Lec 4 - Part 1 Identification & DNA Fingerprinting
Lec 4 - Part 1 Identification & DNA Fingerprinting
Lec 4 - Part 1 Identification & DNA Fingerprinting
Identification and
DNA
Fingerprinting
Atty Molly Cr Abiog, MD
College of Law
University of the Cordilleras
Identification
IDENTIFICATION
Determination of the individuality of a
person or a thing
Importance:
In the prosecution of a criminal offense, the
identity of the offender and that of the
victim must be established
Otherwise it will be a ground for the
dismissal of the case or the acquittal of the
accused
Importance of
Identification
Identification of a person missing
or presumed dead will facilitate
Settlement of the f
Estate
Retirement
Insurance and
Other social benefits
Importance of
Identification
If the identity cannot be established,
then the law on presumption of
death (Art. 390, Civil Code) must be
applied which requires the lapse of
seven years before a person can be
presumed dead
In special instances, the seven years
period may be reduced to four years
(Art. 391, Civil Code)
Importance of
Identification
Identification resolves the
anxiety of the next-of-kin, other
relatives and friends as to the
whereabouts of a missing
person or victim of calamity or
criminal act
Importance of
Identification
Encashment of check
Entering a premise
Delivery of parcels of registered mail
in post office
Sale of property
Release of dead bodies to relatives
Parties to contract, etc.
Rules in Personal
Identification
Laws of Multiplicity of Evidence in
Identification
Value of the different points of
identification varies in the
formulation of a conclusion
Fingerprints
Visual recognition
Rules in Personal
Identification
The longer interval between
death and examination of
the remains for purposes of
identification, the greater
need for experts in
establishing identity
Methods of Identification
By comparison
Identification criteria recovered during
investigation is compared to records
available in the file or
Postmortem findings are compared
with antemortem records, eg
Latent fingerprints recovered from the
crime scene are compared with the
fingerprints on file of an investigating
agency
Methods of Identification
Dental findings on the skeletal remains
are compared with the dental records of
the person in possession of the dentist
By exclusion
If two or more persons have to be
identified and all but one is not yet
identified, then the one whose
identity has not been established
may be known by the process of
elimination
IDENTIFICATION OF PERSONS
(Outline)
I. Ordinary Methods of Identification
A. Points of Identification Applicable to
Living Person Only
1) Characteristics which may easily be changed
2) Characteristics that may not easily be
changed
Ordinary Methods of
Identification
Characteristics which may easily be
changed:
Growth of hair, beard and mustache
Clothing
Frequent place of visit
Grade of profession
Body ornamentations
Mental memory
Speech
Gait patterns
Mannerism stereotype movements or
habits peculiar to an individual
Hands and feet
Complexion
Changes in the eyes
Facies
Left or right handedness
Degree of Nutrition
color of skin
features of face
features of skull
wearing apparel
1. Occupational Marks
Shoemaker depressed sternum
Painters stains of hands & fingernails
Engineers & Mechanics grease on hands &
nails
Baker & Miller flour dust on clothing & body
Mason callosities on the palms of the hands
Blacksmith scars from burns at the back of
hands
Miner tattoo on the hand
Dyer, photographic developer, printer
chemical stain of the hands
2. Race Differences
Race
Color
of
skin
Caucasia
n
Malayan
Mongolia
n
Negro
Fair
Brown
Fair
Black
Feature of face
Prominent sharp
nose
Flat nose, round
face
Almond eyes,
Thick lips,
prominent eyes
Shape of the
skull
Elongated
skull
Round head
Round head
Flat head
3. Stature
Growth most active from 5 7 and from 13 16
yrs
Growth of person rarely exceeds 5.0 cm after
age 18 yrs
Person ceases to grow in height after age 25 yrs
When rate of growth is increased, horizontal
growth is reduced
Shrinkage of height
Old age
Osteoporosis
Long standing debilitating disease
4. Tattoo Marks
Tattoo marks-- introduction of
coloring pigments in the layers
of the skin by multiple puncture
Importance
Helps in identifying a person
Indicates memorable events in his life
Indicate the social stratum to which the
person belong.
