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New Member
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Jan 30, 2009, 06:21 PM
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Criminalistics forensic science
Identify and explain the best procedures to follow when a night time crime scene is to dark to search properly and explain what the investigator should do if the circumstances do not allow the best procedures to be followed?
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Uber Member
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Jan 30, 2009, 08:39 PM
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 Originally Posted by mommie6969
identify and explain the best procedures to follow when a night time crime scene is to dark to search properly and explain what the investigator should do if the circumstances do not allow the best procedures to be followed?
This appears to be homework which this board does notdo.
If you would like to post what you have written and ask people to review it, that is allowed.
Criminal justice major?
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New Member
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Jan 30, 2009, 11:48 PM
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 Originally Posted by mommie6969
identify and explain the best procedures to follow when a night time crime scene is to dark to search properly and explain what the investigator should do if the circumstances do not allow the best procedures to be followed?
Since you didn't bother to phrase your question in the form of a question, should I answer your non-question with another question?
What does your textbook say on this subject?
Are you allowed to use CSI, CSI: Miami, and CSI: NY as reference material?
I also suggest that you should brush up on your homophones, grammar, and punctuation. Statements are not generally terminated with a question mark.
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Uber Member
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Jan 31, 2009, 07:20 AM
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 Originally Posted by Colin Pye
Since you didn't bother to phrase your question in the form of a question, should I answer your non-question with another question?
What does your textbook say on this subject?
Are you allowed to use CSI, CSI: Miami, and CSI: NY as reference material?
I also suggest that you should brush up on your homophones, grammar, and punctuation. Statements are not generally terminated with a question mark.
Sorry but CSI, etc. are TV shows. This is the same as people who post on these threads and use Judge Judy as a point of reference.
Concerning grammar, punctuation and so forth - people who post here come from all walks of life, from all levels of education, from various Countries, from various stages of upset, and I don't see that it's fair to judge them on how they phrase a question.
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Uber Member
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Jan 31, 2009, 07:24 AM
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 Originally Posted by mommie6969
identify and explain the best procedures to follow when a night time crime scene is to dark to search properly and explain what the investigator should do if the circumstances do not allow the best procedures to be followed?
Hello mommie:
Follow correct police procedure. Go to the doughnut shoppe, and wait till the sun comes up.
excon
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Expert
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Jan 31, 2009, 01:48 PM
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New police times excon, non fat muffins.
Yes I have to laugh and laugh at CSI and some of the shows like that, it is so unlike real life in most everywhere.
1. Almost no cities have a CSI department anyway, they have a dect department that may come out, but often it is just the patol officers that do all of the fingerprinting, photos and all of what evidence there is to do.
And perhaps law and order where one jurisdiction won't work with the other is closer to real life.
But a few years ago, my ditigal photos were thrown out of court, they wanted them to be "real" photos. Now I am sure they accept them now.
But to get drugs identified officially takes about 2 to 3 months.
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Uber Member
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Jan 31, 2009, 04:31 PM
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I still cannot use digital - too many pitfalls.
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Uber Member
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Feb 2, 2009, 06:41 AM
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[QUOTE=Colin Pye disagrees: My response was based on what appears to be someone trying to use this forum to do their school assignments. (as, I might ad, yours was!) Based on that, I thought sarcasm was fair game.[/QUOTE]
I would suggest that you read the rules of posting before you do any more posting on the legal boards. I have no idea why you think I was attempting to do a school assignment - ?
Sarcasm is most definitely not "fair game" on this board but I'm sure you'll figure that out after you've posted more than 10 times.
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Uber Member
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Feb 4, 2009, 09:13 AM
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You should read the rules, too.
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