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  2. Forensic photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_photography

    Common types of photography such as creative and artistic photography give a different purpose than forensic photography. Crime scene photography allows one to capture essential aspects of the crime scene, including its scope, the focal points of the scene, and any physical or material evidence found at or from a result of it. [5]

  3. Forensic arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_arts

    Forensic art is used to assist law enforcement with the visual aspects of a case, often using witness descriptions and video footage. [ 1 ] It is a highly specialized field that covers a wide range of artistic skills, such as composite drawing , crime scene sketching, image modification and identification, courtroom drawings, demonstrative ...

  4. Angela Strassheim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angela_Strassheim

    Angela Strassheim (born 1969) is an American photographer living and working in Brooklyn, New York and Jerusalem. [1] Prior to receiving her MFA from Yale in 2003, Strassheim worked as a certified forensic photographer. In this capacity she produced crime scene, evidence, and surveillance photography in Miami.

  5. Meet The Photographer Who Spent Four Years In A Forensic Morgue

    www.aol.com/news/2013-10-21-morgue-photographer.html

    But German photographer Patrik Budenz was able to convince the Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences in Berlin to allow him to spend four years researching and taking photographs of ...

  6. Crime lab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_lab

    Forensic evidence technician; Crime scene investigator; Scenes of crime officer (SOCO) Laboratory analysts – scientists or other personnel who run tests on the evidence once it is brought to the lab (i.e., DNA tests, or bullet striations). Job titles include: Forensic Technician (performs support functions such as making reagents)

  7. History of forensic photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../History_of_forensic_photography

    With technology like digital photography becoming more common, forensic photography continues to advance and now includes many categories where specialists are required to perform more sophisticated tasks. The use of infrared and ultraviolet light is used for trace evidence photography of fingerprints, tiny blood samples and many other things.

  8. They were things that his grandfather told him," he continues. Paramount Pictures/Corbis via Getty From Left: Johnny Depp, Casper Van Dien and Christina Ricci in 1999's 'Sleepy Hollow'

  9. Crime reconstruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_reconstruction

    Arguably, a crime scene reconstructionist is a forensic scientist who specializes in interpreting and assembling evidence in a coherent manner. Chisum and Turvey explain that to perform crime reconstruction one need not "be an expert in all forensic disciplines" but "must become an expert in only one: the interpretation of the evidence in context."