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41. All About Fingerprints And Other Impressions By Katherine Ramsland
You are in criminal MIND/FORENSICS investigation For each person theprosecution used to build a case, the defense had ways to dispute him or her.
http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/forensics/fingerprints/2.html?sect=21

42. CRIJ 2314 Syllabus
Explain the purpose, role, and functions of a criminal investigation unit andinvestigator Discuss techniques used to investigate various crimes
http://www.midland.edu/~criminaljustice/CRIJ2314Syllabus.html
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION (CRIJ 2314)
Syllabus
SCH: 3 Lecture / Lab (Syllabus for Fall 2005) COURSE DESCRIPTION: Study of the investigative theory, the collection and preservation of evidence, sources of information, concepts of interviewing and interrogation, the use of forensic sciences, and trial preparation. Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to discuss the basic theories of investigation; relate the differences between interview and interrogation; discuss the various types of crime scene searches used by police; understand the proper criteria for writing an effective report; understand crime statistics as they relate to investigations; discuss the need for proper crime scene security; describe the concept of offender profiling; and have a basic understanding of the use of various types of evidence.
This course is designed to introduce the student to the unique aspects of criminal investigation, as distinguished from other areas of police service. Emphasis is placed on investigative techniques employed, identification of motives and modus operandi, and the use of informants. Gathering information through interviews and interrogation will be integral parts of the focus of the course, as well as the legal aspects of crime solving.
This course may transfer to four year colleges and universities offering degrees in criminal justice or related disciplines when offered under the CRIJ rubric. The acceptance and application of this course to a four year degree is determined by the receiving institution, not Midland College.

43. MIN OMAR: CONFERENCE - INTERNATIONAL FORENSIC INVESTIGATION CO-OP
The methods used to obtain the relevant information can be divided into Twentyfour (24) investigations, involving R1,7 milliard, were instituted.
http://www.info.gov.za/speeches/1997/060622897.htm
Home ADDRESS BY DR AM OMAR MP, MINISTER OF JUSTICE, AT THE KPMG INTERNATIONAL FORENSIC CONFERENCE ON INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATION IN INVESTIGATIONS, 8 MAY 1997 WELCOME Chairperson, distinguished guests and all visitors from beyond our shores, ladies and gentlemen. It is my privilege and with great pleasure to warmly greet and welcome all participants at this important international conference on behalf of the South African Government. I trust all will enjoy their stay in beautiful Cape Town. Your presence and participation is warmly appreciated and is in fact essential to make this conference a success. WORLD-WIDE CONCERN In many countries of the world, economic and organised crime, including drug trafficking and corruption, are on the increase. Criminal associations also tend to be organised like business enterprises and follow the same sophisticated patterns as legitimate business concerns. These crimes tend to have, by their very nature, international dimensions. As a result world leaders are increasingly giving high-level attention to combating such crimes. Today the extent of the criminal activities of crime syndicates constitute a real threat to building a society in which the peace, security and safety of all its peoples are secured.

44. Introduction To Crime Reconstruction
basis for confession and informant law, basis for conviction, Seldom used “The Signature Aspect in criminal Investigations”, Law and Order Magazine,
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/315/315lect03.htm
AN INTRODUCTION TO CRIME RECONSTRUCTION:
WITH A PRIMER ON LOGICAL REASONING Crime reconstruction (aka crime scene reconstruction) is a fairly new area of study that became popular in the 1990s which many people loosely associate with profiling, psychological autopsy, or equivocal death analysis. Certainly, there are similarities between the four methods, but there are important differences. Profiling , for example, has its origins in the 1974 creation of the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit (see lecture on History of Profiling ). Linkage analysis or signature analysis are subfields of profiling that have the closest ties to crime reconstruction. Psychological autopsy is a term first coined in 1977 by the Los Angeles Medical Examiner's Office to investigate suicide cases (Shneidman 1977). Equivocal death analysis (EDA), sometimes called equivocal death evaluation, is a term that first appeared during the 1989 USS Iowa incident in which Clayton Hartwig presumably blew himself up. Something is "equivocal" (as opposed to unequivocal, or certain) when conclusions lend themselves to different interpretations . Usually, the mode of death is equivocal (Ebert 1987), but Annon (1995) states it is when the manner of death is open to question.

