How can you tell from a burn pattern that a liquid fuel has been used?
What does it mean if there are spots of damage around a main area of damage?
How do you reconstruct a fire scene?
What do asymmetric burn patterns show you?
What side of something was pointing towards a fire
* can see if its been disturbed or moved
What are smoke records and how are they used to know what happened at a scene?
Smoke will have left deposits on all open surfaces
* regions without smoke deposits must have been covered - physical barrier to the smoke
Give some examples of where smoke records can be found
Why might excavation be needed after a fire?
How can we tell if electricity has caused a fire?
How can electricity start fires?
What are signs that a fire is due to arson?
What are physical evdience of arson?
What are some circumstances that could mean arson was involved?
Why is chemical analysis used for fire scene residues?
To determine whether accelerants are present at the scene - evidence but not proof of arson
Where are you likely to find unburned accelerants?
What can be used to absorb traces of accelerant?
Absorbant materials (diatomaceous earth) can be sprinkled on concrete
* Need to know what is in the concrete for lab analysis
How can you detect accelerants?
What is a sniffer device and how is it used?
How does a ‘Sniffer’ work?
What are the disadvantages of sniffer dogs and ‘Sniffers’?
They can only indicate the possibility of accelerants so lab samples are still needed
What samples must be taken from the fire scene?
What type of samples do you take at a fire scene?
Sample packaging and containers for fire scene samples
Why is a lab negative control sample used?
To guard against accelerant trances arising from contamination of lab equipment
* swabs from the workbench/samples of pure solvents
How is a positive control used in the lab analysis of samples?