As noted in previous blog posts, forensics has numerous
specialty areas. One of those specialties is botany. Forensic botany is the
application of plant sciences to criminal investigations. Similar to DNA and
fingerprinting, plant material (seeds, leaves, flowers, spores, wood, fruits,
cells, hairs and glandular hairs) is often unique to certain plant species and
ecological areas. This allows a forensic botanist to narrow down the
possibilities surrounding the who, where, and when of a crime.
An example of this is the comparison of pollen at a crime
scene and on a suspect. Because even common plants have their own unique
combination of pollens at different locations, the botanist may be able to link
the suspect to a particular crime scene or determine that the victim has been
moved from the original crime scene. Another example is the use of botanical
evidence to find “clandestine” graves by examining the changes of disturbed
soil. Botanists are knowledgeable about the plants that typically invade disturbed
surfaces.
The study of trees and roots is also helpful in an
investigation, often for determining the elapsed time of death. Growth rings
can be counted to provide the timing of an event, and even partial damage to
root growth can suggest the period since an interruption occurred.
The first reported trial that used the expert testimony of a
botanist was the Lindbergh baby kidnapping case. Dr. Arthur Koehler was an
expert on wood anatomy and identification with the United States Forest
Service. He studied the ladder used by the kidnapper, and subsequently presented
three kinds of information – identification of the wood used, physical marks
left by tools on the wood, and comparison of the wood structure. By matching
the annual rings on the wood, Koehler was able to show that the attic board in
Bruno Hauptman’s home and the ladder rail had once been a single board. This
was one of the most incriminating pieces of evidence in the trial that led to
Hauptmann’s conviction.
In the eighty years since the Lindberg trial, the value of botanical
trace evidence in criminal and civil cases has been used to bring justice to innumerable
victims.
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