Criminal clues at your fingertips

A fingermark left at a crime scene may now provide investigators
with details about a suspect’s medications, their diet and even their
lifestyle. Thanks to a new technique developed by scientists from
Sheffield Hallam University in the UK, the ability to catch a criminal
just got a whole lot easier.

[cordis.europa.eu] The technology behind the innovation is MALDI-MSI (matrix-assisted
laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry imaging). Normally used to
chart molecules within tissue, the technology was used for the first
time ever by researchers from the university’s Biomedical Research
Centre (BMRC) in order to analyse and produce images of fingermarks.

They discovered that images created through MALDI-MSI not only
compared favourably with traditional forensic approaches (e.g. other MSI
techniques such as desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI)-MS) but
provided a wider range of information on a suspect’s details. This
includes the ability to detect any substances they might have touched
and predict the time that the fingermark was left.

‚Based on the results produced so far and the research currently
undertaken we can say this technology can help gain much more
information from a fingermark than is currently available,‘ said BMRC’s
Dr Simona Francese, one of four authors of the paper published in the
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry journal. She explained that
the technique could help link the suspect to other criminal activity and
provide details of their lifestyle by tracing drug use and medication,
and even details of the food they eat.

‚This is valuable information to a criminal investigation,
particularly if the suspect’s print is not on the criminal database,‘ Dr
Francese added. Typically, fingermarks found at a crime scene (often
lifted using a powder) are compared with prints on a police database to
identify a suspect. The new technique provides the kind of clues that
help build a profile and provide important background information in a
criminal investigation where there is no back-up record.

A fingermark is made up of elements from the surface of the skin and
gland secretions that transfer from one surface to another on contact.
They are different to fingerprints, where either ink is used or the tip
of the finger is scanned. The palms of our hands secrete different
material than those on other parts of the body. But because we often
make contact with our face and other areas, fingermarks are made up of
substances from both sources, especially lipids, fatty acids, amino
acids, vitamins and water.

Latent marks are those fingermarks made up of transparent materials
that are not easy to see (e.g. gland secretions), while fingermarks made
up of opaque materials (e.g. blood, dirt and paint) are called patent
marks. It is the latent marks, the hardest to identify, that was the
subject of the BMRC study.

The research conducted by the team also proved that it was possible
through MALDI-MSI to re-use the fingermarks even after initial testing.
Co-author of the study Dr Rosalind Wolstenholme said: ‚Not only does the
MALDI-MSI technique allow a greater range of information to be obtained
from a fingermark, it also does not affect the fingermark so it can
still be analysed by classic forensic approaches afterwards.

‚We hope to further develop this technique and integrate it with
another portable spectroscopic technique, Raman spectroscopy, making
this technological approach complimentary to current forensic
technology.‘

Source: http://cordis.europa.eu/fetch?CALLER=FP7_SECURITY_NEWS_EN&ACTION=D&DOC=1&CAT=NEWS&QUERY=012940eb86f2:38c6:629c0fdc&RCN=32195