Ballistics & Sciences
Established in 1951, when it also embraced bomb disposal, the
ballistics section has helped homicide detectives send many killers
to jail. The tiny scratches on a bullet as it explodes down a
barrel bear distinctive marks for every weapon; experts can pinpoint
which revolver or rifle fired a shot that killed.
Scientific backup to investigators comes from pathologists and
forensic experts from the Government Laboratory and Forensic Pathology
Service. Their vital but grisly tasks provide expert testimony
in cases of murder, suspicious deaths, rape and hit-and-run accidents.
From examination of tiny objects at scenes of crimes, the doctors
and scientists can often give important clues that lead to convictions.
Just as fingerprinting caused a revolution in criminal detection
decades ago, so now experts in laboratories lead detectives into
another exciting generation of change; DNA profiles can now positively
identify suspects from a drop of blood, saliva, urine or sperm.
Fingerprint checks, too, once regarded as science fiction, are
now being made much faster and more reliably, with the minute
individual whorls on every person's fingers being traced and checked
by computers.
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