Affiliation:
1. Department of Forensic and Investigative Sciences West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA
2. Department of Forensic Science Sam Houston State University Huntsville Texas USA
3. Department of Statistics University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand
Abstract
AbstractThis study assists the interpretation of glass and paint evidence by filling an existing gap in the background occurrence that reflects the socioeconomic and demographic circumstances in the United States. The collection was performed in a college US city (Morgantown, West Virginia) to determine the effect of the type of clothing worn at different seasons on the presence of glass and paint. Tape lifts and sole scrapings (1038) were collected from 210 participants and up to six clothing and footwear areas per individual. Glass fragments were analyzed via polarized light microscopy (PLM), refractive index (RI), micro‐X‐Ray fluorescence (μXRF), and scanning electron microscopy‐energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM‐EDS), while paint specimens were examined by light microscopy and infrared spectroscopy (μFTIR). Higher occurrences of glass and paint were found in the winter season. The winter collection yielded 10 glass fragments and 68 paint particles, whereas the summer collection resulted in one glass fragment and 23 paint particles. The percentage of individuals with traces varied between seasons; 7% of individuals in the winter and 0.9% in the summer had glass, whereas 36% of individuals in the winter and 19% in the summer bore paint. Lastly, when considering the overall garment and footwear areas, glass was detected in 1.4% of the winter set, compared to 0.2% in the summer collection; paint was found in 9.2% of the winter collection, whereas only 4.2% was found in the summer set. There were no instances where both glass and paint were detected on the clothing and footwear of the same individual.
Funder
National Institute of Justice
Subject
Genetics,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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