Code of conduct
Our code of conduct is called Good practice for
forensic practitioners. It sets before forensic practitioners
the values and ideals their profession stands for. It is also a
clear indication to the public of what they have a right to expect.
You can read it in detail below, or you can download a copy
here.
Good practice for forensic practitioners
CRFP is the Council for the Registration of Forensic
Practitioners.
CRFP is an independent regulatory body. Our objective is to
promote public confidence in forensic practice in the UK. We are
achieving this by:
- publishing a register of competent forensic practitioners;
- ensuring through periodic revalidation that forensic
practitioners keep up to date and maintain competence;
- dealing with registered practitioners who fail to meet the
necessary standards.
Registration carries with it both privileges and responsibilities.
The public accept registration as proof of your competence. Your
responsibility is, in return, to maintain and develop professional
performance, adhering at all times to the standards in this
code.
As a registered forensic practitioner you must:
1. Recognise that your overriding duty is to the court and to
the administration of justice: it is your duty to present your
findings and evidence, whether written or oral, in a fair and
impartial manner.
2. Act with honesty, integrity, objectivity and impartiality
3. Not discriminate on grounds of race, beliefs, gender,
language, sexual orientation, social status, age, lifestyle or
political persuasion.
4. Comply with the code of conduct of any professional body of
which you are a member.
5. Provide expert advice and evidence only within the limits of
your professional competence and only when fit to do so.
6. Inform a suitable person or authority, in confidence where
appropriate, if you have good grounds for believing there is a
situation which may result in a miscarriage of justice.
In all aspects of your work as a provider of forensic advice and
evidence you must:
7. Take all reasonable steps to maintain and develop your
professional competence, taking account of material research and
developments within the relevant field and practising techniques of
quality assurance.
8. Declare to your client, patient or employer if you have one,
any prior involvement or personal interest which gives, or may
give, rise to a conflict of interest, real or perceived; and act in
such a case only with their explicit written consent.
9. Take all reasonable steps to ensure access to all available
evidential materials which are relevant to the examinations
requested; to establish, so far as reasonably practicable, whether
any may have been compromised before coming into your possession;
and to ensure their integrity and security are maintained whilst in
your possession.
10. Accept responsibility for all work done under your
supervision, direct or indirect.
11. Conduct all work in accordance with the established
principles of your profession, using methods of proven validity and
appropriate equipment and materials.
12. Make and retain full, contemporaneous, clear and accurate
records of the examinations you conduct, your methods and your
results, in sufficient detail for another forensic practitioner
competent in the same area of work to review your work
independently.
13. Report clearly,
comprehensively and impartially, setting out or stating:
a. your terms of reference and the source of your
instructions;
b. the material upon which you based your investigation and
conclusions;
c. summaries of your and your team's work, results and
conclusions;
d. any ways in which your investigations or conclusions were
limited by external factors, especially if your access to relevant
material was restricted; or if you believe unreasonable limitations
on your time, or on the human, physical or financial resources
available to you, have significantly compromised the quality of
your work;
e. that you have carried out your work and prepared your report in
accordance with this Code.
14. Reconsider and, if necessary, be prepared to change your
conclusions, opinions or advice and to reinterpret your findings in
the light of new information or new developments in the relevant
field; and take the initiative in informing your client or employer
promptly of any such change.
15. Preserve confidentiality unless:
a. the client or patient explicitly authorises you to disclose
something;
b. a court or tribunal orders disclosure;
c. the law obliges disclosure; or
d. your overriding duty to the court and to the administration of
justice demand disclosure.
16. Preserve legal professional privilege: only the client may
waive this. It protects communications, oral and written, between
professional legal advisers and their clients; and between those
advisers and expert witnesses in connection with the giving of
legal advice, or in connection with, or in contemplation of, legal
proceedings and for the purposes of those proceedings.
When you register with us, you accept these as the principles
that must govern your professional practice. They are the standards
against which we would judge any information that called into
question your fitness to stay on the register. You must therefore
always be prepared to justify, in the light of this code, the
actions and decisions you take in the course of your professional
work.
In considering a complaint against a registered forensic
practitioner, we will be guided primarily by the provisions of this
code. But we reserve the right to take action where a
practitioner's fitness to practice is questioned for other reasons.
This would include circumstances such as a criminal conviction or
an allegation of behaviour which, while not specifically addressed
in this code, might be regarded as bringing forensic practice into
disrepute.