Identification of Remains

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Initial Assessment - First Forensic Steps

  • Comprehensive Evidence Establishment: Modern forensic practice emphasizes establishing the facts of a crime through comprehensive evidence collection and analysis.

    ⭐ Evidence-based approach: Proving that a crime occurred requires physical evidence, witness testimony, and circumstantial evidence beyond just the remains themselves.

  • Key Forensic Steps:
    • Determine if remains are human.
    • Estimate Minimum Number of Individuals (MNI).
    • Assess antemortem, perimortem, postmortem changes relevant to identity.

Age Estimation - Skeletal Age Clues

  • Dental Age:
    • Modern practice incorporates population-specific atlases (Demirjian's method, London Atlas) alongside foundational Schour & Massler charts.
    • Adult assessment uses refined methods (Kvaal, Lamendin) supplementing traditional Gustafson's approach.
  • Ossification & Epiphyseal Fusion:
    • Advanced imaging (CT scans) provides precise assessment with population-specific data.
    • Elbow (CRITOE sequence): Approx. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 years (varies by population).
    • Clavicle (medial end): Fuses last, 22-25 years (significant individual variation).
  • Pubic Symphysis:
    • Modern practice favors Suchey-Brooks method over traditional Todd's phases.
    • McKern-Stewart system largely superseded by statistically robust approaches.
  • Sternal End of 4th Rib:
    • Iscan's phases remain valid within broader multifactorial assessment.
  • Cranial Suture Closure:
    • Highly variable; limited utility for precise age determination in modern forensic practice.

⭐ Gustafson's method for age estimation from teeth considers: (1) Attrition, (2) Secondary dentin deposition, (3) Gingival recession, (4) Cementum apposition, (5) Root resorption, and (6) Root transparency.

📌 Mnemonic CRITOE for elbow ossification centers: Capitulum, Radial head, Internal epicondyle, Trochlea, Olecranon, External epicondyle.

Sex & Stature - Height & He/She

Sex determination is crucial for identification under BSA provisions for human remains.

  • Pelvis: Most reliable due to sexual dimorphism related to childbirth. Modern geometric morphometric approaches increase objectivity and accuracy.
    FeatureMaleFemale
    Sciatic NotchNarrow, deepWide, shallow (Angle > 68°)
    Subpubic AngleGenerally acuteGenerally obtuse (94% accuracy in some populations)
    Preauricular SulcusAbsent/faintPresent, well-developed
  • Skull: Less reliable than pelvis. Modern 3D imaging and morphometric analysis improve accuracy.
    • Mastoid Process: Large, projecting (Male) vs. Small (Female).
    • Supraorbital Ridges: Prominent (Male) vs. Smooth (Female).
    • Nuchal Lines: Marked (Male) vs. Gracile (Female).
  • Femur: 3D imaging and geometric morphometric approaches provide more precise sex estimation than diameter alone.

Stature estimation uses long bone lengths (femur, tibia, humerus, radius) per BNSS identification procedures.

  • Formulae: Karl Pearson, Trotter & Gleser.
    • General form: $Stature = A \times BoneLength + C$

⭐ The pelvis remains the most reliable bone for sex determination with modern metric analyses.

📌 Pelvis Priority for Positive Sexing.

Unique Identifiers - Personal Signatures

  • Dental Identification: Crucial method alongside DNA analysis; compares ante-mortem/post-mortem records (restorations, anomalies, morphology, bite marks).
  • Dactylography (Fingerprints): Unique, persistent patterns (loops ~65%, whorls ~30%, arches ~5%); Henry classification foundation with AFIS for database comparison.

    ⭐ Fingerprints are unique, permanent, and develop during fetal life.

  • Cheiloscopy: Study of lip prints (patterns of sulci labiorum).
  • Palatoscopy: Analysis of palatal rugae patterns; stable.
  • Other Individual Marks: Scars (type, age), tattoos (design, location), occupational stigmata.
  • Skeletal Evidence: Healed old fractures, surgical implants (with serial numbers).
  • Ancestry Assessment: Cephalic index ($CI = \frac{Head\ Breadth}{Head\ Length} \times \mathbf{100}$), facial features; ancestry estimation acknowledging biological limitations of racial classification.

Advanced ID Tech - Lab & Disaster ID

  • DNA Fingerprinting: Analysis of unique genetic markers.

    • VNTRs (Variable Number Tandem Repeats).
    • STRs (Short Tandem Repeats): Current gold standard for profiling.

    ⭐ STRs are the current standard for DNA profiling.

    • Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA): Used for degraded samples, traces maternal lineage.
  • Craniofacial Superimposition: Skull matched with antemortem photographic or video records.

  • Forensic Radiology: X-rays detect age (ossification), healed fractures, surgical implants.

  • Mass Disaster Identification (DVI): Interpol DVI phases:

    Forensic DNA analysis workflowoka

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Establishing identity is primary; corpus delicti confirms the crime.
  • Primary identifiers (DNA, fingerprints, dental records) offer the highest certainty.
  • Pelvic and skull morphology are crucial for sex determination.
  • Age estimation relies on dental development, epiphyseal fusion, and pubic symphysis changes.
  • Stature is reconstructed from long bone lengths (e.g., Trotter & Gleser).
  • Dactylography (fingerprints) offers unique, persistent identification.
  • Craniofacial superimposition compares skull to antemortem photographs_._

Practice Questions: Identification of Remains

Test your understanding with these related questions

Disputed maternity can be solved by using the following tests, EXCEPT:

1 of 5

Flashcards: Identification of Remains

1/10

_____ is an exclusory test, which consists of orienting the (live) photographs in the exact same position as the dead body to know the identity of the person

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ is an exclusory test, which consists of orienting the (live) photographs in the exact same position as the dead body to know the identity of the person

Photosuperimposition

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