- Page 4 and 5:
Advances in Advances Fingerprint Te
- Page 6 and 7:
Advances in Fingerprint Technology
- Page 8 and 9:
Preface The first edition of this b
- Page 10 and 11:
Acknowledgments We gratefully ackno
- Page 12 and 13:
Table of Contents Preface Acknowled
- Page 14 and 15:
History and Development of Fingerpr
- Page 16 and 17:
Figure 1.2 Basic fingerprint patter
- Page 18 and 19:
Figure 1.3 Portion of the prehensil
- Page 20 and 21:
Figure 1.4 Elliptical whorl. Theory
- Page 22 and 23:
The bricks, carefully laid and accu
- Page 24 and 25:
the megalithic builders, including
- Page 26 and 27:
made most of them. These “identif
- Page 28 and 29:
Figure 1.6 Nehemiah Grew. (Drawn by
- Page 30 and 31:
Figure 1.7 Right palm imprint in pl
- Page 32 and 33:
By kindly words of persuasion a ref
- Page 34 and 35:
Loop: Now if this oblique stripe by
- Page 36 and 37:
Figure 1.11 Dr. Ivan Vucetich. (Dra
- Page 38 and 39:
Sir Edward Henry and Sir William He
- Page 40 and 41:
in charge he undoubtedly supported
- Page 42 and 43:
1. Finding finger imprints on prehi
- Page 44 and 45:
Faulds edited seven issues of a fin
- Page 46 and 47:
much of his inspired research. For
- Page 48 and 49:
to the unrelenting efforts of Steeg
- Page 50 and 51:
and gathered around him a nucleus o
- Page 52 and 53:
I find that portions of palm imprin
- Page 54 and 55:
Identification of Latent Prints ROB
- Page 56 and 57:
Without it, no amount of further la
- Page 58 and 59:
work will quite often fare badly un
- Page 60 and 61:
Figure 2.3 Polygon method. Overlay
- Page 62 and 63:
Experience and Skill Although the t
- Page 64 and 65:
The initial identification of the l
- Page 66 and 67:
D5 D6 D7 I2 D8 D9 D10 No No No Reco
- Page 68 and 69:
D11 I4 No D12 D11 I5 D12-1 D7 D12-2
- Page 70 and 71:
D14 I7 D16 C3 D11 D14-2 D7 D14-3 C2
- Page 72 and 73:
Figure 2.7 Example of pressure dist
- Page 74 and 75:
9. Mairs, G., Novel method of print
- Page 76 and 77:
DNA From Latent Prints DNA From Blo
- Page 78 and 79:
Figure 3.1 A schematic diagram show
- Page 80 and 81:
Figure 3.3 A schematic diagram of t
- Page 82 and 83:
(5 to 12 µg/L), bromide (0.2 to 0.
- Page 84 and 85:
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) include
- Page 86 and 87:
Table 3.3 Anatomical Variation in t
- Page 88 and 89:
Various oxidative and bacteriologic
- Page 90 and 91:
acid content can change with time i
- Page 92 and 93:
are of sebaceous origin. 82 Approxi
- Page 94 and 95:
Table 3.7 Changes in Surface Lipid
- Page 96 and 97:
gland’s activity. The more active
- Page 98 and 99:
content. 108 Palmitic acid was foun
- Page 100 and 101:
Figure 3.4a A chromatogram of a fin
- Page 102 and 103:
various lipid classes found in a la
- Page 104 and 105:
of DNA using RFLP. 130 No adverse e
- Page 106 and 107:
was later found to be caused by the
- Page 108 and 109:
17. Seutter, E., Goedhart-De Groot,
- Page 110 and 111:
52. Downing, D. T., Strauss, J. S.,
- Page 112 and 113:
85. Summerly, R., Yardley, H. J., R
- Page 114 and 115:
120. Duff, J. M. and Menzel, E. R.,
- Page 116 and 117:
149. Kloosterman, A., Application o
- Page 118 and 119: Coumarin 540 Dye Staining Method An
- Page 120 and 121: visualization of latent fingerprint
- Page 122 and 123: White powder Dolomite, starch powde
- Page 124 and 125: Fluorescein solution (in methanol/w
- Page 126 and 127: Notes: Dissolve the MoS 2 in the di
- Page 128 and 129: 4. Avoid inhaling any iodine fumes
- Page 130 and 131: CN CN CN A - A - CH2 C COOR CH2 C C
- Page 132 and 133: Large vacuum chambers for processin
- Page 134 and 135: Gentian Violet Solution — Non-Phe
- Page 136 and 137: Table 4.1 Approximate Absorption an
- Page 138 and 139: and recorded by autoradiography. Ni
- Page 140 and 141: Ninhydrin solutions may be applied
- Page 142 and 143: of development of ninhydrin-treated
- Page 144 and 145: and certain nonreactive surface mat
- Page 146 and 147: Procedure Xylene 50 mL Petroleum et
- Page 148 and 149: ehavior of Ruhemann’s purple-meta
- Page 150 and 151: 4. Rinse the specimen in tap water.
