Jurisprudence
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Most members of the jurisprudence section of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences are lawyers. They have a strong interest in the legal aspects of the status of scientific evidence in the courts. They study and comment on the admissibility of scientific evidence, especially new types of evidence. They are also concerned with the role of forensic science in general in the criminal justice system and about ethical issues as they apply to judges and lawyers. Some of the lawyers have a strong background themselves in scientific issues and are well positioned to work with other lawyers and scientists on such matters.
Forensic odontology
Perhaps a more familiar term for this branch would be forensic dentistry. There are several important applications of dentistry to the forensic sciences. One of the most long-standing and important is the identification of a body from its dentition, which may be the only reliable way of identifying human remains in mass disasters, such as airplane crashes, fires, or wars. A body may be too badly damaged to have any fingerprints or usable DNA for typing, but dentition is very hardy and can survive crashes, fires, and even explosions. The forensic dentist can obtain an X-ray of the surviving teeth and compare it to antemortem dental X-rays. Of course, there must be some information about the possible identity of the body, and there must be some antemortem X-rays available for comparison. Almost anyone who has been to a dentist will have dental X-rays on file, so the main difficulty in such analysis is knowing whose X-rays to compare to the dental remains. A comparison of dental X-rays can lead to a definitive identification.
Forensic dentists also have an important role in the analysis of facial injuries received in a suspected battering. Their work is especially important in the case of children who may be brought to an emergency room at a hospital with facial injuries. A forensic dentist may be able to verify or refute a claim that the injuries were accidental, as a result of falling down a flight of stairs, for example. In such analysis, the forensic dentist will work closely with emergency room physicians and nurses and perhaps forensic pathologists.
A relatively recent application of forensic dentistry is in the area of bite mark analysis. In many sex-crime and homicide situations, the perpetrator may bite the victim. Often the bites are deep, and the resulting marks may persist for a long time, especially if the victim is bitten after death. During the postmortem exam, the pathologist can take a cast of the bite mark using dental plaster or some other medium. That cast can be compared with a cast taken of the suspect’s dentition. Everyone’s teeth are believed to be unique in their bite surfaces (taken as a whole), and thus the comparison can individualize the bite mark to a particular person.
Such evidence can show up in a variety of crimes. During one reported case of burglary in England, for example, the perpetrator evidently became hungry and took a bite out of a piece of Swiss cheese, leaving a mark that was traced back to his mouth. A more serious and notorious case in which bite mark evidence was important was that of the American serial killer Ted Bundy. Bundy was believed to have killed more than 40 people, most of them young women. One of his habits was to bite his victims, often after they were dead, as he did in the case of one of his last murders in Florida. A forensic odontologist was able to match a bite mark impression taken from the victim’s flesh to Bundy’s dentition. That identification was pivotal evidence in Bundy’s conviction.
Forensic dentists are, of course, first and foremost, dentists. They should have a particular interest and expertise in taking and interpreting dental X-rays or bite marks, or they should have some special training or expertise in the interpretation of facial injuries.