an evidence would be inside of the house like how to fire started
Residual evidence at the scene of an extingguished fire tends to degrad very quickly due to the effect of both the fire and the extinguishing agents used.
Crime scene Management starts from the time an officer arrives at the original call to investigate. The responding officer (s) determine the status of the scene. The police officer will secure the area and make information available to other responding police, fire and emergency personnel including EMS. It is the responsibility of all units arriving on scene to report to police officers before disturbing evidence. In the absence of notification fire and EMS should not assume the scene is in fact secure and take precautions to protect themselves and possible evidence from harm. Crime scenes are put into several classifications. Closed access to unsecured crime scene: This means the scene is a possible threat and hazards still exist. Hostages, suspect(s) still on scene or environmental hazards are present. Limited access crime scene: This means vital evidence could be destroyed. Possible evidence critical to the investigation must be protected, there may be some threat to personnel and /or environmental hazards present. Officers on scene will direct entrance and/or escort fire and EMS. Lifesaving consideration will take presedence and EMS will confirm death on obvious suicide/homicide. Open access crime scene: Evidence still must be collected but all responders have access to the entire area. Care must still be taken not to disturb/ destroy or compromise evidence and must consult with officers before such action is taken. Cold scene: No evidence concerns or environmental hazards, this is often a return to a previously investigated scene.
First-hand evidence is evidence that comes from someone that witnessed/was apart of whatever the situation is. For example, if there was a fire in a building, and you were trying to figure out what caused it, you would interview those who were in the building around the time of the fire. That would be first-hand evidence. Second-hand evidence would be people who were outside at the time of the fire, or people who were not directly witnessing the event. It is more reliable because the people were right there, and have a personal account of what happened.
i really don't know what scene but it was henrey the VIII and a cannon was fired so any scene that would require war?
Fire Rescue Scene - 1894 was released on: USA: December 1894
nothing
That would be "Voldemort" composed by Patrick Doyle and can be found on the Original Score for "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire"
There is no evidence for or against this claim.
There is no evidence for or against this claim.
the smoke and ashes are evidence
Ash
test