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Examination of 
Blood 
By : Gan Quan Fu, PT, 
MSc. Human Anatomy (Batch 3)
Content 
• Introduction 
o History 
o Locard’s Exchange Principle 
o Blood Evidence 
o Forensic Value of Blood 
• Nature of Blood 
o General Characteristics 
o Roles 
o Red Blood Cells 
o Serum 
• Blood Grouping 
• Individualization of Blood 
• Blood Analysis 
o General Question 
o Screening Test 
o Determination of Sex, Race and Age 
• Crime Scene 
o Wet VS Dry Blood 
o Nature of Crime 
o Cause of Death 
o Blood Splashes 
• Collection of Blood Stain 
• References
History 
Prof. Dr. Edmond Locard 
o (13 Dec. 1877 – 4 May 1966) 
o Pioneer in forensic science who 
became known as Sherlock 
Holmes of France. 
o Formulated the basic principle 
of forensic science: "Every 
contact leaves a trace". 
o Became known as Locard's 
exchange principle
Locard’s Exchange Principle 
“ Wherever he steps, whatever he 
touches, whatever he leaves, even 
unconsciously, will serve as a silent 
witness against him. Not only his 
fingerprints or his footprints, but his hair, 
the fibers from his clothes, the glass he 
breaks, the tool mark he leaves, the 
paint he scratches, the blood or semen 
he deposits or collects. All of these and 
more, bear mute witness against him. 
This is evidence that does not forget. It is 
not confused by the excitement of the 
moment. It is not absent because 
human witnesses are. It is factual 
evidence. Physical evidence cannot 
be wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it 
cannot be wholly absent. Only human 
failure to find it, study and understand it, 
can diminish its value” 
- Professor Dr. Edmond Locard
Blood Evidence 
• Most well-known and significant 
evidence in modern criminal 
justice system. Because: 
o It can link a victim to a suspect 
(via Locard’s Exchange 
Principle). 
o Bloodstain patterns reveal 
great deal about position and 
movement during crime. 
o It managed to destroy self-defense 
arguments of suspects. 
• There's no substitute for it, whether 
for medical or forensic purposes.
Forensic Value of Blood 
• Blood has always been 
considered class evidence in 
forensic Science. 
• Individualized blood evidence is 
possible in the near future. 
• In some cases, forensic 
serologists were able to link a 
single perpetrator to a 
bloodstain with strong 
probability estimates.
General Characteristics 
• Slightly alkaline fluid 
• Circulates throughout our bodies, nourishing our 
cells, transporting oxygen and waste. 
• Fluid portion of blood consists of plasma and serum . 
• Non-fluid portion consists of red blood cells which 
outnumber white cells by five hundred to one 
• Blood is composed of: 
o Water 
o Cells 
o Enzymes 
o Proteins 
o Other inorganic substances
Roles 
• Medical scientists are more interested in 
white cells. 
• Forensic scientists are more interested in red 
cells and secondly serum.
Red Blood Cells 
• Most prevalent blood cells in 
the human body. 
• Deliver oxygen from the lungs 
to the body’s tissues. 
• Forensic analyst search for 
smaller chemical substances 
residing on their surfaces (ie. 
antigens), which also tend to 
have important forensic 
implications.
Serum 
• Characterized by its yellow hue, 
and contains white blood cells and 
platelets. 
• Forensic analysts able to determine 
the freshness of a blood sample by 
examining serum (it clots several 
minutes after exposure to air). 
• A centrifuge can be used to 
separate the clotted material from 
the serum portion. 
• Serum contains antibodies , proteins 
floating in blood fluid, which have 
significant forensic implications.