Implies previous commitment in previous
or membership in a criminal gang
Art of Tattooing
Dracula Tattoo
Grimm workpiece
German Creola
Ironstat tattoo
10. Scar
Scar - Remaining mark after
healing of wounds
Characteristics of the scar may show
the cause of the previous lesion:
Surgical operation: regular form and
situation of stitch marks
Burns ands scald- scars are large,
irregular in shape, and may lead to keloids.
Scar of scald may show stippled surface
Gunshot wounds- depressed are center
and may be adherent to the underlying
tissue
ANTHROPOMETRY (Bertillon
System)
Anthropometrical measurement of
the human body as the basis of
identification
Basis:
Human skeleton is unchangeable after
the twentieth year
Impossible to find two human beings
having bones exactly alike
Necessary can easily be taken with the
aid of a simple instrument
ANTHROPOMETRY (Bertillon
System)
Information included in the Bertillon
System
Descriptive data color of hair, eyes,
skin . . .
Body marks moles, scar, tattoo
Anthropometric measurements
Body measurements height, width, sitting
height
Measurement of head
Measurement of the limbs
ANTHROPOMETRY
PORTRAIT PARLE- (Spoken
Picture)
a verbal, accurate and picturesque
description of the person identified
ANTHROPOMETRY
ROGUES GALLERY or PHOTOGRAPHIC
FILES marked files wherein the picture of a suspect is
compared with the cartographic sketch
EXTRINSIC FACTORS IN IDENTIFICATION:
Ornamentations
Personal belongings
Wearing apparel
Foreign bodies
Identification by close relatives
Identification records on file at the police
department, immigration bureau, hospitals, etc.
Identification photograph
LIGHT AS A FACTOR IN
IDENTIFICATION
LIGHT AS A FACTOR IN
IDENTIFICATION:
LIGHT AS A FACTOR IN
IDENTIFICATION:
3. Flash of firearms
By experiment, letters 2 inches high can be
read with the aid of the flash of caliber .22
firearms at a distance of two feet
BUT it is hardly possible for a witness to
see the assailant in case of a hold-up or a
murder because:
Usually the assailant is hidden
Assault is unexpected and attention of witness is
at its minimum
LIGHT AS A FACTOR IN
IDENTIFICATION:
4. Flash of lightning
Produces sufficient light for the
identification of an individual provided that
the persons eye is focused towards the
individual he wishes to identify during the
flash
5. Artificial light
Identity is relative to the kind and intensity
of the light
Experiments maybe made for every
particular artificial light concerned
A. FINGERPRINTING
Most valuable method of
identification; universally used
because:
There are NO two (2) identical
fingerprints
Fingerprints are not changeable
Uses of Fingerprints:
1.
2.
3.
4.
A. Fingerprinting
Dactylography
Art and study of recording fingerprint as a means
of identification
Dactyloscopy
Art of identification by comparison of fingerprints
Study and utilization of fingerprints
Poroscopy
Type study of identification of the pores found on
the papillary or friction ridges of the skin for
purposes of identification
aka Locards Method of Identification
Methods of Producing
Impressions (Fingerprints)
Plain method
Rolled method
Kinds:
Real Impressions
Chance Impressions
Plastic print
Printed on paraffin, putty, resin, cellophane,
plastic, tape, butter, soap, and etch
Latent print
Prints that are not visible after impression but
made visible by the addition of some substances
B. Dental Identification
Important in the following reasons
1. The possibility of two (2) persons to have
the same dentition is quite remote. Why?
