Evidence of personal identity, often based solely on the comparison of a single finger impression, or fragment of an impression, has been accepted by courts of law at all levels in England andWales since 1901, when the fingerprint system of identification was first adopted by police forces. Fingerprint identification is used by police forces world-wide, not only for the identification of latent fingermarks left at crime scenes, but also as the basis for ensuring accuracy in the criminal record system. For more than a century fingerprint evidence has been shown without doubt to be the best form of personal identification yet devised and millions of compar-isons and subsequent identifications have been effected world-wide without any flaw in ...
This paper examines fingerprint identification as a mode of state surveillance. Drawing on but criti...
In response to criticism of latent fingerprint evidence from a variety of authoritative extra-legal ...
The early history of "DNA fingerprinting" in the UK might have been different were it not for the ac...
centre on the use of forensic science to enhance the detection of crime, principally through the ana...
Fingerprints have been the gold standard for personal identification within the forensic community f...
AbstractWithin UK policing it is routinely the responsibility of fingerprint laboratory practitioner...
Physical evidence at a crime scene may be present in an infinite variety of forms and materials. Som...
Fingerprints have been used to identify criminals in the UK since the beginning of the 20th century,...
The aim of this entry is to describe and explain the main forensic uses of fingermarks and fingerpri...
Fingerprint identification has been an accepted forensic discipline for more than 110 years. But how...
Fingerprints are widely used as a means of identifying persons of interest because of the highly ind...
The detection, comparison and identification of fingerprints remains one of the best means of linkin...
This two part article concerns the implications of the report of the Scottish Fingerprint Inquiry fo...
Fingerprint-based identification has been the oldest biometric technique suc-cessfully used in conve...
The paper discusses the problematic nature of information systems evaluation by using a case study t...
This paper examines fingerprint identification as a mode of state surveillance. Drawing on but criti...
In response to criticism of latent fingerprint evidence from a variety of authoritative extra-legal ...
The early history of "DNA fingerprinting" in the UK might have been different were it not for the ac...
centre on the use of forensic science to enhance the detection of crime, principally through the ana...
Fingerprints have been the gold standard for personal identification within the forensic community f...
AbstractWithin UK policing it is routinely the responsibility of fingerprint laboratory practitioner...
Physical evidence at a crime scene may be present in an infinite variety of forms and materials. Som...
Fingerprints have been used to identify criminals in the UK since the beginning of the 20th century,...
The aim of this entry is to describe and explain the main forensic uses of fingermarks and fingerpri...
Fingerprint identification has been an accepted forensic discipline for more than 110 years. But how...
Fingerprints are widely used as a means of identifying persons of interest because of the highly ind...
The detection, comparison and identification of fingerprints remains one of the best means of linkin...
This two part article concerns the implications of the report of the Scottish Fingerprint Inquiry fo...
Fingerprint-based identification has been the oldest biometric technique suc-cessfully used in conve...
The paper discusses the problematic nature of information systems evaluation by using a case study t...
This paper examines fingerprint identification as a mode of state surveillance. Drawing on but criti...
In response to criticism of latent fingerprint evidence from a variety of authoritative extra-legal ...
The early history of "DNA fingerprinting" in the UK might have been different were it not for the ac...