Blood Grouping 
A-B-O system of blood typing was discovered 
in 1901 by Dr. Karl Landsteiner, an Austrian 
biologist and physician. (June 14, 1868 – June 
26, 1943) 
o Developed the modern system of 
classification of blood groups from his 
identification of the presence 
of agglutinins in the blood. 
o 1909  Discovered polio virus. 
o 1930  Received Nobel Prize in 
Physiology or Medicine. 
o 1937  Discovered Rhesus factor. 
o 1946  awarded a Lasker Award and is 
recognised as the father of transfusion 
medicine.
Blood Grouping 
• Late 1930s, a series of antigen-antibody 
reactions discovered in 
blood, the most common ones 
being ABH, MN, Rh, and Gm 
(gamma glouburin marker). 
• There are more than 256 
antigens, and 23 blood group 
systems based on association 
with these antigens. 
• A fundamental principle of 
serology is that for every antigen, 
there exists a specific antibody. 
• All blood groups are defined by 
the antigens on their red blood 
cells and the antibodies in their 
serum.
• ABO blood group antigens present 
on red blood cells 
• IgM antibodies present in the serum.
Blood Typing 
• Blood typing requires 2 antiserums: 
1. anti-A 
2. anti-B. 
• Insert a droplet of these antiserums in samples of blood can 
determine which samples maintain normal appearance and 
which become clotted, or agglutinated under microscopic 
examination. 
‘A’ blood agglutinated by 
anti-A serum. 
‘B’ blood agglutinated by 
anti-B serum. 
‘AB’ blood by both. 
‘O’ blood by neither.
Rhesus Factor 
• Can be categorized using Rh 
(Rhesus disease) factor. 
• Positive Rh factor, means the 
blood contains a protein that is 
also found in Rhesus monkeys. 
• Approximately 85% of the 
population has a positive Rh 
factor. 
• The Rh factor, like other 
antigens, can be found on the 
surface of red blood cells.
Individualization of Blood 
• Potential for the individualization 
of blood is based on the typing 
of proteins andenzymes. 
• Blood proteins and enzymes 
have the quality of being 
polymorphisms or iso-enzymes, 
which means they exist in several 
forms and variants. 
• Most people are familiar with at 
least one common 
polymorphism in blood: Hb, 
which causes sickle-cell anemia.
Secretors 
• 1925  Blood-related discovery valuable to forensic 
science was made. 
• Approximately 80% of the human population was found 
to be "secretors” individuals whose specific types of 
antigens, proteins, antibodies, and enzymes 
characteristic of their blood can be found in other bodily 
fluids and tissues. 
• In the case of a secretor, investigators can conclude the 
blood type by examining the saliva, teardrops, skin 
tissue, urine, or semen. 
• In a rape case, for example, where the perpetrator is a 
secretor, potential suspects can be narrowed down 
through blood type analysis.
General Questions 
Five specific questions as 
guidelines for determining the 
nature of a crime: 
1. Is the sample, blood? 
2. Is the sample, animal blood? 
3. If the sample is animal blood, 
from which species did it 
come from? 
4. If the sample is human blood, 
what type is it? 
5. Can the sex, age, and race of 
the source of blood be 
determined?
Screening Test (Is it Blood?) 
1. Luminol Test 
o To reveal these traces with a light-producing chemical reaction 
between several chemicals (ie hydrogen peroxide) and hemoglobin, 
an oxygen-carrying protein in the blood.Benzidine Test 
2. Phenolphthalein( Kastle- Meyer’s) Test 
o Phenolphthalein is colourless when it's reduced (has electrons), and 
pink when it's oxidized with hemoglobin (no electrons) 
3. O-tolidine Test 
o a test for the presence of hemoglobin in feces or urine. The O-toluidine 
can be in solution, in a tablet or impregnated onto absorbent paper. A 
positive test is the development of a green to blue color. 
4. Leucomalachite Green Test
Luminol Test
Phenolphthalein( Kastle- 
Meyer’s) Test
Screening Test (Human or Animal Blood?) 
