a mock trial as a final exercise in a forensic geology course stephen c. peters assistant professor,...
TRANSCRIPT
A Mock Trial as a Final Exercise in a Forensic Geology Course
Stephen C. PetersAssistant Professor, Lehigh University
Course Scope
• First-year seminar– 16 Students– Majority are non-scientists
• Goal:– Excite & engage students in natural sciences
• Format:– Three-hour integrated lecture & lab held once
per week
Educational and Intellectual Goals
• Investigate physical and chemical properties of earth materials
• Quantitatively measure and describe earth materials
• Relate materials to place and/or time
• Differentiate observations from inferences
• Integrate concepts to argue case
Geochemical Aspects
• Fusion techniques– Melting point, crystal morphology, multiphase
determinations via precipitation
• Isotopic approaches– Carbon, oxygen in organic materials e.g. narcotics
• Polarized light microscopy– Color, refractive index, extinction, pleochroism,
birefringence, etc
• Microfossils, Rocks, Minerals, Sand, Soils, Fibers
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Ammonium Nitrate
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu
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Movie courtesy of Tim Ku, Wesleyan University
Can you identify these items?
Coffee Almond Fudge Crunch
Coca ColaDDT
Tylenol
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu
Trial Mechanism
• Questioning of expert witnesses– Must know:
• Fundamentals of analyses• Fallacies and assumptions• What is diagnostic and what is not• How to argue both sides
Procedure
• Prelude
• Evidence examination
• Discovery documents– Expert witness testimony– Arguments for the prosecution– Arguments for the defense
• The Trial
Prelude
• Series of 5-6 press releases/updates– Scene description– Suspects apprehended– Evidence collected– Police interviews transcribed
• 56 items of evidence– Chain of custody, sample handling, etc
Evidence examination
• Students given necessary equipment– Microscopes, hot plates, reference materials
• Handed all of the evidence
• Instructors are available to answer questions about techniques, but not to organize them
Evidence Type
Amber & Diatoms 1 2 3
Sand & Microfossils 1 2 3
Hair & Fibers 1 2 3
Microchemistry
Fusion techniques1 2 3
Rocks & Minerals 1 2 3
EX
PE
RT
WIT
NE
SS
DE
FE
NS
E
PR
OS
EC
UT
ION
Witness takes standProsecution - 5 minutes questionsDefense - 5 minutes questionsProsecution - 3 minutes redirectDefense - 3 minutes redirectWitness is excused
Grading
• Individual grade– Discovery document– Individual questions and answers during trial
• Group grade– Teamwork, cooperation, preparedness, synergy
Unanticipated Outcomes
• Unclear which evidence should go to which analyst
• Argument strategy and clarity are critically important
• Some students were very impressive at arguing case
• Defense too easy, prosecution too difficult
Feedback and Assessment
• Student debrief following jury verdict– “It really pulled everything together at the end.”
– “Made us remember all that stuff from earlier in the semester.”
– “Fun to do, but really (really) hard.”
– “Prosecution’s case impossible.”
• Questionnaire:– Overall, how would you rank this activity (1-5)
– 88% = “5”, 12% = “4”
Credits & Acknowledgements
• Scott Bair, Ohio State, “Science in the Courtroom”• Tim Ku, Wesleyan University, Forensic Geology• McCrone Research Institute, www.mcri.org• Sandi Connelly, Lehigh University, PhD Candidate,
Minor in Criminal Justice• John Creeling, Southern Illinois Univ• Ray Murray, Univ of Montana
Contact info: Steve [email protected]