The team is working towards providing investigators with an identikit of the suspect simply from the fingermarks that they have left behind. ‘The chemical information that can be obtained could reveal the suspect’s lifestyle, dietary habits and sex,’ explains Francese. ‘Determining the sex of a suspect from a fingermark is of paramount importance because, in the absence of biological fluids, the evidence does not need to be swabbed for DNA, and thus destroyed, to obtain this information.’
‘The ability to determine the sex of an individual from fingermarks left at crime scenes advances our current understanding of the limits of the forensic usefulness of fingermarks,’ says Raul Sutton, an expert in forensic science from the University of Wolverhampton, UK. However, Sutton points out that a similar level of accuracy (85%) could be found by measuring the ridge density of fingerprints, a process that does not require expensive kit. He adds that the work is a promising preliminary observation that opens up the potential of fingermarks, ‘but it shows that there is still much work to do in order to get the most of fingermark chemical composition’.
Francese admits that the method needs testing and improving to make it independent from ethnicity, health conditions and use of medications. However, she says the method could also lead to the use of fingermarks in different scientific areas if they achieve their goals to reveal information about dietary habits, health and pathological state.
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