• Precipitin Test 
• Double gel diffusion technique of Ouchterlony(anti-human 
hemoglobin tests) 
• ABAcard HemaTrace Test
ABAcard HemaTrace 
• Method of choice today 
• An immuno chromographic one-step test for the 
detection of human blood 
• HemaTrace uses anti-human hemoglobin (Hb) 
antibodies to provide a means of detection for the 
presence of human blood 
• Is coated on test strip and has a detection limit of 
0.07 ug Hb
Determination of Sex. Race and Age 
• Sex Determination 
o Presence of Davidson’s body in leukocytes 
o Can be identified by as early as 7 weeks into 
pregnancy; mother’s blood for Y-chromosome 
specific. 
o DNA (Positive indicates male fetus) 
• Race 
o Certain racial genetic markers involving protein 
and enzyme tests can help establish race. 
• Age Determination 
o Fetal Hb indicates fetal blood; also alpha-fetoprotein
DNA Test 
EDTA is the anticoagulant of choice for blood 
collection for DNA extractions 
o It inhibits DNase activity and does not introduce 
volume changes 
o Irrespective of the anticoagulant, the Vacutainer 
tube should be inverted several times to mix the 
blood 
o Sample should be shipped as early as possible 
within 24 hrs( delay > 3days degrade DNA )
Wet VS. Dry Blood 
• Wet blood is more significant than 
dried blood because the forensic 
scientist can perform more tests in 
order to gain insight to the 
happenings of the crime. (ie. 
alcohol and drug content can be 
determined from wet blood only. ) 
• Blood begins to dry after 3 to 5 
minutes of exposure to air. 
• As it dries, it changes colour from 
deep red to brown and black. 
• Blood can be categorized into 
pools, drops, smears, or crusts.
Nature of Crime 
• Murder 
o Blood on weapon can be matched against the 
blood of the victim 
o Blood stains on the clothing's or person of the 
accused can be matched with blood of the victim 
o Hair roots found on weapon’s can be matched with 
blood of victim’s and accused 
• Accidental deaths( RTA etc) 
o Blood stains on the tyre, radiator grill, and other part 
of the offending vehicle may connect victim and it 
• Sexual crimes 
o Blood stains on thigh and private parts of the victims 
• Paternity disputes 
o HLA, DNA 
• Blood of pregnancy/abortion 
o Presence of chorionic gonadotropin ( early stages) 
o Heat –stable alkaline phosphatase( late stages)
Cause of Death 
• Death due to Asphyxia’s : 
o Dark fluid blood in heart chambers 
• Death due to drowning: 
o Alteration in Chloride content( Gettler’s test) 
• Death due to poisoning: 
o Carbon monoxide poisoning: cherry pink color of 
blood 
o Cyanide Poisoning: Brick red color of blood 
o Heavy metal poisoning (ie. lead): anemia, 
basophilic stippled cells
Blood Splashes 
1930s, Scottish pathologist John Glaister 
classified blood splashes into 6 distinct types: 
1. Drops on a horizontal surface. 
2. Splashes, from blood flying through 
the air and hitting a surface at an 
angle. 
3. Pools around the body, which can 
show if it's been dragged. 
4. Spurts from a major artery or vein. 
5. Smears left by movement of a 
bleeding person. 
6. Trails, either in form of smears when a 
bleeding body is dragged, or in 
droplets when it is carried.
Categories of Blood Stain 
1. Passive (dripping) 
2. Transfer (smearing) 
3. Projected 
o Occur in shootings, trauma from blunt weapons, 
hacking, or slashing attacks.
Blood Spatter 
Passive Spatter Projectile Spatter Contact Spatter 
Passive Spatter: 
Blood that drips 
because of gravity and 
as just an after effect 
of the violence is 
called the passive 
spatter. 
This can range from 
isolated drops of blood 
to stagnated pools. 
Projectile Spatter: 
Blood that drops as a 
result of an external 
impulse is called 
projectile spatter. This 
includes blood 
projecting from 
various wounds as a 
direct result of the 
violence. 
