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  • - During my time as a major crimes forensics detective,

  • I worked about 20,000 crime scenes.

  • - [Narrator] Today, Karen is going to break down

  • fictional crime scene investigations

  • to determine what Hollywood gets right and wrong.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - What I want you to understand

  • is that crime scenes are very difficult.

  • There are infinite number of possibilities.

  • So when we go into one,

  • we have to go in with an open mind, with objective means,

  • and we have to gather all of our evidence appropriately

  • so that everything can go to court.

  • First up, "Dexter."

  • In this scene, Dexter, a blood spatter analyst,

  • investigates a crime scene.

  • - Look at the blood spatter, look at the patterns.

  • It tells a story.

  • You see this big pond of blood right there.

  • That's when the initial stab-

  • - This is pure Hollywood.

  • I don't know what a pond of blood is.

  • A pond is what fish are in.

  • A pond is not what blood is.

  • We don't use a term like that.

  • I don't know what all those red strings are either.

  • When we reconstruct what's called an impact pattern,

  • we can take up to six to 10 different, small blood droplets

  • and draw them into three dimensional space.

  • And that's apparently what they were trying to do

  • with these red strings here,

  • but not only is that ridiculous,

  • it doesn't tell me anything

  • about the crime scene whatsoever.

  • - The male victim was standing right here

  • and the killer plunged his knife into the shoulder,

  • severing the carotid artery and [lips sputter].

  • Notice the long thick heavy drips.

  • - That stain on the wall is not like anything we would find

  • at a crime scene.

  • That looks like the prom scene from the movie "Carrie."

  • There's nothing that those strings are attached to,

  • on that wall, that is meaningful at all.

  • I also don't know how you would reconstruct a crime scene

  • using a non-pattern like that

  • and then deduce that the person

  • came across with a knife this way and that way.

  • Crime scene reconstruction is very detailed.

  • It's very objective.

  • So it's not just walking into a crime scene

  • and then just positing what you think happened,

  • based on the patterns at the scene.

  • You have to do a lot of legwork.

  • - Now over here, you have nice clean sprays of blood

  • and that can only happen

  • when you're holding something light and moving quick.

  • Nice sharp slices through the body, no splashes, no drips,

  • clean and easy.

  • - Clean and easy.

  • Hm, if I were to classify what Hollywood

  • has attempted to recreate on that wall,

  • it would be termed something along the lines of cast off.

  • And cast off happens when blood adheres to an object,

  • and that object is swung through the air,

  • and the adhesive properties of blood

  • are overcome by that force,

  • and they land in a linear arc on the available surfaces.

  • And they can leave a line.

  • And depending on weapon used, the line can be very thin,

  • such as with the tip of a knife,

  • or they can be thicker, such as with a baseball bat,

  • or a tire iron.

  • But again, these are things that take the scientific method,

  • they take objective means to measure and to recreate.

  • So this is just nonsense.

  • - So we're looking for a sushi chef.

  • - Yeah, sushi chef is possible.

  • Wouldn't be my first choice, but hey, you never know.

  • - Now what?

  • - Now I eat.

  • - And last but not least, in this clip,

  • nobody's wearing a Tyvek suit.

  • Nobody's wearing shoe booties.

  • Nobody is wearing gloves.

  • He snaps one photograph and splits for dinner.

  • Nothing about this scene has anything to do with reality.

  • Overall, I think this is a Hollywood hot mess.

  • It is a non-forensic nightmare.

  • And I may have a nightmare tonight,

  • now that I've watched it.

  • Next up "Fargo" season two.

  • In this scene, the local detectives

  • investigate a crime scene at a local diner.

  • - Put my coat on her.

  • Seemed only right.

  • - I put my coat on her.

  • Seemed only, right.

  • No, no, no, no.

  • That is only wrong.

  • We never introduce evidence to a body

  • and she's not gonna get cold, I promise.

  • So we've got some pretty major bloodstains

  • at the entrance there.

  • That means we need to find an alternate entry point.

  • We don't wanna walk over those bloodstains

  • because we could alter them.

  • We could introduce our own shoe prints,

  • our own DNA, other things into that crime scene.

  • So as soon as that door was opened

  • and the blood was present there on the floor,

  • trying to find an alternate route

  • would have been the appropriate thing to do.

