Distinguishing between specialties
There is no conventional method for dividing the forensic
community into specialist groups. We have worked hard to describe
what practitioners in the different specialties do for the purpose
of the register. Many of the specialties divide
further into subspecialties, so that we can identify the precise
areas in which a practitioner is competent.
To help us define specialties clearly and design
suitable
registration schemes, we
have grouped the specialties into three sectors. Each sector is
overseen by an
assessment
panel. The boundaries between these sectors are not
hard and fast. Some specialties - such as the analysis of fires,
explosions or transport incidents - actually straddle them. In such
cases we tend to use the terms
investigation
(sometimes
examination) and
evaluation to distinguish between the
specialties.
The investigative role focuses on speculating
about explanations for scientific findings, ranked if possible, to
provide direction to the investigation of a crime. The issues
considered are more likely to be centred on the crime (scene and
offender). The practitioner applies their expertise and their
in-depth technical knowledge to help the investigation, make
inferences and answer questions.
This type of practitioner provides direction to the investigation
by making observations, classifying materials, suggesting and
ranking explanations and eliminating possibilities. They can also
appear in court to provide evidence of their findings and use their
technical knowledge and experience to answer questions and provide
explanations.
The evaluative role involves interpreting
scientific findings of at least two alternative hypotheses (usually
prosecution and defence) and weighing these findings impartially
against each other. The evaluator is allowed to provide evidence of
opinion to the court. The issues considered in this case are more
likely to be centred on the defendant.
The evaluator applies their expertise to help the judicial process,
enabling the court to draw the correct inferences and answer the
questions raised. They deal with pairs of given propositions,
evaluating the observations against these, and corroborating the
version of events provided by either the prosecution or the
defence.
Usually, those forensic practitioners involved in the investigative
element of a case will not also be involved in evaluating the
evidence. Practitioners who provide evaluative interpretation will
often use both investigative and evaluative skills at different
stages of a case.