Smearing: 
This includes marks 
which have been left 
as imprints of 
something drenched 
in blood coming in 
contact with a target 
area.
Projected Blood Stain Analysis 
• 2 Important Determinations: 
o Direction of splatter 
o Angle of impact with surface 
• sin = (width drop / length drop)
Arterial or Venous Blood 
• Arterial blood 
o Copious 
o Bright red in colour 
o Spurting 
• Venous blood 
o Dark red 
o Oozes out gradually
Ante mortem / Post mortem Blood 
• Ante mortem 
o Due to presence of fibrin blood effused 
during life can be peeled off in scales upon 
drying 
• Post mortem 
o Blood flowed after death tend to break into 
a powder upon drying
Precaution 
• Wear protective clothing, gloves, masks, and/or eye 
protection as the situation warrants 
• Photographs should be taken from all angles
Liquid / Fresh Stain 
• A clean white filter paper or a piece of clean white 
cloth; a control filter paper should be also sent if 
object is porous, obtain a portion of the unstained 
area as well
Old and Dried Stain 
• Should be carefully scraped if on a immovable 
object. 
• Scrapings placed in clean containers or envelopes 
sealed and labelled. 
• On clothes or fibres.... Scrapped off or a fragment 
of the material cut, collected in paper bags, sealed 
& labelled. 
• Dried blood stains on weapons, garments, etc. can 
be left intact and entire object submitted. 
• Tape lifting bloodstains 
o If finger prints present
Solvent of Blood 
• 10 % solution of potassium cyanide 
• 10% solution of glycerin in distilled water (most 
common) 
• A weak solution of ammonia 
• Methods 
o Sample can eluted by rubbing the stained area 
with cotton swab moistened with distilled water, 
the swab is air dried and not heated. Placed in a 
sterile swab tube, labeled and sealed 
o Arrange and write the swabs and collected 
samples in sequence of collection
Preservation of Blood 
• Sodium fluoride 
• Potassium oxalate / lithium or ammonium oxalate, 
• EDTA 
• Citrate( sodium citrate) 
• Sodium Iodo acetate 
• 4 degrees Celsius Temperature
Conclusion 
• Blood is an important evidence in crime scene and 
must be carefully detected and collected. 
• Blood screening is used generally to screen out the 
suspects not involve and to provide a more solid 
evidence to determine the criminals.
References 
• Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Available at: 
https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/bca/bca-divisions/ 
forensic-science/Pages/forensic-programs-crime- 
scene-luminol.aspx 
• Science Service Justice. 
http://www.nfstc.org/pdi/Subject02/pdi_s02_m02_0 
2_b.htm 
• UCSB Scienceline. Available at: 
http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=2777

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Examination of blood

  • 1. Examination of Blood By : Gan Quan Fu, PT, MSc. Human Anatomy (Batch 3)
  • 2. Content • Introduction o History o Locard’s Exchange Principle o Blood Evidence o Forensic Value of Blood • Nature of Blood o General Characteristics o Roles o Red Blood Cells o Serum • Blood Grouping • Individualization of Blood • Blood Analysis o General Question o Screening Test o Determination of Sex, Race and Age • Crime Scene o Wet VS Dry Blood o Nature of Crime o Cause of Death o Blood Splashes • Collection of Blood Stain • References
  • 3.
