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Swabbing firearms for handler’s DNA.

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2011

Authors

Journal

Journal of Forensic Sciences


Study Design

Addressed Question

comparison of different sampling method (combined or unique swabbing method) from firearms

Activity Context

CaseworkShooting

Category

Primary DepositRecovery

Specifications

Sampling

Variables of Interest

swabbing methodcrime context

Stringency of Control

Reality

Number of Individuals

18+19 firearms

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

crime context

Contact Scenario

crime context

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

firearms (triggers, grips, hammers, cylinder release, magazines, slides, straps, front sites)

Primary Substrate Material

MetalVarious

Deposit

handling

Delay

N/A

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

N/A

Secondary Substrate Material

N/A

Secondary Substrate Contact

N/A

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Present

Sampling Time

delayed (not specified)

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

swabbing (wet: sterile water) of either separate swabbing of 2-6 areas or all areas combined

Sampling Area

areas: triggers, grips, hammers, cylinder releases, magazines, slides, straps, front sites

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

phenol chloroform extraction, final volume: 24-100 µl

DNA Quantification

QuantiBlot Human DNA Quantitation kit or Quantifiler Human DNA Quantitation kit, 7500 Real Time PCR system

Input for Profiling

1.5 ng (from QuantiBlot) or 3.0 ng (Quantifiler)

Profiling

AmpFlSTR Profiler Plus/Cofiler amplification kits 28 cycles, ABI Prism 310 Genetic Analyzer, Genotyper 2.1, GeneMapper ID v3.2, threshold: 150 rfu

Reference Samples

N/A

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

determining profile completeness, comparison to reference profiles and mixture interpretation n.a./n.s.

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

<0.02-20.6 ng

Profile Quality

mostly partial to almost complete profiles

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield (ng), number of loci obtained, size of profiles (complete, partial, incomplete (= no locus with complete genotype)

Summary of Results

more DNA is obtained using the combined swabbing method compared to using individual swabbing; more complete profiles are obtained when using combined swabbing method; complete failure (no DNA profile) is less likely using combined swabbing method (5% vs. 32%); Areas of firearm for successful sampling: Grip>Slide>>Hammer, Trigger, Cylinder>Sight, front strap, magazine; slightly larger amount of mixtures obtained from combined swabbings (64% vs. 78%); Neither method results in high percentage of CODIS suitable profiles indicating that handler's DNA from firearms is often not a viable source for investigative purposes; conclusion: conclusion: all areas of a firearm (trigger, grips, hammer, cylinder release, magazine, slide, strap, front sight) should be collectively swabbed with max. 2 swabs

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

areas swabbed in combined swabbing approach not shown; swabbing and choice of sampling locations performed by different crime scene investigators -> comparability might be reduced; reduced comparability due to recovery in 24-100 µl; interpretability/complexity of resulting mixtures n.s.