NOTES PERTAINING TO EDITION AND BIBLIOGRAPHIC HISTORY
Text of Note
Third Edition
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles.1. Introduction -- Role of the crime scene investigator in Forensic Science -- Jobs and descriptions -- Certification and professional development -- Expert witnesses -- Ethics and professionalism -- Physical evidence and the crime scene -- Associate evidence -- Class versus individual characteristics -- Natural variation -- Legal issues and the crime scene -- Search warrants -- Admissibility of evidence -- Frye v. United States -- Federal rules of evidence -- Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. -- Chain of custody -- Documentation -- Scientific issues in crime scene investigation -- Controls -- Standards -- Overlapping roles
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Entry Element
، Criminal investigation
Entry Element
، Forensic sciences
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION
Class number
HV8073
.
F485
2014
PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY
Relator Code
AU
Entry Element
Jacqueline T. Fish, Larry S. Miller, Michael C. Braswell