45. HoustonChronicle.com - DNA Analysis Becoming More Precise, Pervasive
It is now the basis of a national criminal database and used by most of thecountry s more Two years later, it was first used to overturn a conviction,
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/special/crimelab/1819521
HoustonChronicle.com Pick a section Home Page Business Classifieds Columnists Comics Community Directory Entertainment Features Health Help Inside Story Marketplace Metropolitan Page 1 News Search Archives Site Map Space Sports Travel Weather
Section: HPD crime lab

Current stories in HPD crime lab:

46. Kruglick's Forensic Bibliography: DNA
A scientific overview of DNA and common DNA tests; Techniques used by uncover the vast and detailed underworkings of criminal investigation.
http://www.bioforensics.com/kruglaw/b_dna.htm
DNA Bibliographic References * Home Forensic Biblio Index (alpha) Biblio Index (area) Amazon = Click title to purchase online now Other Hyperlinks = To listed books, articles, or publishers...most are available online Ancient DNA:
Recovery and Analysis of Genetic Material from Paleontological,

Archaeological, Museum, Medical, and Forensic Specimens
Amazon
by Bernd Herrmann, Susanne Hummel (Editor)
Hardcover
Published by Springer Verlag
Publication date: November 1993 Synopsis : Interest in ancient DNA is growing very rapidly in fields as diverse as evolution, anthropology, medicine, agriculture, and even law enforcement. This is a valuable source of information, ideas, and protocols for everyone interested in this extraordinary field. 50 illustrations; 10 tables. This text refers to the paperback edition of this title. And the Blood Cried Out:
A Prosecutor's Spellbinding Account of the Power of DNA
Amazon
by Harlan Levy
Hardcover, 223 pages

47. 33. Criminal Investigation - Introduction (1 Hr.)
Coded messages are frequently used by the criminal elements. criminalinvestigation Interviewing Techniques (4 hrs.) Unit Goal 33.9.
http://www.tcleose.state.tx.us/GuideInst/HTML/1000/77leg/33-77.htm
Criminal Investigation - Introduction (1 hr.) Unit Goal: The student will have a working knowledge of the goals and objectives of criminal investigation. Define Criminal Investigation. Criminal Investigation is a lawful search for people, land, things useful in reconstructing the circumstances of an illegal act or omission and the mental state accompanying it. Criminal Investigation, Basic Perspectives, 5th ed., Weston Paul B. and Kenneth M. Wells, Prentice Hall, 1990, pg.1. Identify the tools of the criminal investigator. Information - The knowledge which the criminal investigator gathers from other persons. Interview/interrogation - The questioning of witnesses and suspects. Interview - The questioning of a person who has no personal reason to withhold information and therefore may be expected to cooperate with the investigator. Interrogation - The questioning of a suspect or other person who may normally be expected to be reluctant to divulge information concerning the offense under investigation. Instrumentation - The application of the instruments and methods of the physical sciences to the detection of crime.

48. HCRC Investigative Legal Caseworker (HC-2331)
Techniques, principles, and methods used in criminal defense investigations, -methodsand techniques of screening, evaluating, and preparing evidence and
http://www.craigslist.org/sfc/lgl/87050768.html
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49. Police Interrogation - Books, Journals, Articles @ The Questia Online Library
Subjects, criminal investigationLaws, regulations, etc., and otherquestionable methods used by the authorities in uncovering Communists in and out.
http://www.questia.com/search/police-interrogation
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Put exact phrases in quotes Search within Results by media type:
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Research Topics on: police interrogation List All Research Topics Police Interrogation
books on: police interrogation
- 6635 results More book Results: Law in Policing: Legal Regulation and Police Practices Book by David Dixon ; Clarendon Press, 1997 Subjects: Police QuestioningAustralia Police QuestioningGreat Britain PoliceGreat Britain ...attempts to change police practices through...to arrest and interrogation is revealing...processes of police investigation particularly interrogation , to trial and...encouraging police to rely less on interrogation in crime investigation...

50. Course Index: Criminal Justice
Components Lecture; CRIMLJUS 3130 3 credits criminal investigation The courseexamines the various analytical systems used in the evaluation of
http://www.uwplatt.edu/academics/catalogs/undergraduate/current/courses/crimljus
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CRIMLJUS 1130 3 credits Introduction to Criminal Justice
A survey of the administration of criminal justice, including the structural components of the criminal justice system and the stages of the criminal process from the detection of crime and arrest through prosecution, adjudication, sentencing, and correctional intervention; emphasis upon analysis of decisions and practices within the context of the entire criminal justice system. Components: Lecture GE: Social Science
CRIMLJUS 1330 3 credits Introduction to Crime Scene Investigation
This course delves into various types of technology, techniques and equipment used in crime laboratories, and various types of technology, techniques and equipment used by crime scene technicians at a crime scene. Course also provides an overview for the career of crime scene technicians. Components: Lecture
CRIMLJUS 2130 3 credits The Police Function
The roles and functions of police in a democratic society, including their responsibilities for peacekeeping, law enforcement and service; the police as part of the criminal justice system and as agents of municipal government; models and styles of police behavior. Components: Lecture Prereqs/Coreqs: P: CRIMJUS 1130 with a "C" or better
CRIMLJUS 2230 3 credits Correctional Philosophy
The theories, philosophies and practices of corrections; sentencing structures and their relationship to correctional objectives; the modes of correctional intervention.

