blood, blood spatter and dna ch. 7 and 8

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Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

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Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8. Forensic blood video Blood spatter video Dexter- 2 3 4 5 6 * Science of Murder- blood *. Blood typing. If blood is found at the scene of a crime, it can be tested for blood type . This may narrow down suspects - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Blood, Blood spatter and DNACh. 7 and 8

Page 3: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Blood typing

If blood is found at the scene of a crime, it can be tested for blood type. This may narrow down suspects

– Cheaper, easier, and faster than DNA testing , which provides individual evidence

Page 4: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Blood spatter

A spatter pattern can give information about the truthfulness of an account by a witness or a suspect

It also can provide information about the origin of the blood, the angle and velocity of impact and type of weapon used

Page 5: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Composition of Blood

Whole blood has cells and plasma (fluid with hormones, clotting factors and nutrients)

Red blood cells carry oxygen to the body’s cells and CO2 away

White blood cells fight disease and foreign invaders

Platelets aid in blood clotting

Page 6: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

What is blood typing?

Antibodies are proteins secreted by white blood cells that attach to antigens to destroy them (defense machanism)

Antigens are foreign molecules that react to antibodies (causes agglutination or clumping) In this case, antigens are carbohydrate tags on red blood

cells that are read by your immune system If your immune system recognizes them, everything is

fine If your immune system sees them as foreign, it attacks!

Page 7: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8
Page 8: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

A person with type A blood has A antigens on the surface of their red blood cells.

A-type individuals do not make antibodies against A antigens.

A-type individuals make antibodies against B antigens

Page 9: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

If a person with Type A blood receives a Type B transfusion, the anti-B antibodies will bind the B antigens

Donor cells are destroyed by complement-mediated lysis

Can lead to jaundice and kidney damage DeathTherefore, they can only receive A or O blood

Page 10: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

A person with type B blood has B antigens on the surface of their red blood cells.

B-type individuals do not make antibodies against B antigens.

B-type individuals make antibodies against A antigens

Can only receive B or O blood

Page 11: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

A person with type AB blood has A and B antigens on the surface of their red blood cells.

AB-type individuals do not make antibodies against A or B antigens.

Can receive A, B, AB, or O blood– Called the universal recipient

Page 12: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

A person with type O blood has no antigens on the surface of their red blood cells.

O-type make antibodies against A and B antigens

Can only receive other O blood, but can donate to all other blood types

– Known as the universal donor

Page 13: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Type Percent

A 39B 12AB 4O 45

Page 14: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

What is Rh factor? Rh Factor is another antigen present on RBCs – it’s where the +/- of your blood type comes from – named after the Rhesus Monkey (where they were

first discovered) Can cause problems with transfusions – Rh negative people can’t receive positive blood (get

an antigenic reaction- destruction of cells) Also get similar reaction when Rh-negative

mother is carrying an Rh-positive fetus

Page 15: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

If the sample clots, then the antibodies are binding, so the antigen must be present

– If Anti-A makes it clot, A is present –>A (AB) – If Anti-B makes it clot, B is present –>B (AB) – If both Anti-A and Anti-B samples clot, Both antigens

are present –> AB – If neither Anti-A or Anti-B makes it clot, neither

antigen is present –> O – If Anti-Rh makes it clot, Rh factor is present -> +

Page 17: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Luminol Presumptive test

● The first step in an investigation.● Seen on most CSI TV shows as the blue

glowing light test. ● Presumptive Test: Possibility that it is blood

or it is not blood. ● It uses luminol, a peroxide and a base.

Page 18: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Presumption Blood Testing(using the kastel-meyer video)

Kastel-Meyer Blood Test It will not prove that a sample is definitely blood, it

simply supports the idea that the sample could be blood Kastel-meyer is used because of ease of use, doesn’t

destroy DNA and is very sensitive (can detect 1 drop in 10,000 drops), positive test results in easily seen color change due to presence of hemoglobin

Uses alcohol, phenophthalein (special prep- not the kind used in acid/base testing) hydrogen peroxide.

It undergoes a oxidation-reduction reaction Look for no color change with the addition of alcohol

and phenophtalein and blue color with hydrogen peroxide

Page 20: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

• Splatter is the sound a liquid makes when it comes in contact with an object

• Spatter is the pattern blood makes on an object

Page 21: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Blood spatter

The pattern can help to reconstruct the events surrounding a shooting, stabbing or beating

Can determine: Direction blood traveledAngle of impactPoint of origin of the blood Velocity of the blood Manner of death

Page 22: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Common Bloodstain Patterns

Walking Drip Pattern Wipes Swipes Transfer Stains Arterial Spurts (vertical & horizontal) Cast-off Spatter

Page 23: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

When blood falls from a height or at a high velocity, it can overcome its natural cohesiveness and form satellite droplets

When it falls onto a less-than-smooth surface, it can form spiking patterns around the drops

Page 24: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Directionality

The shape of an individual drop of blood provides clues to the direction from where it originated

Page 25: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Shapes

www.deviantcrimes.com/bloodspatter.htmGun

Hammer

http://www.clt.uwa.edu.au/__data/page/112508/fsb05.pdf

Page 26: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Low Velocity - This type of spatter is usually caused by an impact to the blood source at a rate of 5 feet per second and is usually about 4 millimeters in diameter.

(victim walking) Medium Velocity - This type of spatter is usually caused by

an impact to the blood source at a rate of 5-100 feet per second.  Stains caused by this type of force are usually 1-3 millimeters in diameter, but may be larger or smaller. (bat-stab)

 High Velocity - This type of spatter is usually caused by an impact to the blood source in excess of 100 feet per second and is usually less than 1 millimeter in diameter, although it can be larger or smaller.

(gun)

Page 27: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Angle of Impact http://www.bloodspatter.com/BPATutorial.htm

Page 28: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Creating Reference Bloodstain Patterns

http://bloody2.com/diameter.aspx

Page 29: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8
Page 31: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

DNA Fingerprinting

A more modern and popular approach, DNA fingerprinting can be very conclusive

Alec JefferysDNA evidence

Page 32: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

DNA can be isolated from many sources:

Blood Semen Saliva Hair Skin cells Bone Teeth Tissue Urine Feces

Vomit Condoms Hat bands Bras Cigarette Butts Chewing gum Envelopes Drinking Cups Under victim’s fingernails

Page 33: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Running DNA Video

Death, drugs, driving and DNA: Forensic Potpourri (you tube or Research Channel)

Page 34: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) is used to make a small amount of DNA (like you’d find at the SOC) into a large amount for testing

Restriction enzymes are used to cut the DNA into fragments at specific sites

Gel Electrophoresis is used to separate the fragments into a pattern called a fingerprint

These fingerprints can be matched to fingerprints from DNA isolated from suspects (usually by mouth swab)

Page 35: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

DNA STRAND:

CTGGCTAGGCTACCATGCCCGTAAATEveryone has unique DNA except twins

Page 36: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Restriction Enzyme

 We will use TA-ase, an imaginary enyzme, to

cut our DNA Sample DNA strand CTGGCTAGGCTACCATGCCCGTAAATCTGGCTA GGCTA CCATGCCCGTA

AAT

Page 37: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Electrophoresis

Separates fragments by sizeLargest fragment travels least

Page 38: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Gel electrophoresis separates the resulting fragments by size

– the largest fragment moves the slowest through the gel so it stays up at the top

Page 39: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

And we get a fingerprint that looks something like this:

Page 40: Blood, Blood spatter and DNA Ch. 7 and 8

Fingerprints can then be compared to decide which DNA is which