  • - I count three dead.

  • I saw the waitress in the parkin' lot.

  • - She caught one there then staggered out.

  • Gunman followed, made things permanent.

  • - Well, if the gunmen followed,

  • according to this very, very rapid reconstruction

  • and you have snow outside, you should be able to find

  • some shoe prints in that snow,

  • leading to the body where the waitress was.

  • Along with a bullet trajectory through her body,

  • or a penetrating injury into her body.

  • That can place where the shooter was, where she was,

  • and it may be able to give you

  • some identifiable characteristics in those shoe prints.

  • - How's Betsy?

  • - You mean you didn't call her before you came over?

  • - Well, yeah, just being polite.

  • Give you a chance to talk about your feelin's,

  • should you be so disposed.

  • - She's good, yeah.

  • Ordered this kit of recipe cards, saw it on the TV.

  • So now every night we eat delicacies of the world.

  • - As much as I love this banter, because it's just adorable,

  • that doesn't happen at a crime scene.

  • We keep things clinical.

  • We keep things linear.

  • We keep things objective.

  • Swapping recipes is something that we do outside of work,

  • outside of the crime scene.

  • As tempting as it might be, it's inappropriate.

  • - Skid marks.

  • - Yeah, I see 'em.

  • Of course, connectin' those to this deal here,

  • would be what we call jumpin' to a conclusion.

  • - Maybe, maybe not.

  • I don't know.

  • But here's the thing, you can measure those skid marks.

  • You can take samples of the rubber from those skid marks.

  • You can find out a width of the undercarriage

  • of the vehicle that created them.

  • And maybe it'll lead you to a car.

  • - Based on the number of bodies,

  • I think we got one car too many in the parking lot.

  • - Whoa, he just picked up that money,

  • with what appears to be possibly blood on it,

  • with his gloved hand, and it's a leather glove.

  • It's not a new, clean, latex glove.

  • That is a huge no-no.

  • When you take evidence from a crime scene like that,

  • not only are you contaminating it

  • with things that might be on your glove,

  • he's reached into his pocket, he's held his pen,

  • he's taken notes, he may have even pulled it off

  • with his fingers at some point,

  • so he's introducing all of that onto that dollar bill.

  • And if that is blood on it, that is a major clue.

  • So the first thing that we would have to do is document it,

  • photograph it, test that substance on it

  • to see if it's blood,

  • and then package it appropriately for the laboratory.

  • Next up "Iron Man 3."

  • In this scene, Tony Stark uses some high-tech forensics

  • to reconstruct a crime scene.

  • - [Jarvis] I've compiled a Mandarin database for you sir,

  • drawn from Shield, FBI, and CIA intercepts.

  • Initiating virtual crime scene reconstruction.

  • - We do have tools that will reconstruct

  • a crime scene in three dimensions.

  • There are 3D scanners.

  • They not only take a 360 degree view of the crime scene.

  • They can do ceilings and the floors,

  • so that when we upload it into a computer,

  • we can actually tilt the entire scene

  • and take measurements from one area to another

  • that are extremely accurate.

  • So, although this is really futuristic and cool,

  • it is not that far out of the realm of possibility.

  • - [Jarvis] Heat from the blast

  • was in excess of 3,000 degrees Celsius.

  • Any subjects within 12.5 yards were vaporized instantly.

  • - No bomb parts found

  • in a three-mile radius of the Chinese Theater?

  • - [Jarvis] No, sir.

  • - We just heard that this explosive device

  • created 3000 degrees Celsius.

  • Well, that would be equivalent

  • to about 5,400 degrees Fahrenheit.

  • To give you some comparison,

  • the surface of the sun is 5,700 degrees.

  • So that's some serious math.

  • And if you have an incendiary device like that,

  • that goes off at that high of a temperature,

  • I'm pretty sure that vaporized is the correct term,

  • but there would be a very large blast radius,

  • not just at 12 and a half yards away.

  • It would be a lot bigger.

  • - Talk to me Happy.

  • [dramatic music]

  • When is a bomb not a bomb?

  • - When is a bomb not a bomb?

  • Never.

  • You need four things to make a bomb.

  • You need an energy source.

  • You need a method of containment.

  • You need a method of initiation.

