You
will have direct access to the Criminal Database and the Vehicle Records
Database and you will have free use of the Forensic Laboratories where
you can carry out tests on items of physical evidence (fingerprints,
blood. weapons. bullets, tool marks, documents etc) that may emerge
from the searches that you requested.
An
essential aspect of the Camp is that at no time will you be given or
receive formal instruction. Everything you need to know about cryptology,
blood typing, chromatography, soil analyses, fibre analysis, ultra-violet
analysis of inks and soil, ballistics, computer operation or finger
print analysis is set out in a book, the Forensic Manual, that was written
specifically for the Camp. The Manual will also explain aspects of Law
that pertain to the rights of Police, witnesses and suspects and you
will be obliged to abide by the Law throughout your investigation. Evidence
gained unlawfully is not admissible in court.
The
work involved in setting up the camp is prodigious. Five crime scenarios
are created, for each Camp. This means that seven CTFs will work in
parallel (and independently) on each scenario. The creators of the crime
scenarios are campers from last year’s Camp. We call them “Controllers”.
A Controller may live anywhere in Australia and each scenario is developed
by a pair of them. They have been working on their scenario for nine
months and they have been trained by a Controller Manager who was a
Controller at last year’s Camp.
As
well as creating the ideas that make up the scenario, the Controllers
have to collect all of the items of physical evidence (photographs,
fibres, blood stained clothing, shoe prints, shoes, soil samples, documents,
broken headlight covers, ink samples, fountain pens, letters) that are
related to the scenario.
All of these items of physical evidence are real. The fingerprints are
real, the fibres, soil, footprints, blood, inks, bullets are all real.
You will be wise if you rehearse laboratory skills before attempting
to work on the evidence from the scene of the crime. If your laboratory
technique is not up to scratch, vital evidence could be irretrievably
lost. Just as in real life, there can be no replacement of damaged evidence.
Let's
return to the Westpac Bank robbery. On the first day of the Camp your
CTF will receive a parcel of material from Sergeant McKidd, who responded
to a phone call from the bank manager and attended the scene of the
crime. This parcel may include:-
- a brief report
describing the events that had occurred at the Bank, based on information
provided by witnesses.
- a list of individuals
who were inside and outside the Bank and their contact information.
- the note that
the robbers had handed the bank teller.
What your CTF does
from this point is entirely up to the four detectives in your CTF. Remember
that you have all of the resources of the nation’s police forces
at your disposal but your greatest asset is your collective intelligence
and imagination.Not all of the Camp is hard work, however. When the
groups are not solving crimes, there are recreational activities in
the morning and at lunchtimes, making use of The Armidale School's heated
indoor pool and gymnasium, as well as large sporting fields. In the
evenings, activities are held varying from drama games and socials to
trivia nights and movies.After the crimes have wound to a close on Friday,
the 'detectives' come together as a whole to form a legal team, which
must prepare a case to be presented to a jury in a court trial the next
day. All of the campers will play a role in the courtroom (Jury, Expert
Witness, Prosecution, Defense etc). Think about the role that you would
like to play.
They then have Friday afternoon to prepare their case, before presenting
it in the courtroom on Saturday.
Once the Jury has delivered its verdict, the Forensic Science Camp has
come to an end, and the Campers are free to return to the real world...or
are they?