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'A Man
Who Is A Man
Will Go On
Until He Can Do No More
And Then
He Will Go Twice As Far'
(An Old Norwegian Saying)



EMAIL
tom_juby@forensic-physical-evidence-consulting.ca
Thomas C. (Tom)
JUBY
223 Highbury School Road
New Minas, N.S.
B4N 4K1
Phone / Fax #:
902-678-0742

'One
Cannot Move Forward
From One's Past In Life
As Long As
One Has Not Overcome
Its Errors
And
All That
Has Caused Hurt'
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FINGERPRINT IDENTIFICATION
CHART
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For years, the necessity
of fingerprint chart preparation has been discussed by those in the
field of fingerprint identification. However, with the advent
of the ACE-V method of identification, the need to properly prepare
and present the identification both for disclosure and for court has
in effect put this discussion to rest. Especially since expert opinion evidence is to be
offered regarding the identification, it is necessary that the court
be able to view the comparison and follow along with any explanation
provided. With the need to disclose in advance
of the court date any evidence that will be offered, the
fingerprint chart is an easy way to assist in a manner that follows
the requirements of best evidence. The lack of a chart could
well indicate a lack of proper preparation, and certainly a lack of
adequate disclosure.
With the Qualitative – Quantitative and ‘ACE-V’ method as taught by
David ASHBAUGH and others, every fingerprint
ridge is examined and notes are made of the process. Those notes also become part of the disclosure package along with
the rest of the Forensic Identification Section report.
There is a need to analyse the
fingerprint in detail to determine what weight of credibility can be
placed on individual fingerprint characteristics or minutiae located in the
various parts of both the scene and known print. What was the contact surface,
what was the deposited medium that made up the latent print, what method was
used to develop it, how and in what manner was the print placed on the surface,
and what has happened to the latent since its placement until it was
located, developed, and recorded? |
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These are all questions
that need to be answered. Are there
areas of over or under pressure, double tap, smudging, distortion, etc? What levels of detail (level 1, 2., & 3)
are present and in what areas? These
are all things that need to be known before an objective comparison can be undertaken, and they affect the overall amount of evidence
required to form an opinion of identification - the evaluation.
The process may require specialized techniques including
microscopes, special lighting, special printing (what used to take
place in the darkroom with the enlarger but now is carried out on
the computer), etc. These
processes should all be recorded in the identification report, and anything done
to the print on the computer must be recorded and provided for the
final verification procedure.
The evaluation must be determined only
after the analysis and comparison have been completed and it must be
a conclusion that those with similar training and knowledge can also
reach based on the same known data. In this country, this
evaluation must be verified independently by one's peers, and is the ‘V’ in the ‘ACE-V’ process.
By examining all the evidence present in the fingerprint, the need
to simply ‘count points of comparison' in order to arrive at a
conclusion is eliminated and is no longer a valid means of
developing and offering an opinion as to the identification.
This holds true not only for fingerprints, but for all types of
physical evidence comparisons. |

'THEY DISCRIMINATED AGAINST ME JUST
BECAUSE
MY FINGERPRINTS WERE DIFFERENT FROM
EVERYBODY ELSE'S'
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