Dawnay Nick, Sheppard Kayleigh
School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Byrom Street, Liverpool L3 3AF, United Kingdom.
School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Byrom Street, Liverpool L3 3AF, United Kingdom.
Sci Justice. 2023 Mar;63(2):206-228. doi: 10.1016/j.scijus.2022.12.006. Epub 2023 Jan 11.
Sexual assault casework requires the collaboration of multiple agency staff to formalise an investigative pipeline running from crime scene to court. While the same could be said of many other forensic investigations, few require the additional support of health care staff and the combined forensic involvement of body-fluid examiners, DNA experts and analytical chemists. The sheer amount of collaborative effort between agencies is laid out through a detailed examination of the investigative workflow from crime scene to courtroom with each step in the pipelines detailed and discussed. Beginning with a review of sexual assault legislation in the United Kingdom this article details how sexual assault investigations are initiated by police and supported by sexual assault referral centre (SARC) staff who are often the first responders providing primary healthcare and patient support to victims while simultaneously collecting and assessing forensic evidence. Detailing the myriad of evidential material that can be documented and collected at the SARC, the review identifies and categorises key forensic tests to first detect and identify body-fluids recovered from evidence through to the secondary analysis of DNA to help identify the suspect. This review also focusses on the collection and analysis of biological material used to support the allegation that the sexual activity was non-consensual and provides a breakdown of common marks and trauma as well as a review of common analytical methods used to infer Drug Facilitated Sexual Assault (DFSA). The culmination of the investigative pipeline is discussed by reviewing the Rape and Serious Sexual Assault (RASSO) workflow used by the Crown Prosecution Service before providing our thoughts on the future of forensic analysis and possible changes to the described workflows.
性侵犯案件的处理需要多个机构的工作人员协作,以建立一个从犯罪现场到法庭的正式调查流程。虽然许多其他法医调查也可以这么说,但很少有调查需要医护人员的额外支持,以及体液检验员、DNA专家和分析化学家的综合法医参与。通过详细审视从犯罪现场到法庭的调查工作流程,详细列出各机构之间的大量协作努力,对流程中的每一步进行详细阐述和讨论。本文首先回顾英国的性侵犯立法,详细说明警方如何启动性侵犯调查,以及性侵犯转介中心(SARC)的工作人员如何提供支持,这些工作人员通常是第一响应者,在为受害者提供初级医疗保健和患者支持的同时,收集和评估法医证据。该综述详细介绍了可在SARC记录和收集的大量证据材料,识别并分类关键的法医检验,从最初检测和识别从证据中提取到的体液,到对DNA进行二次分析以帮助识别嫌疑人。本综述还着重于收集和分析用于支持性行为系非自愿这一指控的生物材料,详细列出常见的痕迹和创伤,并综述用于推断药物辅助性侵犯(DFSA)的常见分析方法。在阐述我们对法医分析的未来以及所述工作流程可能发生的变化的看法之前,通过回顾皇家检察署使用的强奸和严重性侵犯(RASSO)工作流程,来讨论调查流程的最终阶段。