by Steve Everist » Thu Oct 22, 2009 8:34 pm
On our bench notes (which don't get sent along with the report), we have boxes where we list the names of all people compared or requested to be compared (even if there are no prints on file). One of the boxes next to the name is to be filled in with an S, V, or O - Suspect, Victim, or Officer. We've had discussions about eliminating this altogether are we don't necessarily know what someone is.
If we ID a print from an AFIS search, and the last name matches the name of the victim (on those lift cards where it's written down), we can't automatically assume that they're a victim. At the same time, if we get an ID to one of our officers, we don't automatically know that they were an officer working the case unless they were the one who filled out the card. I recently ID'd a card to an officer whose name was not on the card and I couldn't find a reference to him on the case. So what is he, based on how our form read??? From what I could find out, I think he may have been in training and lifted the print, however his trainer filled out the rest of the card. The print was mirrored and on the underside of the tape outside the general powder area. Hopefully they have that documented somewhere, and he was the only ID in the case.
As far as agencies being reluctant to submit names of people to compare because of the legal meaning for suspect, you could change the form to read something along the lines of "Subjects requested for comparison". So this could include victims, officers who may have touched something at the scene, suspects, or persons of interest.
~Steve E.