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Evidence management

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Evidence management is the administration and control of evidence related to an event so that it can be used to prove the circumstances of the event, and so that this proof can be tested by independent parties with confidence that the evidence provided is the evidence collected related to the event.

Aspects of evidence management

Evidence management requires that the evidence is:

  • collected in a fashion which does not compromise the nature of the evidence
  • kept in a fashion which maintains the nature of the evidence[citation needed]
  • handled in a fashion which allows no doubt that the evidence could not have been accidentally or deliberately altered or substituted

that is, the evidence presented for the proof is the exact evidence collected.[1][verification needed][2]

Evidence management requiries the techniques used in:

  • warehousing and inventory control, of many items of evidence related to many events
  • curation and keeping of delicate and sensitive items, of a broad range in type of material and size
  • secure custodianship and handover of responsibility, from the time and place of collection to the time and place of presentation as elements of a proof, often called either chain of custody or evidence continuity

Evidence lifetime

Evidence must be managed and administered over its entire lifetime. The lifetime of a piece of evidence includes a number of key stages,[3][4] from the piece of evidence's acquisition to its eventual disposal:

  • Acquisition, which can be by:
    • Collection, for example at a crime scene
    • Seizure
    • Voluntary deposit
  • Description, which includes:
    • Indexing
    • Describing
    • Digitising, for example, photographing or scanning
  • Duty of care, for example document seizure from a business which by definition requires the documents to carry out its business, can include:
    • Copying of evidence
    • Provision of copies to evidence owner
  • Analysis, which includes:
    • Information interpretation, for example the content of documents
    • Materials testing, for example of drug type, paper type, ink type
    • Environmental context investigation, for example of included matter, animal life, fingerprints
  • Assessment
    • Relevance to elements of proofs
  • Presentation, which includes
    • Disclosure, for example pre trial to defence
    • In court, and at appeal
  • Disposal, which can be by:
    • Return to owner
    • Destruction, of illicit or redundant or obsolete material
    • Sale or donation, of no owner identifiable material

Accountability and responsibility

At all stages of its life, the piece of evidence must typically be moved in and out of storage, and be handled by different people. This places very strong requirements on the integrity of the chain of custody, and in particular on the personnel involved and the duty of care of the organisation responsible. For example, Interpol has published standards to combat corruption, and Standard 4.12[5] refers to systems and states:

'Having and maintaining systems of revenue collection, money and property handling and for the control and preservation of evidence that ensure that those collecting or handling money, dealing with evidence or handling property are accountable and that the systems are such as to deter corruption.'

Evidence and property management is typically considered critical to the extent that the efficiency or economy of the processes are secondary to the integrity of the evidence and property.[6]

The digitising of evidence is reducing the need to handle the original evidence until it is presented. The reduction in the handling of the original evidence lessens the likelihood of deliberate tampering or accidental contamination and reduces chain of custody requirements and overheads.

While the chain of custody stops with presentation, accountability and responsibility remains until the evidence is disposed of.

Evidence management and its impact on criminal prosecutions

Evidence management is critical to the outcome of criminal prosecutions. If any of the above aspects of evidence management fail in relation to the evidence required for a prosecution, then it can compromise the outcome of the prosecution.

Standards and procedures

The proper management of evidence is so important to organisations responsible for evidence that they develop formal standards for the management, administration, and handling of evidence. The failure to apply proper standards to property processing can result in severe criticism of an organisation.[7] These standards and procedures can vary[6] from consensual indicative standards internationally adopted as a benchmark reference by organisations across the world,[3] be specific to the initial evidence handling procedures for specific institutions,[8] be the lifetime standards for evidence handling for an organisation,[4] or be formal national standards.[9]

Management of physical evidence

The primary aspect of the management of physical evidence is the provision of suitable storage facility. Storage facilities for evidence can vary in size from a single secure cabinet in an office to large dedicated warehouses. The physical storage of evidence in modern departments is often accomplished using hi-density shelving systems. These systems allow use of only one aisle to access several rows of shelving by means of rolling carriages that have shelving mounted to them. This results in storing double the amount of evidence in the same space that would be used on static shelving. These hi-density system can accommodate shelving, shelving with lockable drawers, bulk rack, pallet rack, and lockable cabinets. In addition hi-density style systems can lock off specific aisles for the various degrees of security often needed for items such as guns and drugs.

All but the smallest evidence storage facilities will contain multiple physical containers for separate pieces of evidence. The default container is bankers boxes although plastic bins and bags are also seen. Larger storage facilities will also provide environmentally controlled sections, for example cold rooms or freezers, for the preservation evidence. Hi-density systems are even more valuable when special environments such as cold rooms are required since they require so much less space.

Physical container

The physical containers used to store items of evidence are sometimes called evidence storage units The packaging used to store evidence perform a number of functions. These include:

  • physical stability of the evidence;
  • regular and organised stacking and placement to allow optimal access;[10]
  • protection of evidence management personnel from dangers inherent in the evidence.

Physical containers for pieces of evidence varying in the type of storage they provide.

Highly desirable pieces of evidence such as precious metals, currency, jewelry, firearms, and drugs often require higher levels of storage to protect them from theft, and reentry into to the criminal environment.[10]

Inherently dangerous items of evidence such as drugs, and chemical, biological, nuclear, radiological materials require higher levels of storage to protect the well being of evidence management personnel.[10]

Typically physical containers are of a size and shape that they are able to be handled by a single person. Small items can be placed in an evidence bag: a plastic bag with special tamper resistant features and places to record the chain of custody. Large volumes of evidence will require larger containers typically able to be handled using a fork lift.

Evidence management organisational units

Evidence storage work unit

Most organisations collecting evidence have specific work units responsible for the safe keeping and preservation of evidence. The evidence storage work unit, typically called a property office is responsible for:

Other duties of a property office

When the organisation is a police agency, the property office is typically also responsible for found property.

References

  1. ^ "Information Assurance Applied to Authentication of Digital Evidence". Forensic Science Communications. Federal Bureau of Investigation. 2004-10-01. Archived from the original on March 12, 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-26. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "Forensics and Incident Response". www.peerlyst.com. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Property Room Standards". International Association for Property and Evidence. Archived from the original on 2008-02-04. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  4. ^ a b "Evidence handling". Minnesota Department of Corrections. Archived from the original on 2008-05-31. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  5. ^ "Global Standards to Combat Corruption in Police Forces/Services". Interpol Group of Experts on Corruption. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  6. ^ a b "Western Australia Police Property Management Practices - Good Practice (page 11)" (PDF). Western Australian Police and Corruption and Crime Commission.
  7. ^ "Western Australia Police Property Management Practices" (PDF). Western Australian Police and Corruption and Crime Commission.
  8. ^ "Procedure - Preservation of a Crime Scene and Evidence". Queensland Corrective Services. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  9. ^ "Community and materials - Chain of Custody". Standards Australia. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  10. ^ a b c "Property Standards #7". International Association for Property and Evidence. Archived from the original on 2008-04-23. Retrieved 2008-03-26.