The value that a forensic light
source will bring to your department will be measured by
the significant increase in the number of suspects apprehended
and successfully prosecuted.
What is
a Forensic Light Source?
A forensic light source is a crime scene investigator’s
and lab technician’s tool for enhancing observation, photography
and collection of evidence including latent fingerprints,
body fluids, hair and fibres, bruises, bite marks, wound
patterns, shoe and foot imprints, gun shot residues, drug
traces, questioned documents, bone fragment detection, etc..
It provides more sensitivity than traditional methods thus
increasing the amount of evidence uncovered and the quality
of the evidence photographed and collected.
A forensic light source is made up
of a powerful lamp containing the ultra-violet, visible
and infrared components of light. It then filters down the
light into individual color bands (wavelengths) that enhance
the visualization of evidence by light interaction techniques
including fluorescence (evidence glows), absorption (evidence
darkens), and oblique lighting (small particle evidence
revealed).
Utilizing forensic
light source techniques allows the latent print to be detected
with much more sensitivity (10-100 times more!) than the
conventional method of black powder dusting and lifting.
Latent
Fingerprint Detection
The
primary application of a forensic light source is for enhancing
the detection of latent fingerprints. The use of fluorescent
enhancement processes that compliment a light source greatly
increases the types of surfaces from which a latent fingerprint
can be detected. Consider the difficulties of dusting and
lifting a print off of the following surfaces: thin plastic
bags, rigid duct tape, thin aluminum foil, heavily grained
wood, concrete wall, brick, printed glossy magazine pages,
paper products, etc. Using traditional methods, fingerprint
evidence on these and other types of surfaces may go undetected
or even dismissed because they could not be detected with
enough detail. Forensic light source techniques have been
successfully utilized for revealing latent prints on these
and many other types of textured surfaces, backgrounds which
mask ridge detail, fragile surfaces, and contaminated surfaces.
Different color bands (wavelengths) are required for processing
different types of surfaces making a forensic light source
with tunable or multiple color bands (wavelengths) a coveted
tool for any crime scene investigator. In many cases the
background surface will also glow under light source illumination.
In these cases it is necessary to tune to a color band (wavelength)
of light that causes the print to glow and not the background.
The quality and quantity of evidence revealed is proportional
to the output power and the extent of color tunability of
the light source. This ability is exclusive to a forensic
light source, UV lights or Blue lights cannot offer this
selectivity due to their limited number of color bands (wavelengths)
and low power.
Since fluorescent techniques are very
sensitive, only trace amounts of fluorescent powder are
required when dusting for prints at a crime scene. It therefore
leaves the scene much cleaner than when using black powder.
Body Fluids
Since
body fluids like semen, saliva, and vaginal fluids are naturally
fluorescent, the use of a light source offers a unique method
for locating them. A crime scene investigator can narrow
down the specific locations of stains for collection instead
of testing entire, large pieces of evidence such as a mattress,
a carpet, a sheet, an article of clothing, etc.. The dried
body fluids will actually glow under the light source illumination.
Although the body fluids will fluoresce under an ordinary
UV black light, many articles on which you would find them
including clothing and sheets will also glow and deter their
detection. It is therefore necessary to tune to visible
color bands (wavelengths) to eliminate the background interference.
Considering you will be searching for body fluids on high
profile, capital crime cases, the more body fluid evidence
you can reveal the better. Again, the more powerful and
more tunable your light source, the more evidence you will
uncover. Although blood does not glow in the visible range,
it has a unique color band (wavelength) under which the
blood stain will darken to enhance its contrast by approximately
4 times. This is most effective in photographing blood prints
because more of the detail of the blood print will be revealed
by the enhanced contrast.
Many background surfaces glow under
UV light and therefore a simple UV Black light will not
yield the quality and the quantity of evidence that can
be achieved with a tunable or multiple color band forensic
light source.
Hair &
Fibres
Two light illumination methods can
be employed to locate hair and fibres with a forensic light
source. First, oblique or parallel lighting of a surface
such as a floor or carpet with a strong white light (the
more powerful the better) will reveal small particles like
hair and fibres for collection. Second, some hair and fibres
will also glow under UV or visible light and will stand
out strongly for collection. For the best chance of collecting
the maximum number of hair and fibres at the crime scene,
you need a powerful light source that offers strong White
light illumination as well as strong UV and visible color
bands (wavelengths); all of which are available only in
a forensic light source.