  • And you need some material

  • that will create an exothermic or heat reaction.

  • Without one of those things, it won't work.

  • Next up, "CSI Miami."

  • In this clip, a brand new investigator

  • makes a horrible mistake in the lab.

  • - Talk me through what you're doin'.

  • - Okay, this is the jacket worn by our suspect,

  • Hector Rivera, we believe that he stabbed Gabriel Cervantes.

  • So I'm gonna run what's called a luminol test.

  • - Hey what's luminol.

  • - Luminol is a compound that when it interacts

  • with the iron in hemoglobin it will luminesce.

  • - This is true.

  • Luminol is a chemiluminescent compound.

  • And when it comes into contact with the heme in blood,

  • it will create a bluish green glow.

  • - Anyway you can get that to be even brighter.

  • I just want it to really pop on film.

  • - Yes.

  • - Oh yeah, yeah, that's the money shot.

  • - No!

  • No!

  • The more you spray a liquid like that onto a surface,

  • the more you're going to dilute the stain.

  • That can make it extremely difficult

  • for the DNA analyst to extract the white blood cells

  • that are needed for a DNA analysis.

  • So the fact that he's spraying this luminol on the sleeve

  • and over and over and over again, he's diluting that sample.

  • - My results are zero zip.

  • There's no DNA on the jacket.

  • - I don't see how that's possible.

  • The luminol gave us significant blood spatter.

  • It was actually more than significant.

  • - You shoulda seen it glow, it was amazing.

  • - Oh, I bet it was.

  • Problem is the more luminal you spray,

  • the more you dilute the blood.

  • - Exactly.

  • There's another problem here.

  • He said it was a stabbing

  • and there was significant blood spatter.

  • Luminol is used on crime scenes that have been cleaned up.

  • We don't use it to find evidence

  • where there's significant blood, it's unnecessary.

  • We have other means and methods to do that.

  • So not only did he spray luminol on a jacket

  • that had significant blood on it,

  • that we could have found with other methods,

  • he diluted it to the point that the DNA analyst

  • wasn't able to extract enough for a sample.

  • - Okay, all right, I get it.

  • So what have we really got here?

  • - Ryan, too much luminol, there's no DNA.

  • - What do you mean?

  • - If you wanna get this guy,

  • you're gonna have to find some other way.

  • - It is possible that there is no DNA

  • left on the sweatshirt.

  • It's a chemical.

  • And anytime you introduce a chemical to DNA,

  • there is a chance that some of the alleles,

  • or parts of the DNA, could break down and degrade

  • and make that sample not a full profile.

  • Next up, "Silence of the Lambs."

  • In this clip, the investigators are inside

  • of a small town autopsy suite

  • looking at a body from Buffalo Bill.

  • - Okay, Starling.

  • - Bill.

  • - The menthol under the nose is a nice Hollywood touch,

  • but here's the problem with menthol.

  • It's designed to open your nasal passages.

  • So when you put that under your nose,

  • you're trying to do it to not smell the decomposition.

  • It's better to just deal with it

  • because when you put that under your nose,

  • it opens your nasal passages and makes the smell worse.

  • And I may know this because of experience.

  • - Star-shaped contact entrance wound over the sternum,

  • a muzzle stamp at the top.

  • - [Jack] Wrongful death.

  • - Wrongful death.

  • - When you have a contact wound where a muzzle stamp,

  • meaning the barrel of the gun,

  • is literally pressed against the skin,

  • you are gonna have a stellate,

  • or star-shaped entrance wound.

  • So that description is spot on.

  • - [Jack] What else do you see Starling?

  • - Well, she's not local.

  • Her ears are pierced three times

  • and there's glitter nail polish, that looks like town to me.

  • Two of her fingernails are broken off

  • and there's dirt or grit, I don't know.

  • - Those are really great observations.

  • And not only would we swab under those nails

  • for that dirt or grit,

  • and then compare it to samples that we took

  • from the primary crime scene where the body was found,

  • we would also clip her nails off

  • and then those would be tested for DNA.

  • Another thing that I really appreciate about this scene

  • is Jodie Foster's character coming to the realization

  • that she is face-to-face with a victim of a heinous murder,

  • and she plays it so well.

  • You can see it in her face.

  • You can see that she's a little nauseated.

