Hair, fingerprints, and shoeprints.
Crime scene investigators begin by having the scene of the crime secured. They must then take photographs of the crime scene, take notes on important pieces of information (such as posistion of a victim, presence of bruises or swelling), and identify items that need further testing in the lab. A crucial part of processing a scene is ensuring that evidence is not altered or contaminated. Failure to do so could result in all evidence being discarded.
A crime scene investigator analyzes evidence from a crime scene. A detective does show up to the crime scene. They just cant touch evidence.
"When it comes to a crime scene investigation, the events that take place are recognition of the crime scene, documentation of the scene, finding of the evidence, collection of the evidence, and finally analyzing all of the evidence collected."
CSI (Crime Scene Investigation) agents take pieces of evidence from a crime scene (anything from clothes and undergarments or pictures to various weapons) and subject them to a variety of chemical, physical and analytical tests to see know the who's, what's, where's and why's of that crime scene.
Who committed the crime is usually unknown in a crime scene and has to be proven with evidence.
To provide an aspect of spacial relativity to a piece or pieces of evidence. This allows for a more accurate recreation of a crime scene at trial
It could be evidence.
Anything found at a crime scene is considered evidence.
Macroscopic scene - the "large view" of a crime scene, including things such as locations, the victim's body, cars, and buildings. Microscopic scene - a crime scene viewed in terms of specific objects and pieces of evidence associated with the crime, such as knives, guns, hairs, fibers, and biological fluids.
The crime scene technician is the individuals whom do the investigative work. First, they collect the evidence. Then they evaluate what each piece is. Last they determine how all of the pieces fit to the crime.
To prove speculations and theories.
It refers to the collection and documentation of all evidence at a crime scene