51. WB HIDTA
specialized investigative techniques (such as financial or undercover investigation) and the criminal activity used by gangs to fund gang operations.
http://www.hidta.org/training/law_enforcement.asp
Training MakeSubmenu(window.fw_menu_5); Law Enforcement
Training Calendar Registering
To register for a course, contact Ruth Phillips , Training Coordinator, using one of the methods shown.
fax: Ruth Phillips 301-489-1660
Phone: 301-489-1751
Please submit your registration information promptly as the classes fill up rapidly. [ Registration Form
The Law Enforcement Program sponsors a number of training programs throughout the year to assist law enforcement personnel in the Washington/Baltimore region in developing and updating their investigative and analytical skills. Training is offered at basic and advanced levels on a wide range of topics, including:
  • specialized investigative techniques (such as financial or undercover investigation) interview and interrogation skills and issues related to drug trafficking investigations (for instance, Title 3 regulations or criminal street gangs).

52. Online Graduate, Undergraduate, And Certificate Programs - Aspen University
Visit the FAQ page to learn more about our course delivery methods. This coursepresents the fundamentals of criminal investigation and their
http://www.aspen.edu/criminaljustice/
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Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice
Degree Completion Program
Personnel trends in law enforcement over the past 15 years have stressed the importance of education in addition to time in service when considering candidates for promotion. In addition, candidates seeking entry into state police forces or federal law enforcement agencies are much more competitive if they possess a bachelor's degree. Aspen's Bachelor Degree Completion Program provides you with the critical and current knowledge needed in today's law enforcement community. Dramatically increase your potential (without setting foot on a campus) through our degree completion program. The objectives of the program are to provide students with the ability to:
  • Explain the scientific study of crime, criminals, the law-making process, the criminal justice system, and the treatment of offenders.

53. BRIA(13:3) Forensic Evidence, Romanovs, Courtroom, Trial, Reliable, Eyewitness,
In short, most witnesses and criminal investigators have the same goals. Psychologist GH Wells, an expert in methods used to secure eyewitness testimony
http://www.crf-usa.org/bria/bria133.html
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS FOUNDATION
Bill of Rights in Action
Summer 1997 (13:3)
Forensic Evidence
fo-ren-sic:
involving the application of scientific. . . knowledge to legal matters. —Webster's New World Dictionary
Advances in science and technology are invading the courtroom and even solving past mysteries. This edition of Bill of Rights in Action takes a look at several issues—past and present—involving forensic evidence. World History: The Riddle of the Romanovs U.S. Government: DNA, Lie Detector, and Voiceprint Evidence U.S. Government: How Reliable Are Eyewitnesses?
This issue of the Bill of Rights in Action is made possible by a generous grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation.
The Riddle of the Romanovs
In law and history there are many mysteries. Today, forensic science is helping courts and historians unravel new and old puzzles, among them the 80-year-old mystery of what happened to last tsar of Russia and his family. By the summer of 1918, Russia had erupted in civil war. On one side were the communist revolutionaries, called the Reds or Bolsheviks, who favored redistribution of wealth and worker control of government. They held the major cities, but in the countryside White armies were on the move. These forces opposed the revolutionary government, some favoring democracy and some the restoration of the monarch.

54. FBI: Criminal Cases - Economic Crimes Unit
DISCONNECT resulted in the indictment and conviction of 402 subjects, Investigators and prosecutors then used those recordings to prosecute the
http://www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/fc/ec/cases/criminalecu.htm
Operation Disconnect
Senior Sentinel

Double Barrel
Home
Operation Disconnect An essential feature of the undercover scenario centered around undercover FBI Agents visiting the owners of illegal telemarketing operations and representing themselves as salesmen of a company which leased a "one-of-a-kind" computerized automatic dialing system. This equipment was advertised by the undercover Agents as a method to dramatically reduce the telemarketer's operating costs and increase their incoming phone calls, thereby generating additional profits for the operation. The undercover scenario continued with the undercover Agents designing a recorded sales pitch that was customized for that particular telemarketing operation. In order to develop the "pitch," knowledge of the operation was essential. The owners and operators disclosed that they were in the business to defraud people. The recorded sales pitch, which was developed after interviews with the owners and operators, would be installed in the computerized dialing equipment and used to promote the telemarketer's operation. The undercover Agents arranged for a test of this customized recorded sales pitch in order to demonstrate its effectiveness. The test results were quite successful with a number of "consumers" purchasing the product.