  • 4. History Prof. Dr. Edmond Locard o (13 Dec. 1877 – 4 May 1966) o Pioneer in forensic science who became known as Sherlock Holmes of France. o Formulated the basic principle of forensic science: "Every contact leaves a trace". o Became known as Locard's exchange principle
  • 5. Locard’s Exchange Principle “ Wherever he steps, whatever he touches, whatever he leaves, even unconsciously, will serve as a silent witness against him. Not only his fingerprints or his footprints, but his hair, the fibers from his clothes, the glass he breaks, the tool mark he leaves, the paint he scratches, the blood or semen he deposits or collects. All of these and more, bear mute witness against him. This is evidence that does not forget. It is not confused by the excitement of the moment. It is not absent because human witnesses are. It is factual evidence. Physical evidence cannot be wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be wholly absent. Only human failure to find it, study and understand it, can diminish its value” - Professor Dr. Edmond Locard
  • 6. Blood Evidence • Most well-known and significant evidence in modern criminal justice system. Because: o It can link a victim to a suspect (via Locard’s Exchange Principle). o Bloodstain patterns reveal great deal about position and movement during crime. o It managed to destroy self-defense arguments of suspects. • There's no substitute for it, whether for medical or forensic purposes.
  • 7. Forensic Value of Blood • Blood has always been considered class evidence in forensic Science. • Individualized blood evidence is possible in the near future. • In some cases, forensic serologists were able to link a single perpetrator to a bloodstain with strong probability estimates.
  • 8.
  • 9. General Characteristics • Slightly alkaline fluid • Circulates throughout our bodies, nourishing our cells, transporting oxygen and waste. • Fluid portion of blood consists of plasma and serum . • Non-fluid portion consists of red blood cells which outnumber white cells by five hundred to one • Blood is composed of: o Water o Cells o Enzymes o Proteins o Other inorganic substances
  • 10. Roles • Medical scientists are more interested in white cells. • Forensic scientists are more interested in red cells and secondly serum.
  • 11. Red Blood Cells • Most prevalent blood cells in the human body. • Deliver oxygen from the lungs to the body’s tissues. • Forensic analyst search for smaller chemical substances residing on their surfaces (ie. antigens), which also tend to have important forensic implications.
  • 12. Serum • Characterized by its yellow hue, and contains white blood cells and platelets. • Forensic analysts able to determine the freshness of a blood sample by examining serum (it clots several minutes after exposure to air). • A centrifuge can be used to separate the clotted material from the serum portion. • Serum contains antibodies , proteins floating in blood fluid, which have significant forensic implications.
  • 13.
  • 14. Blood Grouping A-B-O system of blood typing was discovered in 1901 by Dr. Karl Landsteiner, an Austrian biologist and physician. (June 14, 1868 – June 26, 1943) o Developed the modern system of classification of blood groups from his identification of the presence of agglutinins in the blood. o 1909  Discovered polio virus. o 1930  Received Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. o 1937  Discovered Rhesus factor. o 1946  awarded a Lasker Award and is recognised as the father of transfusion medicine.
  • 15. Blood Grouping • Late 1930s, a series of antigen-antibody reactions discovered in blood, the most common ones being ABH, MN, Rh, and Gm (gamma glouburin marker). • There are more than 256 antigens, and 23 blood group systems based on association with these antigens. • A fundamental principle of serology is that for every antigen, there exists a specific antibody. • All blood groups are defined by the antigens on their red blood cells and the antibodies in their serum.
  • 16. • ABO blood group antigens present on red blood cells • IgM antibodies present in the serum.
  • 17.
  • 18. Blood Typing • Blood typing requires 2 antiserums: 1. anti-A 2. anti-B. • Insert a droplet of these antiserums in samples of blood can determine which samples maintain normal appearance and which become clotted, or agglutinated under microscopic examination. ‘A’ blood agglutinated by anti-A serum. ‘B’ blood agglutinated by anti-B serum. ‘AB’ blood by both. ‘O’ blood by neither.
  • 19. Rhesus Factor • Can be categorized using Rh (Rhesus disease) factor. • Positive Rh factor, means the blood contains a protein that is also found in Rhesus monkeys. • Approximately 85% of the population has a positive Rh factor. • The Rh factor, like other antigens, can be found on the surface of red blood cells.
  • 20.
  • 21. Individualization of Blood • Potential for the individualization of blood is based on the typing of proteins andenzymes. • Blood proteins and enzymes have the quality of being polymorphisms or iso-enzymes, which means they exist in several forms and variants. • Most people are familiar with at least one common polymorphism in blood: Hb, which causes sickle-cell anemia.