A blue filtered flash light is limited
by a single blue color band and even more severely by the
limited power output of a flash light.
Bruises
/ Bite Marks / Pattern Wounds
A
tunable or multiple color band (wavelength) forensic light
source reveal bruise and patterned wound details that are
invisible under normal white light illumination. Details
of a bruise pattern in a suspects palm can link a suspect
to a weapon. Furthermore, details of a bruise on a victim,
for instance, a bite mark or a shoe mark, can link a suspect
to the victim. Multiple color bands (wavelengths) are necessary
because different colors penetrate to different depths within
the skin and therefore depending on the depth of the bruise
or wound you will need to vary the color band (wavelength)
of the instrument. Deep wounds may require infrared illumination
to get enough skin penetration.
Only a forensic
light source gives you the versatility of UV, visible, and
IR color bands for enhancing bruise or wound pattern detail.
Questiond
Documents
Inks
have different formulations, even within the same apparent
color type. A tunable forensic light source can be used
to identify slight variations in ink type by viewing ink
responses as the color of the light is tuned through the
visible and infrared regions. Regardless of the skill of
the forger, this examination would reveal that 2 different
pens were used on the document.
Why choose
a SPEX CrimeScope Forensic Light Source?
The SPEX Mini-CrimeScope 400 multiple
color band (wavelength) forensic light source and the SPEX
CrimeScope CS-16 tunable forensic light source offer the
following advantages over other available forensic light
sources:
More Power:
Both units offer considerably more power output than even
the nearest competitor. The difference is visibly apparent
and the advantage is clearly evident in the ability to look
at fainter evidence with our units. The reason for the greater
power is design. Both units take advantage of the latest
in Liquid Light Guide technology as well as incorporate
the highest quality optics.
More Color
Bands: Both units offer more color bands (wavelengths)
than their competitors. The Mini-CrimeScope 400 offers wavelengths
in multiples of 6 (6, 12, 18, etc.) with field interchangeable
6 position filter wheels. The CrimeScope CS-16 incorporates
24 wavelengths for the UV, Visible and the IR, our nearest
competitor offers only 12 wavelengths. The CrimeScope also
offers 15 positions for continuous tunability, more than
any other light source giving the highest overall intensity
throughout the spectrum.
More User
Friendly: The CrimeScope line of forensic slight
sources are the only units that offer true ONE HAND OPERATION
of color band (wavelength) selection; the Mini-CrimeScope
400 with its patented 6 position thumbwheel at the working
end of the light guide, and the CrimeScope CS-16 with its
automated remote control at the working end of the light
guide. These are the only units on the market which truly
allow you to take advantage of the 2 meter light guides
while processing hard to reach areas like the insides of
vehicles. Additionally, ONE HAND OPERATION of the light
source allows the other hand the opportunity to dust or
collect for evidence.
Fully
Upgradeable: The CrimeScope line of forensic light
sources have the ability to be upgraded at any time in the
future. If a new application was developed for the light
sources, filters can be added to both units to cover that
new application. This upgradeability is cost effective,
as you only need to purchase today what wavelengths you
need and can afford, upgrades allow you to spread the cost
of the unit over multiple budgets.
Application
Targeted Design: The CrimeScope line was not designed
overnight. It evolved from a testbed to a commercial product,
to 2 distinct classes of light sources, and then finally
to the State of the Art forensic instruments you see today.
Each step of the way the designers worked with professionals
in the forensics field from the federal, state, and local
levels to find out what the community needed and wanted.
The resulting CrimeScopes are the most versatile, most rugged
and easiest to use of any light sources ever available.
Because of their performance, SPEX has the most loyal users
in the field, returning to us for more units when they expand
their departments capabilities.
We are confident the Mini-CrimeScope
400 and the CrimeScope
CS-16 are the best forensic light sources available,
so sure that we encourage side by side demonstrations and
trials with our competitor's units.