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As Seen on TV: Five Forensic Lies
You’re old enough to know that you can’t believe everything that you see on TV. What happens when you don’t have inside knowledge about a particular subject? When you see the same things time and again, it’s easy to fall into a pattern of belief that is simply incorrect. Take forensics for example: Do you believe that it’s a glorious job filled with beautiful people who solve crimes in as little as a single day? If so, you aren’t alone. Here’s the truth:
1.Professionals Specialize
If you believe what you see on TV, forensic scientists know everything about everything. A tech can match DNA, tell you what insect lives in what region, and the time of death based on the contents of the stomach. In truth, forensic scientists tend to concentrate in one specialty, and rarely more than two.
2.CSIs Are Not Police Officers
Small departments may train their police officers to work as crime scene investigators, but these departments are in the minority. In most law enforcement agencies, CSIs don’t carry guns, wear bullet-proof vests, or make arrests. CSIs are only tasked with the job of collecting, sorting and analyzing evidence; the majority of which they do in house, not in the field.
3.The Lab Does Not Look Like a Space Ship
4.Evidence Can Be Difficult to Find
Watch any crime show and you’ll see techs pulling fingerprints and DNA from just about every surface they encounter. Clues are hidden, and found, in the deepest recesses of a room and crimes are solved with the smallest nugget of information. In reality, according to Ken Novak, professor at the University of Missouri, that is rarely the case. All but the flattest of surfaces can make fingerprint retrieval difficult, and DNA is much harder to collect than television would have you believe.
5.Paperwork is the Norm
The world of forensics is filled with beautiful, sexy people working in glamorous labs, solving crimes in less than an hour. If you believe television, that is. The truth is that forensics is a meticulous, methodical job that infrequently, if ever, involves glamour. Don’t believe what you see on TV; you’ll be sorely disappointed when reality smacks you in the face.
John Acker is a writer that is interested in forensic science. If this is a career you would be interested in pursuing find out the forensic pathologist salary and how to earn a criminal justice PHD at bestcriminaljustice.com.