Friday, November 27, 2020

CRJ 627 CRJ627 Week 6 Final Project (Ashford)

 CRJ 627 CRJ627 Week 6 Final Project (Ashford)

 

 

 

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https://mxstudent.com/crj-627-crj627-week-6-final-project-ashford/

 

Ashford CRJ 627 Week 6 Final Project Wayne Williams Presentation

Wayne Williams Case Evidence Staff Study—Part II: The Presentation (25% of the Summative grade) Due by Day 7. In the role of commander of the investigations division, create a five-minute PowerPoint/Screencast-O- Matic presentation for a citizens’ police academy class which summarizes the evidence found in the Wayne Williams/Atlanta Child Murders case.

This brief presentation should highlight important aspects of forensics as seen in the Wayne Williams case as well as how forensics have evolved. Utilize your written report as a source for the presentation material; however, the presentation should not be a duplicate of the written staff report, but should be phrased in a way that the non-law enforcement members of the citizens’ academy can understand the processes and legal aspects involved in introducing the evidence at a trial. After creating the PowerPoint presentation, create a Screencast-O-Matic recording of the presentation, which is an online recording of you narrating the PowerPoint. For the recording portion, you may use any screen casting platform you wish. (Quick-start guides for Screencast-O-Matic, and Jing are provided for your convenience.) Your presentation must be clear and provide the audience with an understanding of the purpose and meaning of the evidence analysis including the following elements.

Provide a high-level overview of the processing procedures. Evaluate the probative value of the evidence and legal or ethical issues, in addition to why certain methods should or should not have been used. This brief presentation should highlight important aspects of forensics as seen in the Wayne Williams case and how forensics have evolved. In addition, in your presentation, you must

• ·  Explain why each type of evidence is important to this case.
• ·  Explain different techniques that might be used to process non-biological trace, biological, and digital

evidence in the field and in a laboratory setting.

• · Examine legal and ethical issues related to judicial admissibility regarding collection and forensic testing of non-biological, biological, and digital evidence, including current challenges and emerging issues that are relevant to the case.

· Evaluate techniques used in the field and the laboratory, identifying which is the preferred method and why.

 

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