shoeprints

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Shoeprints. History. Earliest use of shoe prints was in 1786 in Scotland Used to discover the murderer of a young girl Footprints were found leaving her cottage An officer took a rough cast – compared the cast against boots of individuals at a funeral. Footprints. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Shoeprints

ShoeprintsShoeprints

Page 2: Shoeprints

History

• Earliest use of shoe prints was in 1786 in Scotland– Used to discover the murderer of a young girl

• Footprints were found leaving her cottage• An officer took a rough cast – compared the cast

against boots of individuals at a funeral

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Footprints• Bottom of feet and toes have prints just

like on your fingers– Can be used to link you to a crime scene (if

barefoot)– Footprint database has been created

• FYI – Air Force takes each soldiers footprint – more likely to be found at a crash site

Page 4: Shoeprints

Parts of the foot

• Ball - Portion of the outsole beneath the fleshy part of the foot just back of the toes

• Heel - The rear-most region of the outsole, sometimes raised and sometimes a separately constructed component

• Arch - The portion of the outsole beneath the arched bony framework of the foot extending from the heel forward to the toes

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Barefoot Morphology

• Based on the belief that individuals have unique patterns to the weight-bearing part of the foot– No two people have the same foot shape

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Basic Foot Types

1. Normal – normal arch – imprint shows a flare but heel and forefoot are connected by a wide band

2. Flat – low arch – leaves a nearly complete imprint

3. High – high arch – very narrow band connecting forefoot and heel

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Shoe Parts

• Upper holds foot securely in place

• Midsole cushion that cradles the foot

• Outsole bottom of the shoe (protection and traction)

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Class Characteristics

• Characteristics that repeat during the manufacturing process and are shared by one or more shoes. These include: size, design/pattern and mold characteristics.

• Class characteristics reduce the number of shoes from every shoe in the world to a group of similar shoes

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Individual Characteristics

• Unique, accidental, random damage on the outsole that is the result of its use and wear.

• These nicks and scratches are in the outsole accidentally and in a completely random shape, orientation and position.– Two types:

Damage characteristicsTemporary characteristics

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Damage Characteristics

• Characteristics associated with random cuts, gouges, etc. made to the outsole during the wearing or before molding

– Ex: molding inconsistencies, cutting problems, bubbles found in the mold

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Temporary Characteristics

• Marks that result from foreign debris or substances becoming attached to the outsole

– Ex: rocks, gum, tape

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Wear

• The continual changing of class characteristics and certain accidental characteristics, resulting in individual features

• Wear patterns patterns acquired in or on an object as a result of normal usage– Determined by weight, gait, how they use

and wear shoes

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Shoeprint Comparison

• Examination and comparison of a shoeprint is made up of 3 critical parts:

– Physical characteristics of the outsoles– Manufacturing techniques of the known shoe– Wearing of the shoe

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To Make It Valid…

• There is no established minimum number of characteristics that must match to prove a relationship

• Positive ID is based on:Level of expertise of examinerQuality and clarity of characteristicsUniqueness and significance of the

characteristics

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Shoeprint Evidence

• When collected and preserved properly, footwear can provide:– Type– Make– Description– Approximate size– The number of suspects– The path through and away from the crime scene– The involvement of the evidence– The events that occurred during the crime

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What Can Be Told…

• Theoretically, a footprint or set of footprints can tell you…– Relative height of the individual

• Shoe size• Stride length

– Speed at which person was walking/running– Individual characteristics – limp, cane,…

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SICAR

• Shoeprint Image Capture and Retrieval – shoeprint database