Some components of sweat are luminescent and fluoresce when
illuminated with lasers. Also, fluorescent dyes can be employed that
do not require laser excitation.
19
Visualizing Fingerprints
Dusting is suitable for hard and/or non-absorbent surfaces
but for porous surfaces like paper or cloth chemical
treatments are employed.
– iodine fuming
– ninhydrin
– superglue fuming
20
Visualizing Prints
Iodine - Iodine sublimes at room temperature. If an
object is placed in a chamber with crystals of iodine
placed in it, any fingerprints on the object will appear as
brownish prints. The iodine is believed to dissolve in the
skin oils that make up the print (temporary and will
fade).
Superglue - Cyanoacrylate ester. When vapors come into
contact with fingerprints the molecules of the
cyanoacrylate attach to the print and polymerize. The
visible prints produced are white, but are often treated
with a fluorescent dye to improve visibility.
21
Ninhydrin Method
Colorless compound reacts with amino
acids in sweat to form a colored
compound.
R
NH2
O
C
COOO-
O
H
OH
N
OH
O
Ninhydrin
O
O
Ruhemann’s Purple
22
Preserving Prints
Photography (analog and digital
imaging)
Lifting with tape (or similar)
23
AFIS
Law enforcement agencies, such as the FBI and the Scotland Yard,
have built up vast collections of fingerprints.
A fingerprint is first classified and compared with filed prints to try
and establish a match, and therefore to identify a possible suspect.
This process has been automated using automated fingerprint
identification systems (AFIS).
24