 Forensic science has become a favourite of TV scriptwriters, with fictional criminals being caught through fingerprinting, fibre analysis and a toxicology report. What works for TV, however, doesn’t always play out in real life. For example, the success rate for DNA profiling of gun cartridges is currently around 10 per cent. This is why a team, with members from Brighton, Brunel, Cranfield, Surrey and York Universities, are working on a ‘bullet tagging’ technology.
‘We set ourselves a dual target of increasing the amount of DNA that was left on cartridge cases from the most recent people that have handled it,’ explains team leader Professor Paul Sermon from the University of Surrey. ‘Obviously, because some people wear gloves, you can’t guarantee the DNA will be left behind. The second of our dual targets was to ensure that there were tags on the surface of the cartridge case which was handled and left at the crime scene, this would then donate tags to the users skin, gloves and clothes.’
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