Words to know before you read
- Alpine - high mountain regions.
- Civil Cases - court cases
that are not criminal case such as divorce, ownership of property and business
matters.
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Conifers
- evergreen trees and shrubs that usually have needle-shaped leaves such as pine
trees.
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- Evidence - a thing or group of things used to form a conclusion or
judgment. The broken door lock was evidence that a burglary had taken place.
- Palynomorphs
- microscopic objects such a pollen and spores studied by scientists called palynologist.
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Pollen and Solving Crime
Nearly
50 years has passed since pollen was first reported to have assisted in solving
a crime. It has taken this long for the law enforcement and legal community to
see the benefits of forensic palynology. As the number of cases that pollen and
spores are successfully used as evidence in forensic cases increases, the range
of its potential uses also increases.
Recently solved criminal cases show that the forensic use
of pollen and spores can be used in many different crimes. A short list of these
cases show many ways pollen is now being used in the courtroom.
- Forgery,
- Production and distribution of illegal drugs,
- Assaults,
- Robbery,
- Rapes,
- Homicide,
- Genocide,
- Terrorism,
- Arson,
- Hit and run crimes,
- Counterfeiting of currency,
- Identifying the origin of fake prescription drugs such
as Viagra
Pollen and spore evidence has also been used to resolve
different types of civil cases. There are many ways in which pollen and spores are
being used as evidence. Following is a list of
civil cases where pollen and spores have been used as evidence.
- Forged documents
- Fake antiques
- Authentication of paintings by master artists
- Removal of artifacts from historic or archaeological
sites
- Illegal poaching of animals including fish
- Illegal pollution of the environment
So many types of pollen, how can you tell them apart?
Successful use of pollen and spores in forensic
applications may depend on the palynologist’s knowledge and experience. With
almost half-a-million kinds of spores and pollen, it can take a lot of
experience to tell one pollen or spore from another. One must have the knowledge
of and understand plant ecology and plant communities in and around the crime
scene area, or the region where pollen samples were collected. A thorough
understanding of palynology, including knowledge of the production, dispersal
patterns, preservation potential, and identification of pollen and spores is
essential to understand and interpret the expected total palynomorph assemblage
recovered in forensic samples.
As with most types of forensic evidence, timing is
critical. The sooner the palynologist is called to investigate a crime scene,
the more likely quality samples will be collected. Because pollen and spores are
small, light, easily recycled, and present in abundant amounts in the
atmosphere, a crime scene can quickly become contaminated by recycled
palynomorphs. These recycled palynomorphs may have been carried into the area on
the clothing or shoes of crime scene investigators, deposited out of the
atmosphere, or from other non-crime scene sources if the forensic pollen sample
collection is delayed, or collected improperly.
If the circumstances are perfect, and the pollen samples
are collected in a correct and timely way it is even possible to tell the time
of the year when a crime was committed. It some cases a person can tell how long
ago a crime was committed. Much of that information has to do with knowing the
pollination cycles of various plants, and being able to check for the presence
of cytoplasm and the innermost wall of pollen grains, called the intine, which
is composed of cellulose. The intine degrades fairly rapidly after pollen grains
are dispersed and so it is a good way to estimate how long ago the crime
happened.
Two cases of forensic palynology
The first case involves a shipment of 500 grams of cocaine
hydrochloride, that was seized in New York City during a drug raid. A portion of
the seized material was sent to a forensic palynologist for analysis. Some
examinations of earlier seized illegal marijuana (Cannabis) seized in New
Zealand had revealed two important clues. First, the pollen recovered from the
seized sample contained not only marijuana pollen but it also contained many
pollen types indicating the plants had been grown in Asia and not at any
location in New Zealand. Second, pollen studies of marijuana samples seized in
the different drug raids in many different regions of New Zealand showed that
all the samples contained very similar pollen spectra (footprint). This showed
that the illegal marijuana seized in all the raids came from the same large
imported shipment from Asia. It also suggested that the marijuana was being
distributed through a single network.
A similar type of
reconstruction was attempted for the seized cocaine shipment from New York.
After processing the sample in the forensic lab, the recovered pollen provided
three important clues about the cocaine. First, some of the trapped pollen came
from tropical plants that typically grow in regions of Bolivia and Colombia,
where coca plants are grown commercially. Those pollen types linked the origins
of the cocaine to those regions of tropical South America. A second group of
pollen grains recovered from the cocaine came from sub-alpine conifers,
including Canada hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) and jack pines (Pinus banksiana).
These two species of conifers do not typically inhabit the same area, but do
grow together in limited regions of Eastern Canada and the Northeastern U.S.
Therefore, the presence of pollen from both of these conifer types in the same
sample suggests the cocaine was smuggled from South America into North America
someplace in Eastern Canada or the Northeastern U.S.
Once in North
America, the cocaine shipment was apparently opened and exposed to airborne
pollen types while it was being “cut” with powered sugar to increase its value.
If that had occurred in any other region, then both of the conifer pollen types
would not have been present in the same cocaine sample. Finally, the remaining
pollen found in the cocaine came from weeds and plants (composites, grasses,
birch, goosefoot and pigweed, etc.) commonly found growing in vacant lots in the
urban slums of New York City. It is suspected that when the cocaine reached New
York City it was again opened and cut further before being packaged for
distribution on the street. It was during that time the cocaine was again
exposed to airborne pollen, which then became trapped in the sample.
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