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Heat and magnified fibers
f*** i dont know
The answer is in your question: contamination. To contaminate something is to adulterate it, to ruin it. In this case, it is the evidence that is ruined. Contaminating a crime scene is essentially making a difficult job performed by an often less than qualified group of people far more difficult than it should be or needs to be. It seriously reduces the potential to secure a conviction of whomever committed the crime at that scene. That, and you could be criminally charged with a variety of misdemeanor and/or felony complaints.
Forensic science
Luminol
Anything found at a crime scene is considered evidence.
Physical
Blood evidence is most often found at crime scenes involving violent crimes such as homicides, assaults, and stabbings. It can also be found in cases of accidents, suicides, or medical emergencies where there is significant bleeding.
So vague as to be unusable for evidence.
A crime scene investigator is responsible for collecting and analyzing physical evidence at a crime scene, while a detective is responsible for investigating crimes, gathering information, interviewing witnesses and suspects, and solving cases. Essentially, a crime scene investigator focuses on the physical evidence aspect, while a detective handles the overall investigation.
He or she analizes the evidence found at a crime scene and tests blood fingerprints and stuff like that
It could be evidence.
Yes, there can be more than one crime scene associated with a single crime. Different locations may be involved in the commission of a crime, such as where evidence is found or where different parts of the criminal act occurred. Each crime scene may provide valuable information for investigators in piecing together the sequence of events.
A crime scene investigation involves securing and documenting the scene, collecting physical evidence such as fingerprints or DNA samples, photographing and sketching the scene, and interviewing witnesses. Forensic analysis of the evidence collected is also a key component in determining what happened at the crime scene.
Who committed the crime is usually unknown in a crime scene and has to be proven with evidence.
The division of a police department that is in charge of searching a crime scene are a specially trained group of officers called crime scene investigators, or CSI's. These officers are specially trained to collect evidence at crimes scenes, and to process this evidence.
there is lots of evidence at a crime scene, for instance fingerprints, hair,if it was a burglary what was actually took or what might be left behind, if it was a murder, the weapon or some blood