  • 22. Secretors • 1925  Blood-related discovery valuable to forensic science was made. • Approximately 80% of the human population was found to be "secretors” individuals whose specific types of antigens, proteins, antibodies, and enzymes characteristic of their blood can be found in other bodily fluids and tissues. • In the case of a secretor, investigators can conclude the blood type by examining the saliva, teardrops, skin tissue, urine, or semen. • In a rape case, for example, where the perpetrator is a secretor, potential suspects can be narrowed down through blood type analysis.
  • 23.
  • 24. General Questions Five specific questions as guidelines for determining the nature of a crime: 1. Is the sample, blood? 2. Is the sample, animal blood? 3. If the sample is animal blood, from which species did it come from? 4. If the sample is human blood, what type is it? 5. Can the sex, age, and race of the source of blood be determined?
  • 25. Screening Test (Is it Blood?) 1. Luminol Test o To reveal these traces with a light-producing chemical reaction between several chemicals (ie hydrogen peroxide) and hemoglobin, an oxygen-carrying protein in the blood.Benzidine Test 2. Phenolphthalein( Kastle- Meyer’s) Test o Phenolphthalein is colourless when it's reduced (has electrons), and pink when it's oxidized with hemoglobin (no electrons) 3. O-tolidine Test o a test for the presence of hemoglobin in feces or urine. The O-toluidine can be in solution, in a tablet or impregnated onto absorbent paper. A positive test is the development of a green to blue color. 4. Leucomalachite Green Test
  • 28. Screening Test (Human or Animal Blood?) • Precipitin Test • Double gel diffusion technique of Ouchterlony(anti-human hemoglobin tests) • ABAcard HemaTrace Test
  • 29. ABAcard HemaTrace • Method of choice today • An immuno chromographic one-step test for the detection of human blood • HemaTrace uses anti-human hemoglobin (Hb) antibodies to provide a means of detection for the presence of human blood • Is coated on test strip and has a detection limit of 0.07 ug Hb
  • 30. Determination of Sex. Race and Age • Sex Determination o Presence of Davidson’s body in leukocytes o Can be identified by as early as 7 weeks into pregnancy; mother’s blood for Y-chromosome specific. o DNA (Positive indicates male fetus) • Race o Certain racial genetic markers involving protein and enzyme tests can help establish race. • Age Determination o Fetal Hb indicates fetal blood; also alpha-fetoprotein
  • 31. DNA Test EDTA is the anticoagulant of choice for blood collection for DNA extractions o It inhibits DNase activity and does not introduce volume changes o Irrespective of the anticoagulant, the Vacutainer tube should be inverted several times to mix the blood o Sample should be shipped as early as possible within 24 hrs( delay > 3days degrade DNA )
  • 32.
  • 33. Wet VS. Dry Blood • Wet blood is more significant than dried blood because the forensic scientist can perform more tests in order to gain insight to the happenings of the crime. (ie. alcohol and drug content can be determined from wet blood only. ) • Blood begins to dry after 3 to 5 minutes of exposure to air. • As it dries, it changes colour from deep red to brown and black. • Blood can be categorized into pools, drops, smears, or crusts.
