Locard’s Exchange Principle states that
with contact between two items, there will always be an exchange. So, when a
crime is committed, if the perpetrator deposits a sufficient number of skin
cells on an item at the scene, and that item is collected as possible evidence.
- It
is the DNA in skin cells that is left at a crime scene and may be sampled
from a variety of items including gun grips, steering wheels, eating utensils,
luggage handles and clothing.
- Humans
shed tens of thousands of skin cells each day, and these cells are
transferred to every surface with which human skin comes into contact.
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DNA is not Low Copy Number DNA (LCN DNA).
- LCN
DNA profiling allows a very small amount of DNA to be analyzed, from as
few as 10 to 30 cells.
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DNA samples are processed exactly in the same way as blood, semen, saliva
etc, and can stand up to scrutiny in court much better than LCN DNA.
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DNA analysis may be able to link the perpetrator to the crime scene, by
collecting the skin cells and analyzing them.
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