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Critters on Cadavers
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The application of insects and other
arthropods to legal issues and court
proceedings
Applications
± Estimation of time of death
± Cases involving possible sudden death
± Traffic accidents with no immediately
obvious cause
± Possible criminal use of insects
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Not as large of a biomass as bacteria ± but
run a respectable second!
Unifying Characteristic ± hard exoskeleton
Class Insecta includes bees and wasps
(Order Hymenoptera,) flies (O. Diptera,)
butterflies (O. Lepidoptera,) dragonflies (O.
Odanata,) beetles (O. Coleoptera,) etc.
³True Bugs´ are Order Hemiptora. No
hemiptorans have any consequence for
forensic science ± so erase ³bugs´ from your
vocabulary!
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Urban ± Relates insects to human
structures and environments
Stored Products ± Insect infestations
of stored food and beverages
Mediocriminal ± The only division that
has a criminal aspect. Relates to
insects feeding on human tissue in the
postmortem period.
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Fact ± insects feed on humans after
death. Yup ± not good news, but we
are part of the cycle of life!
If insects are found on a corpse, the
life stage of the insect can be used to
determine time of death
± This calculation is known as the
POSTMORTEM INTERVAL (PMI)
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PMI must take into consideration many
environmental variables
Temperature
Time of day death occurred
Time of year death occurred
Whether the corpse is submerged in soil or
water.
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As the body decays, odors attract insects to
the dead body. Levels of putricine (decomp.
enzyme,) sulfur and methane compounds
send up an ³open for dinner´ flare.
The flies (order Diptera) are the first to
arrive. Blowflies (F. Calliphoridae) and flesh
flies (F. Sarcophagidae) are flesh feeders
and will be the first in line.
Flies can arrive within minutes or up to a
couple hours after death.
In many cases flies arrive before the
completion of a crime and are a silent
witnesses.
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If no trauma is present on the body, female
blowflies will lay eggs in exposed body
openings (ears, nose, mouth, anus,
genitalia.)
Flesh flies don¶t lay eggs, they deposit
larvae.
The colonization pattern is due to the mouth
parts of adult flies.
± Blowflies and flesh flies have spongy mouth
parts. They lack piercing apparatus that can cut
through unbroken human skin. The body
openings provide a moist, warm environment for
larvae development.
Blowfly Classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Uniramia
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Calliphoridae
Small, 2-3 mm length, elongate, whitish to
yellowish
Found in large clusters in and around body
openings as well as injuries
Clearly visible to naked eye
Colder months may see fewer in numbers
Can be found in more hidden locations such
as under eyelids or in nostrils
Eggs typically hatch within hours but may
take up to 2-3 days depending on conditions
One fairly small and featureless larvae
hatches from each egg
The body tapers from anterior to
posterior ± Mouth at the anterior,
spiracles at the posterior
Posterior contains breathing apparatus
called spiracles
± Spiracles, along with body size and
shape provide important info for
identification
Large numbers of blowfly
typically hatch at a time and
remain together while they
feed on a corpse
These maggot masses
generally form in the head
region and move down the
torso as they feed.
As they feed the larvae
secrete digestive enzymes
which allows them to
consume nearly all the soft
tissue on the corpse
Blowfly larvae go through three instars
(molts)
They are considered fully grown at the
third instar
This can occur in several days or
several weeks depending on species,
environmental conditions and number
of larvae present
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After the 3rd instar
larvae go through a
drastic behavioral
change
± they crawl away from the
corpse and burrow down
into the soil to transform
into the pupal stage and
complete the life cycle
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The pupa form when the outer larval skin
hardens and shrinks
Inside this ³case´ the adult blowfly will form
Once the adult fly emerges, the pupal case
does not decompose. It can remain under a
corpse for hundreds of years
Pupal cases can provide valuable forensic
info to investigators long after a crime has
been committed.
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Entomological evidence collection can
be done in a variety of ways
For our purpose we will:
± Identify the species
± Document larvae length
± Determine the instar
± Determine postmortem interval estimation
Depending on species we will use
extrapolation of instar length or the
accumulated degree day theory
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PMI ± The use of insect life cycles to
estimate the time a corpse has been in
the location where it was found
PMI does not DETERMINE the time of
death
± Time of death is established by the
medical examiner
Forensic entomology can provide value
information for the M.E.
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Time of injury vs. death
Estimation of time of death
Whether or not a corpse has been moved
Instances of insects as weapons
Child and elderly abuse and neglect
Single vehicle car accidents (insect stings
and path vehicles have traveled)
Aircraft crashes (instrument obstruction and
engine and fuel line clogging)
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³Roach Track´ Confusion
± Roaches are notorious for confusing
blood spatter analysis
± Blood trajectory is often critical to forensic
investigations
± Roaches, silverfish and other household
insects often travel through bloodstained
areas
³Roach tracks´ frequently confuse forensic
investigators that are untrained in how to
identify them
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Flies also track through blood, but ³fly
specks´ are a far greater problem for
investigators
Flies ingest blood and can leave large
undigested droplets behind in previously
uncontaminated areas. These droplets can
enlarge a crime scene unneccessarily.
Fleas also leave behind undigested blood in
their feces (commonly known as ³flea dirt.´)
± Flea dirt in a heavily infested dwelling can falsely
suggest blood ³evidence´
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It is becoming more clear that household
insect infestations need to be included as a
variable in forensic investigations
Proper identification of household pests can
save valuable time and resources for
technicians and investigators
Best for juries to hear about insect
³confusion´ from CSI¶s rather than from
attorneys for the defense!
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Shipments of illegal drugs often
contain insect infestations, especially
cannabis and heroine (derived from
poppy plants.)
Analysis of insect ³stowaways´ can
allow investigators to track country of
origin, and in many cases the local
area of cultivation.
PMI used to detect illegal
drugs/poisons in fly larvae (consumed
from corpses)
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Insects are becoming invaluable in the
investigation of crime
Forensic entomology is one of the
fastest growing specialties in forensic
science.
All Crime Scene Investigation Units
MUST be prepared to include insect
collection, identification and analysis in
their investigations.