  • 34. Nature of Crime • Murder o Blood on weapon can be matched against the blood of the victim o Blood stains on the clothing's or person of the accused can be matched with blood of the victim o Hair roots found on weapon’s can be matched with blood of victim’s and accused • Accidental deaths( RTA etc) o Blood stains on the tyre, radiator grill, and other part of the offending vehicle may connect victim and it • Sexual crimes o Blood stains on thigh and private parts of the victims • Paternity disputes o HLA, DNA • Blood of pregnancy/abortion o Presence of chorionic gonadotropin ( early stages) o Heat –stable alkaline phosphatase( late stages)
  • 35. Cause of Death • Death due to Asphyxia’s : o Dark fluid blood in heart chambers • Death due to drowning: o Alteration in Chloride content( Gettler’s test) • Death due to poisoning: o Carbon monoxide poisoning: cherry pink color of blood o Cyanide Poisoning: Brick red color of blood o Heavy metal poisoning (ie. lead): anemia, basophilic stippled cells
  • 36. Blood Splashes 1930s, Scottish pathologist John Glaister classified blood splashes into 6 distinct types: 1. Drops on a horizontal surface. 2. Splashes, from blood flying through the air and hitting a surface at an angle. 3. Pools around the body, which can show if it's been dragged. 4. Spurts from a major artery or vein. 5. Smears left by movement of a bleeding person. 6. Trails, either in form of smears when a bleeding body is dragged, or in droplets when it is carried.
  • 37. Categories of Blood Stain 1. Passive (dripping) 2. Transfer (smearing) 3. Projected o Occur in shootings, trauma from blunt weapons, hacking, or slashing attacks.
  • 38. Blood Spatter Passive Spatter Projectile Spatter Contact Spatter Passive Spatter: Blood that drips because of gravity and as just an after effect of the violence is called the passive spatter. This can range from isolated drops of blood to stagnated pools. Projectile Spatter: Blood that drops as a result of an external impulse is called projectile spatter. This includes blood projecting from various wounds as a direct result of the violence. Smearing: This includes marks which have been left as imprints of something drenched in blood coming in contact with a target area.
  • 39.
  • 40. Projected Blood Stain Analysis • 2 Important Determinations: o Direction of splatter o Angle of impact with surface • sin = (width drop / length drop)
  • 41. Arterial or Venous Blood • Arterial blood o Copious o Bright red in colour o Spurting • Venous blood o Dark red o Oozes out gradually
  • 42. Ante mortem / Post mortem Blood • Ante mortem o Due to presence of fibrin blood effused during life can be peeled off in scales upon drying • Post mortem o Blood flowed after death tend to break into a powder upon drying
  • 43.
  • 44. Precaution • Wear protective clothing, gloves, masks, and/or eye protection as the situation warrants • Photographs should be taken from all angles
  • 45. Liquid / Fresh Stain • A clean white filter paper or a piece of clean white cloth; a control filter paper should be also sent if object is porous, obtain a portion of the unstained area as well
  • 46. Old and Dried Stain • Should be carefully scraped if on a immovable object. • Scrapings placed in clean containers or envelopes sealed and labelled. • On clothes or fibres.... Scrapped off or a fragment of the material cut, collected in paper bags, sealed & labelled. • Dried blood stains on weapons, garments, etc. can be left intact and entire object submitted. • Tape lifting bloodstains o If finger prints present
  • 47. Solvent of Blood • 10 % solution of potassium cyanide • 10% solution of glycerin in distilled water (most common) • A weak solution of ammonia • Methods o Sample can eluted by rubbing the stained area with cotton swab moistened with distilled water, the swab is air dried and not heated. Placed in a sterile swab tube, labeled and sealed o Arrange and write the swabs and collected samples in sequence of collection
  • 48. Preservation of Blood • Sodium fluoride • Potassium oxalate / lithium or ammonium oxalate, • EDTA • Citrate( sodium citrate) • Sodium Iodo acetate • 4 degrees Celsius Temperature
  • 49. Conclusion • Blood is an important evidence in crime scene and must be carefully detected and collected. • Blood screening is used generally to screen out the suspects not involve and to provide a more solid evidence to determine the criminals.
  • 50. References • Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Available at: https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/bca/bca-divisions/ forensic-science/Pages/forensic-programs-crime- scene-luminol.aspx • Science Service Justice. http://www.nfstc.org/pdi/Subject02/pdi_s02_m02_0 2_b.htm • UCSB Scienceline. Available at: http://scienceline.ucsb.edu/getkey.php?key=2777