55. Department Of Defense Polygraph Program: 2001 Report To Congress
It is used in criminal investigations, counterintelligence cases, This projectis designed to develop improved methods of evaluating physiological data
http://www.fas.org/sgp/othergov/polygraph/dod-2001.html
Department of Defense POLYGRAPH PROGRAM
ANNUAL POLYGRAPH REPORT TO CONGRESS Fiscal Year 2001
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense
(Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence) TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary
I DoD Use of Polygraph Examinations II Fiscal Year 2001 Counterintelligence-Scope Polygraph (CSP) Examinations CSP Refusals Specific CSP Examination Results Significant Information Developed III Utility of the Investigative Polygraph IV Training and Qualification Standards for Department of Defense Forensic Psychophysiologist (Polygraph Examiners) V Polygraph Research EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Department of Defense (DoD) uses the polygraph in criminal investigations, counterintelligence cases, foreign intelligence and counterintelligence operations, and for requests for exculpation. This report contains numerous examples of polygraph utility in resolving counterintelligence and security issues as well as criminal investigations. The polygraph is clearly one of our most effective investigative tools. The Department of Defense Polygraph Institute (DODPI) trains all federal polygraph examiners. The basic polygraph courses are taught at the Masters Degree level. The Institute also offers specialized courses in forensic psychophysiology through their continuing education program. In addition, DODPI conducts on-going evaluations of the validity of polygraph techniques used by federal examiners as well as research on new polygraph techniques, instrumentation, analytic methods, and polygraph countermeasures.

56. Policy 4060: Criminal History And Driver's Record Investigation
Policy 4060 criminal History and Driver s Record investigation The universitymay also select individuals for whom conviction histories will be checked
http://www.policies.vt.edu/4060.html
Policy 4060: Criminal History and Driver's Record Investigation
No. 4060
Subject: Criminal History and Driver's Record Investigation
Rev. 2
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Policy and Procedures
Date: July 20, 2000
1.0 Purpose
2.0 Policy

2.2 Criminal History Check
3.0 Procedures ...
6.0 Approval and Revisions
1.0 Purpose
In order to protect its interests and the well being of its students, staff, faculty, and the public, it is the policy of the university to conduct criminal conviction and/or driver's record checks on candidates selected for certain wage and salaried classified positions.
2.0 Policy
Conviction checks will be initiated for the following positions: individuals who will be employed in positions identified as security-sensitive; individuals identified through the employment process as having potentially job-related convictions; and individuals identified based on departmental needs and policy.
Positions that involve the operation of a motor vehicle or heavy equipment, or require the possession of a valid motor vehicle operator's license will require a driving record check. The provisions of this policy also apply to temporary wage positions that are exempted from the normal recruitment process. (See Policy 4032, Recruitment Guidelines for On- and Off-campus Wage and Salaried Classified Positions

57. Rape Of The Mind - Chapter 3
Actual knowledge of methods used in brainwashing and menticide proves that all more closely related to our subject, is that a criminal investigator can
http://www.ninehundred.net/control/mc-ch3.html
THE RAPE OF THE MIND The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing, by Joost A. M. Meerloo, M.D., Instructor in Psychiatry, Columbia University Lecturer in Social Psychology, New School for Social Research, Former Chief, Psychological Department, Netherlands Forces, published in 1956, World Publishing Company. (Out of Print) CHAPTER THREE - MEDICATION INTO SUBMISSION As we have already seen in the preceding chapters, it is not only the political and Pavlovian pressure that may drag down man's mind into servile submissiveness. There are many other human habits and actions which have a coercive influence. All kinds of rumrs have been circulatd telling how brainwashees, before surrendering to their inquisitor, have been poisoned with mysterious drugs. This chapter aimes to describe what medical techniques not only drugs can do to reach behind man's inner secrets. Actually the thought-control police no longer need drugs, though occasionally they have been used. I will touch upon another side to this problem as well, namely, our dangeorus social dependence on various drugs, the problem of addiction, making it easier for us to slip into the pattern of submissiveness. The alcoholic has no mental backbone any more when you give him his drink. The same is true for the chronic user of sedatives or other pills. The use of alcohol or drugs may result in a chemical dependency, weakening our stamina under exceptional circumstances. In the field of practical medicine, magic thinking is still rampant. Though we flatter ourselves that we are rational and logical in our choice of therapy, somewhere we know taht hidden feelings and unconscious motivations direct the prescribing hand. In spite of the therapeutic triumphs of the last fifty years [since 1900], the era of chemotherapy and antibiotics, let us not forget that the same means of medical victory can be used to defeat our purposes.