- Page 152 and 153: een treated with ninhydrin. In addi
- Page 154 and 155: Working solution Stock solution 6 m
- Page 156 and 157: Note: Combine and stir until citric
- Page 158 and 159: Zauner 181 noted that on a rare occ
- Page 160 and 161: 3. Expose the tape surface to a hig
- Page 162 and 163: lifting media were used, followed b
- Page 164 and 165: under certain circumstances. The Br
- Page 166 and 167: Physical Methods Visual Examination
- Page 170 and 171: Visual Examination Photography Iodi
- Page 172 and 173: References 1. Olsen, R. D., Scott
- Page 174 and 175: 36. Springer, E. and Bergman, P., A
- Page 176 and 177: 74. McCarthy, M. M., Evaluation of
- Page 178 and 179: 110. Mooney, D. G., Development of
- Page 180 and 181: 142. Pounds, C. A., Grigg, R., and
- Page 182 and 183: 175. Jones, R. J. and Pounds, C. A.
- Page 184 and 185: 213. Hebrard, J. and Donche, A., Fi
- Page 186 and 187: 245. Misner, A., Wilkinson, D., and
- Page 188 and 189: Fingerprint Development by Ninhydri
- Page 190 and 191: Figure 5.1 2,2-Dihydroxy-1,3-indane
- Page 192 and 193: Figure 5.4 Formation of murexide (V
- Page 194 and 195: Figure 5.6 The 1,3-dipole form of t
- Page 196 and 197: less volatile 1,1,2-trichloroethane
- Page 198 and 199: Key to Routes Primary Special Secon
- Page 200 and 201: Specially designed cabinets for che
- Page 202 and 203: the importance of cooling the objec
- Page 204 and 205: Figure 5.10 Ninhydrin (I) and some
- Page 206 and 207: een prepared and evaluated as finge
- Page 208 and 209: Figure 5.14 The red pigment formed
- Page 210 and 211: Figure 5.16 The fluorescent product
- Page 212 and 213: 16. Pounds, C.A. and Jones, R.J., P
- Page 214 and 215: 51. Jungbluth, W.O., Replacement fo
- Page 216 and 217: 87. Kent, T., An operational guide
- Page 218 and 219:
116. Kobus, H.J., Pigou, P.E., Dell
- Page 220 and 221:
147. Dayan, S., Almog, J., Khodzhae
- Page 222 and 223:
Figure 6.1 Ninhydrin/ZnCl 2 vs. nin
- Page 224 and 225:
purposes of understanding their pho
- Page 226 and 227:
Ar-laser image monitor lens light c
- Page 228 and 229:
laser Figure 6.6 Block diagram of p
- Page 230 and 231:
step 1 step 2 step 3 fingerprint co
- Page 232 and 233:
nanocrystals. Photoluminescent semi
- Page 234 and 235:
Figure 6.11 Photoluminescence of fi
- Page 236 and 237:
H H H H N N CH2CH2 CH2CH2 H N N H N
- Page 238 and 239:
sample, rather than preferential ad
- Page 240 and 241:
O R C OH + R' NH2 R C Figure 6.16 G
- Page 242 and 243:
The amidation reaction depicted in
- Page 244 and 245:
Figure 6.20 Photoluminescence of fi
- Page 246 and 247:
Figure 6.22 Photoluminescence of fi
- Page 248 and 249:
R 1 - COOH + HO - N R 1 O C N H Fig
- Page 250 and 251:
29. Sooklal, K., Hanus, L.H., Ploeh
- Page 252 and 253:
Procedure Water and Acid Pretreatme
- Page 254 and 255:
The Silver Physical Development Pro
- Page 256 and 257:
(in the emulsion) the silver and si
- Page 258 and 259:
ions (found only on paper that has
- Page 260 and 261:
as that of print residue on porous
- Page 262 and 263:
+ + + + + + + Cit 3- Cit 3- Cit 3-
- Page 264 and 265:
Saunders. 22 Both workers recognize
- Page 266 and 267:
Figure 7.2 Scanning electron micros
- Page 268 and 269:
paper and these convert to ferric o
- Page 270 and 271:
Water and Acid Pretreatments The wa
- Page 272 and 273:
Figure 7.4 Comparison of a ninhydri
- Page 274 and 275:
Figure 7.7 Comparison of a ninhydri
- Page 276 and 277:
(0.2%) to not form silver oxide whe
- Page 278 and 279:
X-Ray and Scanning Electron Microsc
- Page 280 and 281:
is much to be done to optimize the
- Page 282 and 283:
3. Margot, P. and Lennard, C., Fing
- Page 284 and 285:
35. Morris, J.R. and Wells, J.M., A
- Page 286 and 287:
Introduction More than a century ha
- Page 288 and 289:
False Reject Rate (FRR) Civilian Ap
- Page 290 and 291:
Fingerprint Quality Acquisition Est
