I'm sure somebody can give a more detailed answer, but yes.
What isn't real is the amount of time spent at each crime scene. The CSI series shows high-profile cases with highly funded departments. To make the shows more interesting, they actually follow the case from the crime through the capture of the criminal and/or the solving of the case. In reality, it's the CSIs job to simply gather and preserve the evidence.
It is another person's job to analyze the evidence, and a lawyer's job to continue with the trial. The CSI might be called on to testify in a trial if a lawyer thinks s/he can prove the evidence was handled incorrectly, but this is rare.
Real CSI involves the collection and analysis of physical evidence from crime scenes to support criminal investigations, typically conducted by trained forensic professionals. TV CSI, on the other hand, often exaggerates the abilities and speed of forensic investigations, using unrealistic technology and dramatized scenarios for entertainment purposes.
yes they are....
No the dead bodies on any of the csi's aren't real. Actually I hear Emily procter who plays Calleigh Duquesne in CSI Miami say that most of the body parts are made of food!!!!
There Is Real Csi Jobs all over the world but some stuff you see on the csi show is fake
They use sets not real hospitals.
Perhaps the best CSI games are the most recent ones, as video game technology increases its quality the newer the game is and the most recently it's been manufactured.
Both series are fictional shows based on real techniques, practises and policies used by the corresponding police department's forensic lab.
Of course! The show "CSI" is a fictional dramatization of what a real Crime Scene Investigator does.
CSI Miami's Horatio Caine's real name is David Caruso.
No it is not a real show.
The CSI effect refers to the phenomenon where jurors have unrealistic expectations about the capabilities of forensic evidence based on what they see on crime procedural TV shows like CSI. This can lead to jurors expecting more forensic evidence than is actually presented in real criminal cases, potentially affecting the outcome of trials.
The cast of The Real CSI - 2004 includes: Nick Murphey as Himself - Narrator