This word refers to the application of scientific knowledge to legal questions.
What is forensics?
In what year was the Federal Bureau of Investigation founded?
What is 1905?
Who are the first responders who typically separate witnesses and rope of a crime scene?
Who are the police?
The innocence project's main goal is to do what to the wrongly convicted?
What is Exonerate?
True or False, Identical twins have the same fingerprint?
What is False?
According to the Innocence Project, most faulty convictions were based on what?
What is faulty eye witness testimony?
In what year was DNA profiling first used?
What element causes luminol to emit a blue light?
What is Iron?
In what country was the oldest DNA evidence found?
Where is Siberia?
True or False, do all people have fingerprints?
What is False?
This part of the human brain controls memory and notably shares its name with a creature from Greek Mythology.
What is the hippocampus?
Who invented the "Breathalyzer" for sobriety tests? (last name)
Who is Borkenstein?
What piece of crime scene data is responsible for identifying 93% of all remains?
What is the condition in which a person has 2 or more DNA Profiles?
What is a Chimera?
What is the study of ridge patterns of the skin?
What is Dermatoglyphics?
This word has multiple meanings, one of which is "to fill in the gaps in memory by fabrication"
What is confabulation?
This professor of criminal law published the first comprehensive description of uses of physical evidence in solving crime. (last name)
Who is Gross?
What are the 4 types of fibers in the world? (in alphabetical order)
What are Animal, Manmade, Mineral, and Vegetable?
Who published the first text on bloodstain patterns in 1895? (last name)
Who is Piotrowski?
What animal has fingerprints that are almost indistinguishable from that of a human?
What is a Koala?