CHAPTER ONE
BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
1.1 INTRODUCTION
The
ancient Greeks and Romans were the first to practice forensic science. The
system of criminal adjudication in ancient Roman societies consisted of the
presentation of cases before a group of persons in the forum. Both parties were
allowed to say their side of the story, after which the outcome of the case was
determined based on the best argument. Despite the beliefs of forensics being
used in ancient times, the concept of using science to combat crime did not
develop until the late Middle Ages, particularly, during the frequency of human
poisonings across Europe. This led to the practice where corpses were analyzed
to check for toxic substances in the 19th century. 1 At some point, it became
necessary to document the identity of offenders in order to identify repeat
offenders. The first attempt to document the identities of offenders was called
Anthropometry. It consisted of measuring and documenting the body (fingers,
ears, head, legs, etc.) of the offender. However, due to similar
characteristics and measurement errors, this was found to be unreliable and was
replaced by Dactylography; the use of fingerprints for identification due to
the uniqueness of finger prints, even in identical twins. In 1892, Francis
Galton propounded upon calculation, that the chances of identical prints were 1
in 64 billion.2 This method has been extremely successful and is still used
today. The next major advancement occurred in 1980 when scientists became able
to decode human deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). DNA is till date, a reliable way
to link a suspect with a crime scene and also to identify human remains. The
role of science in the criminal justice system increases daily. Evidence can be
linked to its source through forensic science.
The
term “forensic science” encompasses a wide range of disciplines, and each
discipline with its own different practices. These disciplines present wide
variability in regard to techniques and methodologies. Some of the disciplines
are laboratory based (drug analysis, and toxicology), while other disciplines
are based on interpretation of observed patterns by the experts (fingermarks,
writings, tool marks). Some of the activities requires the expertise of people
trained as scientists in analyzing them (chemists or biologists); also there
other activities are conducted by both people trained in law enforcement and
scientists (blood spatter experts, crime scene investigators, crime
reconstruction experts), medicine (forensic pathologists), or laboratory
methodologies by lab technologists. Empirical application of science is the
main process that forensic scientists use. The main aim of forensic science is
to gather intelligence and enable the judge in making decisions in court by
means of a scientific approach through evaluation of evidence (Cardinetti and
Cammarota, 2005:80).
Crime
scene investigation is traced as far as 1750. It is in that year that Henry
Fielding created a small group of volunteers in London, referred as the “Bow
Street Runners”. These volunteers hurried to scenes of reported crimes and
began investigations, thus becoming the first modern crime scene detectives
(Swanson et al., 2003:4). Crime scene investigation, as it is known today,
dates back to the 17th century in China, where a Chinese team of investigators
evaluated crime scenes, examined physical evidence and interviewed witnesses
and suspects (Owen, 2000:13). However, it was only during the 1970s that crime
scene investigation gained popularity. In the 1970s many court decisions
severely constrained investigators in their use of traditional interrogation
techniques, and both scientists and investigators had to search for alternative
sources to provide them with information. During these new developments
investigators realised that the crime scene contains a tremendous amount of
information. As a result, investigations today rely greatly on crime scene
experts to gather clues and evidence to prove the crime and the suspect‟s
involvement (Lee et al., 2001:20).
TOPIC: AN EVALUATION OF THE CHALLENGES OF FORENSIC INVESTIGATION AND UNSOLVED MURDERS IN NIGERIA
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Chapters: 1 - 5, Abstract, References
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Number of Pages: 90
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