Returning to the Scene of the Crime
High definition surveying gives law
enforcement a whole new picture of a crime scene.
By: Lieutenant Raymond E. Foster, LAPD
(ret.), MPA
Its a given that criminals often return
to the scene of the crime, such as an arsonist or serial murderer returning to
the scene as a means to relive the crime. Its not only criminals that do so
detectives, prosecutors and juries also need to revisit the crime scene. For the
detective, it may be to re-examine the evidence; the prosecutor for case
preparation; and for a jury to assist members in making a decision.
Typically, investigators rely on
photographic evidence and two-dimensional (2D) drawings as a means to
re-evaluate crime scenes. The problem is we live in a three-dimensional (3D)
world and it can be difficult to visualize the positional relationships of
evidence with 2D tools.
What if agents could measure with extreme
accuracy thousands of data points per second in a crime scene? What if an agent
could capture that information, recall it and create his or her own virtual
representation for use during a trial?
Through a combination of laser and
computer technology, HDS creates a virtual crime scene that gives investigators
the ability to manipulate every piece of evidence in that crime scene.
Cloud of Information
Understanding evidence documented on a 2D
drawing of a staircase is difficult, said Derry Long of Plowman Craven &
Associates (PCA), a land surveying company based in the United Kingdom. If you
create a 3D staircase and cut-away, the relevance of evidence is often clear.
Long spent 12 years as a civilian employee
of Scotland Yard, where he designed police stations and developed computer
modeling. At PCA, he uses high definition surveying (HDS) to reengineer crime
scenes down to the sub-millimeter level. Although PCAs focus is working with
builders and developers, Long has created the first HDS call-out team in Europe
for criminal investigations.
His team, on-call 365 days a year,
responds to about 150 incidents each year including 20 major crime scenes in the
last year alone. Long has taken high technology from the surveying industry into
the arena of crime scene investigations, and he said the chief value of HDS is
that it produces evidence, not an interpretation of evidence
Many times, Long responds to a scene weeks
after the investigations are concluded at the actual crime scene. His job, then,
is to scan the scene and use the photographic documentation and crime scene
notes to reengineer the scene. Long recalled a recent homicide wherein it was
believed the murder actually occurred in the kitchen, but no one could determine
how the body ended up in a hallway.
By reengineering the crime scene,
investigators were able to examine different points of view and the positional
relationships of the evidence.
Now it made sense, the investigators were
able to see what had happened, said Long.
An HDS scanner can remotely emits
millions of eye-safe bursts of laser light over a 360 degree field of view said
Tony Grissim, Homeland Security & Law Enforcement Liaison for Leica Geosystems
HDS, Inc., based in San Ramon, Calif. The HDS is measuring millions of points,
creating a point cloud.
The laser light is reflected off objects
in the crime scene and back to a digital sensor on the HDS, Grissim explained,
and then 3D spatial coordinates of the objects are calculated and stored using
algebraic equations.
Think of letting off an old-style insect
bomb in your first apartment. Millions of particles create a fog, and the
resulting cloud settles on all of the objects in your apartment. With HDS,
instead of millions of data particles settling on the objects, those data points
are bounced back to the receiver, collected, converted and used to create a
virtual image of any location.
An average desktop personal computer can
now take the data file and project the location onto your screen. Not only has
the scene been preserved exactly, the perspective can be manipulated. For
instance, if the crime scene were the front room of an apartment, the 3D image
allows the investigator to move around and examine different points of view.
Or perhaps the victim was found seated. An
investigator could see and show a jury what the victim might have seen. If
witnesses outside said they looked in a living room window, an investigator
could zoom around and view what the witnesses could or could not have seen
through that window.
Keeping
the Scene Clean
A basic concept taught to first responders
is securing a crime scene so that the contamination of evidence is minimized.
Crime scene contamination can take on many
forms. It might be someone leaving additional trace evidence, such as touching
an object and leaving their fingerprints, someone inadvertently taking evidence
from the scene, perhaps picking up fibers on their shoes, or moving evidence.
The analysis of a scenes evidence helps
to tell the story of what happened, and if an item of evidence is moved or
disturbed from its resting place the analysis could be faulty.
National Crime & Operations Faculty
(NCOF) Special
Adviser Mark Harrison, MBE., talks about the golden hour,
the time after a crime has been committed during
which there is a maximum potential for the recovery of forensic evidence.
Harrison, an 18-year veteran of British policing
is on loan from the Bedfordshire Police to the NCOF, a national organization in
the UK that provides special services during complex investigations. He
commonly uses HDS technology as a stand off device: the HDS technology allows
him to approach the scene in stages, scanning from the outer perimeter and
moving into the heart of the scene.