32 teeth (Adult) have five (5) surfaces
Some of the teeth may be missing, carious, with
filling materials, and with abnormality in shape
and other peculiarities
Dental Identification
3. After the death, the greater the degree
of the tissue destruction, the greater is
the importance of dental
characteristics as means of
identification
4. The more recent the ante-mortem
records of the person to be identified,
the more reliable is the comparative or
exclusionary mode of identification
that can be done
C. Handwriting
A person may be identified
through:
Handwriting
Handprinting
Handnumbering
Handwriting
Bibliotics
Science of writing analysis
Study of documents & writing materials to
determine its genuineness and authorship
Experts on this is called bibliotist, handwriting
expert or qualified question document
examiner
Graphology
Study of handwriting for the purpose of
determining the writers personality, character
and aptitude
Handwriting
Handwriting- is a complex interaction
of nerves, memory and muscular
movement. It is influenced by several
factors and may be changed or modified
during the life-span of a person
Points to be Considered In
Questioned Document Examination
Size
Slant
Spacing
Proportion of the letters
Speed & Rhythm in writing
Shading & change in position in pen hold
Pressure
Penlift
Initial & Terminal strokes
Alignment
Requested standard
Assignment
Please read & review pp.71-73 of
your book, Legal Medicine by Solis,
1988 ed.:
Handwriting Characteristics of
Illiterates
Old Aged Persons and
Disguised Writing
Signature Forgery
Most common activity of a questioned
document examiner
A signature may be found on a document
which appears that a person has
participated in its execution and the person
denied that he had signed it
Such signature may be found in checks,
deeds of conveyance, anonymous letters,
receipts, etc.
Classification of Signature
Forgery
1. Traced forgery Outlining of a genuine signature from
one document onto another where
the forger wishes it to appear
Traced forgery is basically drawing
and consequently lacks free natural
movement inherent in a persons
normal writing
Classification of Signature
Forgery
2. Simulated forgery
- An attempt to copy in a freehand
manner the characteristics of a
genuine signature either from memory
of the signature of from a model
3. Spurious forgery
- Forgers own handwriting wherein
little or no attempt has been made to
copy the characteristics of the genuine
writing
D. IDENTIFICATION OF
SKELETON
In the identification of bones, the
following points should be determined
approximately:
1. Whether remains are of human origin or
not
2. Whether remains belong to a single person
or not
3. Height
4. Sex
5. Race
D. IDENTIFICATION OF
SKELETON
In the identification of bones, the
following points should be determined
approximately:
6. Age
7. Length of interment or length of time from
date of death
8. Presence or absence of anti-mortem or postmortem bone injuries
9. Congenial deformities and acquired injuries
in the hard tissues causing permanent
deformities
E. DETERMINATION OF SEX
Legal importance of determination
of Sex Determination
As an aid in identification
To determine whether an individual can
exercise certain obligations vested by law on
one sex only
Marriage or the union of a man and a woman
Rights granted by law are different to
different sexes
There are certain crimes wherein a specific
sex can only be the offender or victim
Sex Determination
How to determine sex:
Social tests
Genital tests
Gonadal tests
Chromosomal test
Sex Determination
Problems in Sex Determination
Gonadal agenesis- testes or ovaries
have never developed
True hermaphrodism- A state of
bisexuality. The gonads of both sexes
are present which may be separated
or combined as ovotestis
Evidences of Sex
Presumptive Evidences
Highly Probable Evidences of Sex
Conclusive Evidences of Sex
Evidences of Sex
Presumptive Evidences
General features & Contour of face
+/- of hair in some parts of body
Length of the scalp hair
Clothes & apparel, but not in
transvestite
Figure coke, plum
Habit or inclination
Voice & manner of speech
Evidences of Sex
Highly Probable Evidences of Sex
Possession of vagina, uterus or penis
Developed, large breasts in female
Muscular development & distribution
of fats
F. DETERMINATION OF AGE
Legal importance of
Determination of Age:
As an aid to identification
Determination of criminal liability
Determination of right of suffrage
Determination of exercise of civil rights
Determine the capacity to contract
marriage
As a requisite to certain crimes- rape,
infanticide, seduction (qualified, simple),
consented abduction
Rape
Infanticide
Parricide
Seductions
Qualified vs Simple
Consented abduction
Process of Blood
Examination:
1. Determine whether the stain is due to blood
2. If due to blood, determine whether it is of
human origin or not. (Precipitin test)
3. If it is of human origin, to what group does it
belong?
(A, B, AB, O)
4. Does it belong to the person in question?
5. The manner, degree and condition of the
article,
which have been stained;
6. Age of stain
Height vs Age
Height vs Age
Skeleton Identification
Sex Determination
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Blood Types
EEG Tracings
EEG Recording
Medico-legal Documentation
Medico-legal Documentation
Lightning Victim