1 / 36

Methods of Identification in Forensic Medicine

Methods of Identification in Forensic Medicine. dr. Yudha Nurhantari, Ph.D Department of Forensic Medicine Faculty of Medicine, Gadjah Mada University. Introduction. People die due to natural or unnatural death Unnatural death : disaster, transportation accident, criminals, accidents, etc

efaulk
Télécharger la présentation

Methods of Identification in Forensic Medicine

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Methods of Identification in Forensic Medicine dr. Yudha Nurhantari, Ph.D Department of Forensic Medicine Faculty of Medicine, Gadjah Mada University

  2. Introduction • People die due to natural or unnatural death • Unnatural death : disaster, transportation accident, criminals, accidents, etc • Not all of the died people are known /identified need identification

  3. The important of identification • Respect of death person for official, statistical, and legal purposes • Discharge legal claims and obligation in relation to property, estate, and debts. • To facilitate police enquiries into overtly criminal or suspicious deaths.

  4. Identification • Comparison of the evidence with references • Biological Evidences : human body  complete: fresh, decomposed  incomplete: mutilated, skeleton, part of human body (blood stain, semen, hair, fingerprints etc)

  5. Non biological evidence: documents : ID card properties: cloths, shoes, accessories location in the scene

  6. Cadaver identification Antemortem data Post mortem Antemortem data data Examination Medical record of Cadaver Family, etc Identified Unidentified Post mortem data

  7. Biological evidences Characteristics for Identification • Facial appearance • Age, sex, Racial and ethnic characteristics, Posture , Skin color, Hair : color, structure Nevus pigmentosus, Tatto, Scar

  8. Sex determination • Tanda kelamin sekunder • Pemeriksaan darah • Anthropology • etc

  9. Age estimation • Rambut • Tekstur kulit • Gigi • Penulangan • Anthropology

  10. Anthropology forensic

  11. Anthropology forensic • Human/non human • Race • Sex • Age • Posture

  12. Odontology Forensic • Every body has a characteristic of the teeth • Use dentition by comparing am –pm data • Comparison of dentition with bite marks • Obtaining DNA to assist the identification of suspects

  13. Odontology Forensic

  14. 5.Fingerprints/Dermatoglify • Long history, China 2000 yrs ago • Friction ridge of skin  hills , valleys

  15. Blood typing • Use multi systems: - ABO - Rh - Mn - Lewis - Duffy, etc

  16. DNA fingerprints • DNA fingerprinting for forensic purposes was developed by Alec Jeffreys in 1985 • DNA is a powerful investigative tool • no two people have the same DNA • DNA evidence collected from a crime scene can be linked to a suspect or can eliminate a suspect from suspicion

  17. We Inherit DNA characteristics P1 2nd gen aa AA A a X A a A a AA Aa 1st Gen X Aa Aa aa Aa 25%:50%:25%

  18. Thousands of identical DNA sequences in each strand of DNA • The number of repetitive sequences - are different for each person, - but constant for a given individual - transmitted from parents in a regular fashion

  19. STR (short Tandem Repeat) DNA • Multiple copies of identical base sequences , arranged in tandem, one behind another. • Like a gene, a loci of STR can have multiple allele.  6, 5, 7, 8

  20. DNA analysis • DNA extraction • Amplification • Electrophoresis • Genotyping

  21. Repeats (8-10) (6-6) (6-8) (6-10)

  22. Matching the evidence vs the ante mortem data E 1 2 3 (8,5) E=2 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

  23. Mutilated body L1 L2 L3 A1 A2 B1 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 (7,4) 1: L1.L2,A2 (8,5) 2: L3,A1,B2

  24. Mitochondrial DNA • mtDNA is non nuclear DNA • Structure : circular • The cell contain thousands mitochondria • Inherited solely from mother • Cannot differentiate between individuals of the same maternal line. • The transmission of mtDNA is consistent over many generations.

  25. DNA Mitokondria

  26. DNA analysis • DNA extraction • Amplification • Sequencing • Sequence variations

  27. Tsar Tsarina Prince Philip Duke of Edinburg Xenia Cheremeteff-Sfiri

  28. What kind of sample ? Blood Teeth Sperm Hair Urine Bone Muscle

More Related