Complete Crime Scene Investigation Workbook

Regular price €72.99
Quantity:
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Shipping & Delivery
A01=Everett Baxter Jr.
advanced forensic investigation workbook
Als
alternate
aperture
Author_Everett Baxter Jr.
Backing Card
Bloodstain pattern analysis
Bloodstain pattern evidence
bullet
Bullet Defects
Camera Make
Camera Mode
Casting Medium
Category=JKVC
Category=JKVF
Coin Envelopes
Contact DNA
Crime Scene
Crime scene investigation
Crime Scene Investigator
Crime scene techniques
defects
Digital evidence
DNA Evidence
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Evidence collection
evidence documentation methods
Examination Quality Photograph
focal
Footwear and tire impressions
Footwear Impression
forensic analysis techniques
Forensic photography
forensic science training
Gel Lifter
investigative procedure skills
Item Description
laboratory practical exercises
Latent Fingerprints
Law enforcement
law enforcement education
LCV
length
light
Midrange Photograph
Mock Crime Scene
Paper Sack
Presumptive Test
priority
Questioned document evidence
shutter
Shutter Speed
speed
Trajectory Rod
Unknown Evidence
White Butcher Paper

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498701426
  • Weight: 816g
  • Dimensions: 210 x 280mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

This specially developed workbook can be used in conjunction with the Complete Crime Scene Investigation Handbook (ISBN: 978-1-4987-0144-0) in group training environments, or for individuals looking for independent, step-by-step self-study guide. It presents an abridged version of the Handbook, supplying both students and professionals with the most critical points and extensive hands-on exercises for skill enhancement. Filled with more than 350 full-color images, the Complete Crime Scene Investigation Workbook walks readers through self-tests and exercises they can perform to practice and improve their documentation, collection, and processing techniques.

Most experienced crime scene investigators will tell you that it is virtually impossible to be an expert in every aspect of crime scene investigations. If you begin to "specialize" too soon, you risk not becoming a well-rounded crime scene investigator. Establishing a complete foundation to the topic, the exercises in this workbook reinforce the concepts presented in the Handbook with a practical, real-world application.

As a crime scene investigator, reports need to be more descriptive than they are at the patrol officer level. This workbook provides a range of scenarios around which to coordinate multiple exercises and lab examples, and space is provided to write descriptions of observations. The book also supplies step-by-step, fully illustrative photographs of crime scene procedures, protocols, and evidence collection and testing techniques.

This lab exercise workbook is ideal for use in conjunction with the Handbook, both in group training settings, as well as a stand-alone workbook for individuals looking for hands-on self-study. It is a must-have resource for crime scene technicians, investigators, and professionals who want a complete manual of crime scene collection and processing techniques.

Everett Baxter Jr. has over 21 years of combined law enforcement experience. Mr. Baxter’s education includes an associate’s degree in applied science (emergency medical technology) from Oklahoma City Community College. As a licensed paramedic in the state of Oklahoma, he also received extensive training in medical emergencies, including instruction in how to identify the mechanism of injury on a human body. As a field paramedic, he gained invaluable experience in determining the mechanism of injury from the auto collisions, shootings, stabbings, assaults, etc., that he responded to as a paramedic. He also has a bachelor of science in chemistry from the University of Oklahoma. Once Mr. Baxter became a member of the Oklahoma City Police Department’s crime scene unit, he was able to put his medical and scientific education to use as an investigator. He continued his training with numerous courses in bloodstain pattern analysis, shooting scene reconstruction, fingerprinting, and forensic mapping. Mr. Baxter currently teaches a basic crime scene investigations course for the Oklahoma City Police Department. He is also an adjunct professor at Oklahoma State University–Oklahoma City, where he teaches Technical Investigations, Police Photography, and Basic Bloodstain Pattern Analysis.

More from this author