  • You can see that she's very, very upset

  • and that really does happen.

  • - She's got something in her throat.

  • - When a body comes out of the water.

  • Lots of times there's like leaves and things in the mouth.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - What is that?

  • Some kinda seed pod?

  • - No, sir.

  • That's a bug cocoon.

  • There's no way that could get way down in there like that.

  • - Unless somebody shoved it in there.

  • - The one thing that I really liked about this scene

  • was when they did pull that cocoon out of the throat,

  • Jodie Foster fixated it with alcohol.

  • When you have entomological samples, which are bug samples,

  • you have to preserve them somehow.

  • And alcohol is definitely

  • one of the preservation methods that we use.

  • Next up, "No Country for Old Men."

  • In this scene, local sheriffs

  • investigate a crime scene on horseback.

  • - It's the same tire tread comin' back as goin',

  • made 'bout the same time too.

  • You can see the sides real clear.

  • - When we have tire tracks and shoe prints

  • and a scene like this, that's in the middle of nowhere,

  • it's very difficult.

  • However, if you can see tire tracks

  • that are leading to a crime scene,

  • that you're headed to,

  • riding a horse over top of those tire tracks,

  • isn't gonna do anybody any favors.

  • We have to photograph them.

  • We would have to cast them with some kind of material

  • and recover them so that if we find a matching tire

  • on a suspect vehicle, the analysts at the lab

  • can do comparisons.

  • - What caliber's you got there sheriff?

  • - Nine millimeter,

  • a couple of 45 ACPs.

  • Somebody unloaded on that thing with a shot gun.

  • - The fact that he picked the casings up

  • with his bare hands is not good.

  • Now there is no need to do DNA swabs.

  • There's no need to process those casings for latent prints.

  • We haven't documented their location

  • to find out where the shooter may have been standing

  • when they exited.

  • The kind of gun that he was firing.

  • Also, you have nine millimeters and 45s.

  • That could be one suspect with one gun in each hand.

  • It could be a suspect with the nine, a suspect with the 45,

  • and then you have another person with a shotgun.

  • So were there two shooters are were there three?

  • We will never know because all of that evidence

  • has now been manipulated and moved before it was documented.

  • - How come you reckon the coyotes ain't been at 'em?

  • - I don't know.

  • - This is Hollywood gone awry.

  • This is what happens when you don't pay attention

  • to small things like opening doors without thinking.

  • There looks to be a victim in the driver's seat of that car

  • with a bullet wound to the back of their head.

  • That might be important.

  • You have the other guy on horseback kicking dirt

  • onto the bodies on the ground.

  • So, this is just Hollywood taking a lot of

  • really bad liberties.

  • - Looks like Mexican brown dope.

  • - [Deputy] Oh, these boys is all swole up.

  • - Never, never touch evidence with your bare hand,

  • especially narcotics.

  • One of the ways that drugs get into your system

  • is through absorption in your skin.

  • Another way is through inhalation through the air.

  • So not only did he touch it with his bare hands,

  • he flipped it into the air

  • and now he's inhaling those particles into his lungs.

  • So it's really important

  • that any evidence that's at a scene,

  • you leave it the way that it is.

  • You document it with photography

  • and then you use very tightly gloved hands,

  • and you take that sample

  • and you place it into a sealed envelope

  • for the toxicologist.

  • Next up, "Body of Proof."

  • In this clip, a medical examiner tries to determine

  • the cause and manner of death at an autopsy.

  • - Well, she's obviously in excellent physical condition.

  • Callouses on her feet.

  • A few minor scars.

  • Healed bite marks on the left forearm,

  • both posterior and anterior, probably canine.

  • - That was a quick conclusion.

  • Skin is notorious for moving, for being pliable.

  • So when you have bite marks on skin,

  • it's not that easy to make a determination

  • and you never, ever get a perfect impression,

  • even from a canine or a human.

  • So a forensic odontologist would need to be consulted

  • to look at those bite marks

  • and to see if there's anything to glean from them.

  • - Keeps her nails clipped a little bit chewed.

  • - Any the DNA under 'em?

  • - All in good time, detective.

  • - This is the kind of contentious relationship

  • that will not work.

  • I've said before, this is a team effort

  • and being this contentious

  • with the medical examiner is inappropriate.

