Book of the week. Forensics, the Anatomy of Crime 3/5.

Date:
2014
  • Audio

About this work

Description

Part 3 of 5, Val McDermid talks about her new book, 'The Anatomy of Crime', launched prior to a Wellcome Collection exhibition on the subject in February 2015. She explores history and practices in forensics science referencing historical cases as well as those in the more recent news. The late Victorian age saw the advent of finger printing. From the 1980s most of the documentation and analysis of finger prints is carried out by computers. Finger prints are captured in certain ways; they are either 'patent' or 'latent'. Not much has changed in terms of capturing prints from a crime scene. McDermid recounts a case of a miscarriage of justice; finger prints are not without controversy. She turns to blood splatter analysis. Formerly blood scene analysis could only corroborate common blood types. More recently, DNA analysis has provided a breakthrough and testing is getting quicker despite the tiny amount of crime scene material.

Publication/Creation

UK : BBC Radio 4, 2014.

Physical description

1 CD (14 min).

Contributors

Copyright note

BBC Radio 4

Notes

Broadcast on 12 November 2014

Creator/production credits

Presented by Val McDermid. Produced by Allegra McIlroy.

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
    1909A

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