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  • Who doesn't know to wear gloves? Even criminals wear gloves.

  • Zoom and enhance images. That's never going to happen.

  • Please, if you make CSI-type programmes, stop doing it.

  • I think, probably, a lot of what you think about what happens

  • at a crime scene is determined by what you see on TV.

  • And oh my, the reality is so much different.

  • Zoom in right here on this spot.

  • Enhance the reflection in her eye.

  • The reflection of the man's face. The reflection. There's a reflection.

  • There's a phenomenon related to forensic science

  • known as the CSI effect.

  • Legal professionals, in particular, started getting concerned that

  • that was affecting real people that were serving on juries in real cases.

  • Because TV is so immediate, you're actually seeing it,

  • it has an extremely powerful impact.

  • Verging on the dangerous side.

  • They were concerned that if there wasn't the type of evidence in a case

  • that you would see on the TV that the jurors would think,

  • {\an2}"Well, it's a weak case." They were also concerned that

  • the presence of some evidence, even if it was fairly weak evidence,

  • would be seen by jurors as being very strong evidence because it's got the

  • word forensics in it, and forensics on TV means you've solved the case.

  • Forensic science is really any form of science that's applied to

  • the civil, sometimes, but usually criminal justice systems.

  • Physical forensics is physical items - blood, skin traces, hair, fibres...

  • that sort of thing. Digital forensics is things like phone records,

  • digital information as well, which will tell you, for example,

  • when the recording was made.

  • It's not used all the time. It is still slow.

  • There aren't always the resources that we need.

  • And it's not always appropriate.

  • ARCHIVE: The advent of the electronic age has changed all that.

  • But there are still some things that we just cannot do.

  • Facial reconstruction is most of the time fiction, you can't say,

  • {\an2}"Oh this is the person," just from the skull.

  • This is just so much like... chunky bits.

  • Bite mark analysis, er, that's probably fiction.

  • Were you able to determine which monkey bit him?

  • The bite marks match those of the monkey found at the scene.

  • You're comparing part of a print...

  • which is usually quite a rubbish smudge mark ...

  • to a whole set of fingerprints and trying to make a match.

  • Eight million people just in central London.

  • That's so many other people who can be prosecuted.

  • CLIP: Well it turns out his fortune can be read from his palms.

  • It's also worth bearing in mind,

  • forensic evidence is circumstantial evidence.

  • Forensic science has said, "Yes, this person is present,"

  • does not necessarily mean that that person has committed the offence.

  • The Phantom of Heilbronn.

  • The Phantom of Heilbronn, it's a very interesting case.

  • I'll simplify this massively. The police were finding DNA traces

  • from an unknown person at a huge number of different crime scenes.

  • So many across Europe panicked law enforcement.

  • And they started to think,

  • {\an2}"Have we got a serial killer on our hands here?"

  • DNA can only tell you what you ask it to tell you.

  • The data are what the data are.

  • But what the data mean is always a matter of judgement.

  • Even if it is a suicide note, that doesn't mean it's a suicide.

  • Yes, I know that Detective Constable.

  • I think there is possibly a tendency for people to want science

  • to have the answers.

  • Caution should be part of the craft,

  • which is not really the case on TV shows.

  • It is important to establish both the certainty and the uncertainty.

  • Is forensics fact or fiction? That's...

  • This is going to sound rude...

  • I can kind of forgive the fast-forwarding of how long it takes

  • to actually do forensics.

  • I think human beings are hardwired to find out what happened.

  • We all love secrets. We all love mysteries,

  • we all want to work it out.

  • So are you happy for my answer to be, "It's both."

  • So, where science can come in and say,

  • {\an2}"Hey, you've got that wrong. Let's put it right."

  • That's a tremendous advantage. And of course, if it can come in in

  • the first place and go, "Hey, don't get that wrong," that's even better.

  • Thanks for watching! :)

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Who doesn't know to wear gloves? Even criminals wear gloves.

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