  • She has a job to do.

  • The detectives have a job to do.

  • We have to work in concert for the victim,

  • so that we can find the answers.

  • - I see a beautiful young woman, who ate well and kept fit.

  • For whom, a boyfriend?

  • Did she break up with him?

  • Look deeper, she shows signs of stress, a workaholic.

  • Was she up for partner?

  • Did she piss somebody off?

  • Was somebody jealous, out to get her?

  • The answers are all here because that's what we do.

  • I honor the body for what it tells me

  • about Angela Swanson's life.

  • - Okay, we have a lot of lane crossing going here.

  • The medical examiner's job is to determine the cause

  • and the manner of death.

  • Their job is not to go into the victimology,

  • into the background of that victim.

  • That's the detective's job.

  • They should have a lot of that information already,

  • or they should be about to go find out about it.

  • Did she have a bad breakup?

  • Does she have enemies?

  • Does she have some people who she may owe money to?

  • Things like that, that's the detective's job.

  • - I'm gonna to get some coffee.

  • - The skull collapsed into the occipital lobe

  • in a V-shaped depression.

  • There are flecks of rust throughout.

  • Your murder weapon is heavy, maybe cast iron,

  • square with a dull edge, possibly a large plumber's wrench,

  • or some kind of mallet.

  • And detective? - Yeah.

  • - I take mine with cream, no sugar.

  • - I would really like to know

  • how she knows all of that information

  • when we haven't even seen the injury yet.

  • When a body goes in for autopsy,

  • one thing that the medical examiners have to do,

  • especially if there's long hair like I have,

  • is you have to shave their head,

  • especially if there's injuries to that head.

  • And when there's blunt force trauma,

  • such as what she is describing with a large pipe

  • or a large wrench, there will be some telltale signs

  • on that scalp to help us identify what that tool might be.

  • But we can't see it until we get rid of the hair.

  • And we wouldn't be able to make conclusions

  • about the actual item of evidence,

  • what caused those injuries

  • until we did a lot more investigation.

  • Last up, "The Boondock Saints."

  • In this scene, an FBI agent uses eccentric methods

  • to investigate a crime scene.

  • [inspiring opera music]

  • The first thing about this clip that I actually liked

  • was he put gloves on.

  • So we always wear personal protective equipment.

  • Gloves are a bare minimum, which is a good thing.

  • The music, not so much.

  • It's hard to concentrate on a crime scene

  • when you have music blaring in your ears.

  • Also the CD player.

  • We don't bring extraneous things into a crime scene ever.

  • Because not only can that introduce trace evidence

  • into a crime scene, it can also bring the crime scene

  • onto your stuff.

  • [inspiring opera music]

  • - That's a big, no-no.

  • You don't eat, you don't drink, you don't smoke

  • inside of a crime scene, ever.

  • It is inappropriate.

  • What are you gonna do?

  • Are you gonna ditch the cigarette butt

  • inside the crime scene, so now we don't know

  • what might be evidence and what might not be?

  • Plus you're introducing things from the crime scene

  • into your mouth.

  • Crime scenes are not clean.

  • Crime scenes are gross.

  • This is an alley full of garbage.

  • You don't want that stuff in your mouth.

  • [inspiring opera music]

  • - What I see wrong here is the body is

  • the jurisdiction of the medical examiner or coroner.

  • So FBI agents and investigators,

  • we aren't allowed to touch

  • and manipulate the body without a representative

  • from the medical examiner or coroner present.

  • [inspiring opera music]

  • - I have no idea what he's doing.

  • I don't know he was putting on the hand.

  • I honest to God don't even know what that is.

  • Is it blood? Is it dye?

  • This is a perfect example of Hollywood

  • taking complete liberty with forensics

  • because that made no sense at all.

  • So overall it looks like Hollywood goes over the border

  • most of the time, but sometimes they do get it right.

  • Believe me, crime scenes are not this sexy.

  • They are not this entertaining.

  • So if you're liking what you see on television and film,

  • just to remember, it's Hollywood, it's not reality.

  • [dramatic music]

- During my time as a major crimes forensics detective,

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Forensics Detective Reviews Crime Scene Investigations, from 'Dexter' to 'CSI: Miami' | Vanity Fair

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2020 年 11 月 16 日
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