- Page 292 and 293:
finger gets mapped onto the two-dim
- Page 294 and 295:
(a) (b) (c) Figure 8.3 Fingerprint
- Page 296 and 297:
In forensics, a special kind of ink
- Page 298 and 299:
L A B (a) Finger Friction Surface R
- Page 300 and 301:
Fingerprint Representation A finger
- Page 302 and 303:
(a) (b) (c) (d) Figure 8.8 A finger
- Page 304 and 305:
Figure 8.10 Relative configuration
- Page 306 and 307:
A minutiae feature extractor finds
- Page 308 and 309:
depicting a ridge in the fingerprin
- Page 310 and 311:
1. Singular points. The Poincare in
- Page 312 and 313:
Table 8.2 shows the results of the
- Page 314 and 315:
(a) (b) Figure 8.13 Two different i
- Page 316 and 317:
ox size is adjusted based on the es
- Page 318 and 319:
(a) (b) Figure 8.16 Fingerprinting
- Page 320 and 321:
0.5 -0.5 -1 200 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 1
- Page 322 and 323:
andpass filters and extracts ridges
- Page 324 and 325:
(a) (b) Figure 8.19 Examples of enh
- Page 326 and 327:
A significant implication of the ab
- Page 328 and 329:
or otherwise. Therefore, there are
- Page 330 and 331:
Conclusions and Future Prospects Fi
- Page 332 and 333:
WSQ-related illustrations (Figure 8
- Page 334 and 335:
37. Siemens. The ID Mouse from Siem
- Page 336 and 337:
69. L. Hong, A. Jain, and S. Pankan
- Page 338 and 339:
Trauring Model (1963) Description o
- Page 340 and 341:
correspondence in friction ridge de
- Page 342 and 343:
extreme variability of friction rid
- Page 344 and 345:
5. Trauring 19 6. Kingston 20 7. Os
- Page 346 and 347:
variation need have no relationship
- Page 348 and 349:
1. Fork directed to the right 2. Fo
- Page 350 and 351:
e closer to reality. In any case, t
- Page 352 and 353:
There is not only opportunity for c
- Page 354 and 355:
that, in practice, it is relative d
- Page 356 and 357:
e the probability that there will b
- Page 358 and 359:
Correction factors (G) were introdu
- Page 360 and 361:
fingerprint individuality into two
- Page 362 and 363:
appreciated that the number of tria
- Page 364 and 365:
a corresponding reference point is
- Page 366 and 367:
Table 9.1 Kingston’s Relative Fre
- Page 368 and 369:
minutia counts in different-sized r
- Page 370 and 371:
If one is to use the compound forms
- Page 372 and 373:
Osterburg Model (1977-1980) Descrip
- Page 374 and 375:
of any occurrences that appear in t
- Page 376 and 377:
minutiae. Both the Kingston and Ost
- Page 378 and 379:
minutia orientation results in regi
- Page 380 and 381:
Orientation for minutiae was define
- Page 382 and 383:
the allowable combinations of minut
- Page 384 and 385:
selected for the study, based on th
- Page 386 and 387:
Table 9.4 Champod’s Upper Bound F
- Page 388 and 389:
that Champod and Margot proved to b
- Page 390 and 391:
fingerprint was isolated. This area
- Page 392 and 393:
that, for the experiments as design
- Page 394 and 395:
can be encouraged by the dedication
- Page 396 and 397:
37. Amy, L., Valeur de la preuve en
- Page 398 and 399:
The Expert Fingerprint Witness ROBE
- Page 400 and 401:
Qualifications of the Fingerprint E
- Page 402 and 403:
7. Results of comparisons conducted
- Page 404 and 405:
granted for a pretrial conference,
- Page 406 and 407:
any examination that I have conduct
- Page 408 and 409:
to fully understand the meaning of
- Page 410 and 411:
When seated in the witness stand, t
- Page 412 and 413:
jury but looked down at the floor i
- Page 414 and 415:
Courtroom Courtesy When in court, i
- Page 416 and 417:
If the attorney does not have the p
- Page 418 and 419:
Glossary of Commonly Used Courtroom
- Page 420 and 421:
Indictment An accusation in writing
- Page 422 and 423:
APPENDIX Daubert Hearings EDWARD GE
- Page 424 and 425:
The U.S. Government set presented e
- Page 426:
Presided over by the Honorable J. C