Imagine you're a detective - - you've been called in to investigate a shooting that took place inside a small apartment. You examine the situation, interview witnesses, take photographs and collect physical evidence. Eventually, you have to leave the scene and let the apartment's tenants get on with their lives - - but what if you're not through figuring out how the crime took place?
Traditionally, police would create hand-drawn sketches of crime scenes and return to them later. These days, some police have moved towards virtual crime scene technology. Virtual crime scenes are controlled, digital re-creations of existing crime scenes. They're usually rendered with the help of surveying technology and specialized computer software. Some virtual crime scene software packages use physical measurements or building plans to create three-dimensional models of crime scenes, while other programs take photographic evidence in order to create 360-degree visual simulations.
Virtual crime scenes can help investigators revisit real crime scenes long after they've been cleaned up, altered or abandoned. Detectives can use virtual scenes to aid in data visualization - - if a detective needs to check a bullet's trajectory to figure out an attacker's position, he or she can do so within the three-dimensional model. Investigators can also use virtual crime scenes to imagine various scenarios and test theories about how a crime could have been accomplished. Plus, virtual crime scenes are useful for jogging witnesses' memories and testing witness testimony for accuracy. In addition, virtual crime scenes are outstanding training tools for new investigators. In the trial portion of the case, a virtual crime scene can be shown to a jury to illustrate a crime and demonstrate probable scenarios, or to clarify the testimony of a witness.
One of the biggest disadvantages to virtual crime scene technology is that police departments need someone who knows how to work the computer software that creates and displays the virtual crime scene. Even the simplest virtual crime scene programs require the operator to have some amount of expertise in order to create an accurate rendering of the scene and tweak it for exactness. A second disadvantage is that no matter how good the virtually rendered scene is, it is never a perfect copy of the real crime scene.
Discovery Channel
http://people.howstuffworks.com
No comments:
Post a Comment