58. Annual Report 1996 - Chapter 1
1) There are several ways in which the criminal justice system can assist should target the investigation, prosecution and conviction of participants in
http://www.incb.org/incb/en/annual_report_1996_chapter1.html
@import url(/misc/incb_mozilla.css) all; English Login writeLabel('sitemap') writeLabel('search') writeLabel('home') Annual Report I. DRUG ABUSE AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM A. Challenges to criminal justice systems 1. The International Narcotics Control Board calls on all Governments, when determining their national drug control policies, to recognize the important contribution of criminal justice systems in preventing and controlling the illicit supply and consumption of drugs. There are several ways in which the criminal justice system can assist in the struggle against drug production, trafficking and abuse and drug-related crime. It is aimed at convicting and punishing the guilty, thereby deterring criminal conduct, as well as offering to the abuser an opportunity for treatment and rehabilitation. By making drug seizures, it reduces the quantity of illicit drugs in circulation, thus making it more difficult for users to obtain such drugs. Freezing and confiscating assets derived from drug trafficking not only deprive traffickers of the proceeds of their activities, but can also provide an additional source of revenue for law enforcement activities. 2. The Board notes that there has been a significant increase in the amount of opiates, amphetamines, other psychotropic substances and cocaine seized in recent years. Those seizures reflect the increased efforts and resources devoted by many States to fighting the growing problems of illicit trafficking and drug abuse. Since 1980, global seizures of opiates have increased more than fivefold and seizures of cocaine have increased over tenfold. There has also been an increased number of arrests and convictions of drug offenders, including illicit drug producers and traffickers and persons engaged in laundering drug-related proceeds. Although these developments are in part an indication of growth in the drug abuse problem, they are also an indication of better law enforcement and better training of law enforcement officers.

59. Criminal Justice S Crazy Cases - A Sampler From Punch And Jurists
he had used to obtain a conviction and death sentence at Thompson s trial . Prison cases have always been great barometers of our criminal justice
http://www.fedcrimlaw.com/visitors/crazyltd/ltdcrazy.html
A Sampler of Crazy Cases
A sampler of some recent cases from the Federal Courts that border on the crazy, the insane and the absurd
TABLE OF NO SENSE
Ineffective Counsel:
  • Patrasso v. Nelson, 121 F.3d 297 (7th Cir. 1997) This is one of those classic, but awful, examples of how difficult it can be to establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. In this case, the Seventh Circuit refused to vacate a defendant's conviction for attempted murder even though it acknowledged that his counsel's performance was "below professional norms." That conclusion was based on findings that the attorney "barely spoke with his client and performed no investigation; he had no information [about the case] and so he could not have reasonably considered his available strategies."
    Tippins v. Walker, 77 F.3d 682 (2nd Cir. 1996)
    - A case that shows how difficult it is to prove that a defense counsel was ineffective - even when he has slept through most of the proceedings.
    Lane v. Richards, 957 F.2d 363 (7th Cir. 1992)

60. Underwater Criminal Investigation (crimescenedivers.org)
Underwater criminal investigation Worldwide underwater criminal In mostcases, a TECHNICAL SCUBA diver will need to be used to complete this task.
http://www.crimescenedivers.org/
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Online Course Application This web site is dedicated to the professional and courageous volunteer divers who enter the dark, inhospitable and sometime frigid waters in search of victims, weapons, vehicles and other evidence in furtherance of an investigation. Often their dedication, efforts, and advice go unnoticed or are ignored. These divers are instrumental in the recovery of evidence that otherwise would not be available to the investigator. Their successes were known only to a few, until now. Expand your knowledge and training with chosen professionals in the Public Service Dive Industry. The Instructors are certified educators, well trained, highly experienced, and extremely qualified. They are currently active in the field of Law Enforcement, Rescue, Search and Recovery. Teaching clear, descriptive, step by step procedures, techniques, principles and operational procedures for specific search and recovery operations. Teaching is the process that provides specific tasks and related skills to be applied to the occupation.

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