The laser doesnt care if its day or
night, Harrison said. It captures the information and allows me to interrogate
the crime scene with my laptop before it has been disturbed.
In the past, the method of preserving
information about the evidence was photographic documentation and 2D drawings.
Later, not only could someone testify to the recovery of the evidence, they
might also provide expert interpretation. Drawings and photographs assist
investigators in the investigation and ultimately assist prosecutors in telling
the story to a jury.
In many cases, Harrison said, the value of
evidence is in its positional relationship.
It could be blood splatters, a firearm,
shell casings or any other pieces of physical evidence, he said.
Investigators often go to elaborate means
to reconstruct scenes. Unfortunately, no matter how good your photographer there
is always something else an investigator wants to know. Photographs and drawings
are helpful, but they are 2D. Moreover, photographs and drawings are the
technicians interpretation of the scene.
Long and Harrison agree that observer bias
always creeps into the photography and crime-scene drawing. If an HDS device is
used at the scene, detectives, prosecutors and juries can return to the scene of
the crime in its preserved state.
Matter of
Perspective
The investigative and prosecutorial value
of virtual crime scenes is evident. Being able to re-visit the scene and
demonstrate exactly where evidence was recovered and it relationship to other
evidence is stunning. Moreover, being able to show a jury exactly what a witness
could have or could not have seen can be very valuable.
Recently, Craig Fries, president and CEO
of Precision Simulations, said his company was asked to reengineer an
officer-involved shooting in the San Francisco area that had occurred on year
earlier.
There were more than 40 witnesses to the
incident, he said, and the scene itself was approximately 400 feet by 2,000
feet; an entire city block with businesses and apartments. Using HDS technology,
Fries scanned the scene, the involved vehicles (at the impound yard) and used
photographic evidence to reconstruct a virtual model of the incident that could
be examined from almost any point of view.
Once the plaintiff knew what we were able
to provide, they dropped the lawsuit, Fries said, adding that HDS technology is
beginning to be a tool used by both the defendant and plaintiff. If done well,
its very compelling to the jury.
HDS works equally well in a large rural
area. Harrison recalled a political execution in Ireland wherein the crime scene
was a large pasture. HDS technology allowed investigators to document the entire
scene in a relatively short period of time and was extraordinarily useful in
their investigation.
Long and Harrison also said UK agencies
have scanned vehicles, train crashes, river crossings, buildings and planes.
From the point-cloud data, investigators in the UK can develop 2D line drawings,
3D models, animations and interactive multimedia packages.
The system has training applications.
Currently, there are driving, pursuit and use-of-force simulators. Using HDS,
police officers could be taken into a virtual world to practice their skills.
With HDS, police officers also could be taken back to actual events and
debriefed on their own, or other police officers actions.
HDS technology has significant application
for tabletop exercise, and in addition to training, the technology has a
real-time application in tactical situations. Harrison explained that if there
were a hostage situation on an aircraft, a similar aircraft could be used to
create a virtual representation of the problem.
Within about two minutes you could scan
the interior of the second aircraft, upload the data and hand virtual goggles to
the tactical team, he said, and with that data, combined with other real-time
intelligence, the team could explore the interior of aircraft before taking
action.
In the UK, government agencies are
beginning to use HDS to document critical infrastructure as a means of
furthering emergency planning. It would be valuable for fire, emergency medical
or tactical teams to have access to virtual information about a building.
Imagine a tactical team being able to
virtually visit the inside of a school where children are being held hostage. As
with the aircraft scenario, the HDS could produce a virtual school and combined
with real-time information could give tactical teams an edge over the
hostage-takers.
For this to be effective, though, the HDS
scanning of critical structures must take place before the incident. As we go
forward in the 21st century, we will likely see this technology take
an important role in the criminal investigations, civil liability, training and
emergency preparedness.
About the Author:
Lieutenant Raymond E. Foster, LAPD (ret.)
is the author of Police Technology (Prentice Hall, July 2004) and numerous
articles about law enforcement and technology. Currently, he is working on
Homeland Security and the New Threats of Global Terrorism: From Cold War to
Flaming-Hot War (Prentice Hall, February 2007) with his co-authors Major
General Dror Itzhaki, Israeli Security Agency (ret), a senior Israeli expert on
security, protection, operations and prevention of criminal and terror acts;
and, Dr. Reuven Paz, Ph.D., an Israeli expert on militant and radical Islam and
Islamist movements.
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