Mike Byrd - Real Life CSI Visionary - Loses Battle with Cancer
Mike Byrd, a Miami Dade County police officer and Crime Scene Investigator passed away peacefully on Friday, February 25th at 2043 hours after a more than two year battle with multiple myeloma cancer. Mike was 49 years old. He was the real-life Crime Scene Investigations Officer portrayed today on television shows and the visionary pioneer of forensics techniques that solved crimes.
View Mike Byrd's obituary here.
The Iowa Division of the International Association for Identification extends sincere sympathy to the Byrd family. Mike contributed many articles to the Iowa I.A.I. website as we were just getting started years ago. We are proud to provide links to Mike's articles here ...
Written Documentation at a Crime Scene
Mike Byrd
Miami-Dade Police Department
Crime Scene Investigations
In an Organized step by step approach Scene Documentation is one of the stages in the
proper processing of a crime scene. The final results of a properly documented crime scene
is the ability of others to take our finished product to use in either reconstructing the
scene or the chain of events in an incident and our court room presentation. In
documenting the scene there are actually 3 functions or methods used to properly document
the crime scene. Those methods consist of written notes which will ultimately be used in
constructing a final report, crime scene photographs, and a diagram or sketch. Consistency
between each of these functions is paramount.
Each method is important in the process of properly documenting the crime scene. The notes
and reports should be done in a chronological order and should include no opinions, no
analysis, or no conclusions. Just the facts!!!! The crime scene investigator or evidence
recovery technician should document what he/she sees, not what he/she thinks. The final
report should tell a descriptive story. A general description of the crime scene should be
given just as the investigator sees it when he/she does the initial walk through of the
scene.
Each department or agency has a method which they use for written documentation of the
crime scene. There investigator/technician should follow his/her departments assigned
procedures for written documentation. The importance of sharing information can never be
over-looked. This article is intended to share ideas in the area of uniform documentation
as an example of the format that is used by my department. We use a narrative section of
the report divided it into 5 categories. The categories are summary, scene (including a
detailed body description if in a death investigation), processing, evidence collected,
and pending.
The summary would basically give the details of how we were initiated into the
investigation. For an example: " At the request of Robbery Detective J. Doe, this
writer was requested to respond to assist in processing the scene of an armed robbery
involving 4 unknown masked subjects. Det. J. Doe's preliminary investigation revealed that
the subjects startled the victim as she returned home from shopping". For further
details of this investigation refer to Det. J. Doe's report.. Our summary is brief and
does not include a lot of he said, she said information.
In the scene section of the narrative we give a detailed description of the scene as it is
seen upon our approach. The scene description usually includes anything that is unusual
and out of place. Any weather or environment conditions are also included. Again this is a
description of what we see not what we think. The Evidence observed, its location,
condition, or anything remarkable about the item will be included in our scene description
section. This would also correspond to any identification markers used to number or label
the items of evidence. These remarks would all be consistent with any numbers, letters, or
labels indicated in the photographs, or drawn into a sketch of the scene.
The processing section is for our units to describe what we did, if assistance was needed
during the processing stages, who we had assisting, and what functions they did.
The evidence collection section is to organize what evidence we and others assisting were
able to recover from the crime scene, where the items were recovered from, and what part
of the lab the items were directed to for analysis.
The pending section would be for any known tasks that would need to be completed at a
later date in the investigation.
Recently I was asked to give an opinion on the crime scene portion of a cold case
investigation which had occurred more than 20 years earlier. I agreed to take a look at
everything to give my interpretation of the crime scene from the work product. So the
reports and pictures were ordered from the original files.
When the items came in the mail the report consisted of a one page, one paragraph
narrative. The scene photographs consisted of several overall prospective of a wooded
area. I could be of no assistance to my fellow college. But the experience best
illustrates how important it is to properly use the tools at hand. We are brought in to
assist in the beginning stages of an investigation when very limited information is known.
We should realize that our work product may need to be viewed extensively by someone years
from now for interpretation. The written documentation, photographs, and simple sketch
need to tell the scene story. Hopefully by sharing this simple organized method it will be
of some assistance to you.