What allows a crime scene photo to be admissible in court?
What is being fair, accurate and relevant.
What is the first step in crime scene investigation protocol?
What is approaching.
Is an interview accusatory or non-accusatory?
What is non-accusatory.
What is an eyewitness?
What is someone who was there to see what happened at a crime.
What is the ocularus region?
What is the eyes.
What is lens aperture?
What is what determines how wide the opening is that lets light in.
What do you look for when identifying a victim during a crime scene investigation?
What is ID, drag marks, discrepancies in mortis and body temperature.
What is one of the purposes of an interrogation?
What is to obtain an admission of guilt from the suspect.
What is observation?
What is using all five senses when studying something to gain information.
What is the oris region?
What is the mouth.
How many pictures should you get of a vehicle?
What is 21.
What is preserving in crime scene investigation protocol?
What is establishing perimeters, setting up command posts, determining the suspect's point of entry and engress + your own.
When are Miranda Rights not required?
What is when there's a concern for public safety or the person isn't in custody.
What is reconstruction?
What is rebuilding a crime scene as accurate as possible.
What is a cavity?
What are the elements of a good, technical photograph?
What is correctly exposed, maximum depth of field, accurate perspective and sharp focus.
What step is notifying next of kin in a crime scene investigation protocol?
What is step 6.
What's the difference between an admission and a confession?
What is an admission doesn't directly acknowledge guilt while a confession does.
What's the difference between individual and class evidence?
What's the difference between anterior and posterior view?
What is anterior is front view and posterior is back view.
How should up close photos be taken?
What is on a scale the same plane as the evidence, at 90 degrees, with oblique light and with a tripod.
What do photographers do in the processing step of a criminal investigation?
What is a cognitive interview used for?
What is to elicit information from witnesses and victims as opposed to obtaining confessions from suspects.
What is bindle?
What is where the evidence goes and gets packed and shipped off to the evidence lab.
Describe the Anatomical position.
What is hands at side, palms facing forward, feet together, front view and back view.