Ch. 1 Principles of Fire Investigation Flashcards

Fire, Explosion, Fire Investigation, Detecting Incendiary Fires, Resource Allocation, Scientific Method, Expert Testimony

1
Q

Define fire

A

Rapid oxidation reaction resulting in light and heat i.e. uncontrolled combustion

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2
Q

Define explosion

A

Sudden conversion of potential energy into kinetic energy with the production and release of gas under pressure

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3
Q

Define fire investigation

A

Formal process of determining the origin, cause, and development of the fire and explosion

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4
Q

What 2 stipulations make fire investigation one of the hardest forensic sciences?

A

Distruction & distortion of evidence

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5
Q

Define fire investigator.

A

Specialist who conducts, coordinates, and completes fire investigation

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6
Q

What are 3 major tasks of a fire investigator?

A

1) Proving/disproving allegations of fire being incendiary or arson
2) Using scientific method
3) Civil or criminal litigation

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7
Q

How does civil litigation intertwine with fire investigation?

A

People may set fires to their property for the insurance payout, and charges will need to be pressed on these people

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8
Q

Define cause

A

Circumstances, conditions, or agencies brought about or resulting in a fire or explosion

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9
Q

Define origin

A

General location where a fire or explosion began

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10
Q

Define incendiary

A

Intentionally igniting in an area where a fire when and where there shouldn’t be fire

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11
Q

Give an example of an incendiary fire.

A

Homeless person sets fire in a trash can for warmth, and it gets out of control

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12
Q

Define arson

A

Maliciously & intentionally, or recklessly, causing fire or explosion

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13
Q

Define accidental fire

A

Fire with a proven cause not involving an intentional human act to ignite or spread fire

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14
Q

How do fires affect the economy?

A

Fires can cause economic issues with devastating trickledown/domino effect

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15
Q

How should you treat all fire cases?

A

Like a crime scene

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16
Q

What 3 things should you do at a fire scene?

A

1) Secure the scene
2) Preserve/document/collect evidence
3) Define legal aspects (i.e. jurisdiction, search warrant, etc.)

17
Q

What are the 3 major ways that evidence is destroyed in fire investigation?

A

1) Fire
2) Fire suppression (i.e. water)
3) Firefighters (i.e. breaking through walls)

18
Q

How does a case become undetermined?

A

If the level of certainty for the fire’s cause is only possible or suspected

19
Q

How is resource allocation complicated in arson (HINT: property vs. violent crime)?

A

Arson is seen as a property crime, and resource allocation of property crimes is typically less than that of violent crimes

20
Q

What is the result of an agency not having an arson unit?

A

The investigation may be impacted

21
Q

What is the first step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Recognizing the need

22
Q

After recognizing the need, what is the second step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Defining the problem

23
Q

After defining the problem, what is the third step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Collecting data

24
Q

After collecting data, what is the fourth step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Analyzing the data (inductive reasoning)

25
Q

Define inductive reasoning

A

Reasoning that involves using specific observations to make a general conclusion

26
Q

After analyzing your data, what is the fifth step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Developing a working hypothesis

27
Q

Define hypothesis

A

A conjecture put forward that must be consistent with facts of the case

28
Q

After developing a working hypothesis, what is the sixth step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Testing the working hypothesis (deductive reasoning)

29
Q

Define deductive reasoning

A

Reasoning that involves narrowing down general ideas in favor of a specific conclusion

30
Q

After testing the working hypothesis, what is the seventh/final step of the scientific method in fire investigation?

A

Selecting the final hypothesis

31
Q

What privilege do experts have in a trial?

A

Being able to express an opinion based on established fact (i.e. having an informed opinion)

32
Q

What case lead to the Daubert criteria?

A

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals (1993)

33
Q

What do the Daubert criteria generally entail?

A

The judge is the gatekeeper to ensure expert testimony is relevant and reliable

34
Q

What are the four Daubert criteria?

A

1) Validity of testing
2) Peer-reviewed publication
3) Error rates & professional standards
4) General acceptance by the scientific community