The document provides an overview of forensic odontology. It discusses how forensic odontology deals with dental evidence in legal cases. It also outlines some key aspects of forensic odontology including dental anatomy, bite mark analysis, and identifying unknown remains using dental records. The document then presents a case study example where dental records were used to identify victims in a house fire and help solve a criminal case by matching a bite mark to a suspect's dental records.
2. By
Prof.Pervaiz A Rana
Deprtment of Forensic Medicine &
Toxicology
CMH Lahore Medical College
3. Forensic Medicine and Odontology deals with the
professional handling , examination, interpretation
and presentation of medical and dental evidences
that come before legal authorities
Forensic Odontology is one of the fastest emerging
sub disciplines within the broader subject of dental
science.
It requires special dental expertise not possessed
by ordinary pathologist qualified only in medicine.
It encompasses ethical issues and events related to
the claim of negligence and malpractice by
dentists and paradental professionals.
4. History and status of Forensic Odontology
Working of Forensic dental section
Forensic Dental Anatomy
Main applications
Case discussion
5. 66 A.D.: Lollia Paulina’s body identified
Casualty ID in Revolutionary War
1849
Vienna Opera House fire
Dental identification evidence first admitted in U.S.
court system
6. The department is divided into sub divisions
like record section, cold storage, autopsy
section, analytical, serologic and chemical
examiner, they are interlinked with a chain of
custody .
13. Each tooth has a specific
number
Each surface of the teeth
are classified
Notes
extractions, fillings, orient
ation, etc.
Primary dentition noted
with upper case letters
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20. Are the remains human?
If so, what are the sex, age, and race of the
individual?
Who is the person?
21. Is it a tooth, or a portion of a tooth?
Is it an animal tooth, or a human tooth?
If human, what type of tooth is it, i.e., incisor,
canine, premolar, or molar?
Is it deciduous/primary, or permanent?
Which quadrant does it come from, i.e., right
upper, left lower, etc?
22. Some variation is developmental, i.e., the tooth
in question developed abnormally.
Other variations are acquired at some time
after birth. Such acquired variations can be the
result of
trauma
erosion
occupational insult
dental work in a clinical setting.
23. Abnormalities of eruption patterns.
Abnormalities of shape (morphology). Any
given tooth can have missing features, extra
features, or atypical features. This can include
bent teeth, anomalies in the number of cusps or
roots, abnormal enamel deposition, etc.
Abnormalities in the number of teeth. This
can range from complete absence of teeth
(adontia), to extra teeth, known as polydontia.
Any given tooth may be absent in any given
individual, a condition known as partial
adontia. The presence of additional individual
teeth is sometimes known as supernumerary
teeth.
24. Abnormalities in the spacing or position of
teeth. Teeth can be crowded, have gaps
(diastema) between them, or be rotated or
misaligned. Long-term bulimics often have
the appearance of teeth that are spreading
apart – as the space between the teeth increases
over time..
Abnormalities in the size of teeth. It is quite
rare to have abnormally small (microdontia),
or abnormally large teeth (macrodontia) –
either as a complete set, or individually.
28. CUYAHOGA COUNTY 07-0000
CORONER‘S OFFICE
Dental records
Photo
Fingerprints
29. Postmortem description is
generated
Radiographs taken
Possible identities
known?
Yes: Comparison to
antemortem data
Match strength determined
No: Biological profile
generated
30.
31. Postmortem description is generated
Radiographs taken
Possible identities known?
Yes: Comparison to antemortem data
Match strength determined
No: Biological profile generated
32.
33.
34.
35. Completed in the same manner as individual
identification
Organization of antemortem and postmortem
data is essential
Large scale problems can occur if no record
available (radiological, DNA)
36. Postmortem Team
Generates dental profile and radiographs
Antemortem Team
Collects/organizes antemortem data
Records Comparison Team
Compares postmortem and antemortem data
37. Can be used to link
a suspect to a crime
Impressions left on
food, skin or other
items left at a scene
38.
39. “Every contact leaves it’s
trace”
Said professor Edmond Locard (1877),
founder and director of the institute of
Criminalistics,
University of Lyons,
France
40. Each dentition can
produce variable
impressions
Change based on
pressure and
surface of contact
Impressions from the same dentition
41. Bite marks are photographed with a scale
Bite marks on skin are taken over repeated intervals
Casts of impression are taken
Impression traced onto transparencies
Casts of suspects teeth are taken
Comparison between suspect cast and bite
mark
42. Assailants Saliva
Collection
preservation &
dispatch of saliva collected from bite site
DNA profiling & Blood Grouping
43. 3D Bite mark analysis
Automatic dental code matching
OdontoSearch
Automatic dental identification system
44. 3D scans of dental
casts are used to
generate overlays
using various
pressure and
deviation.
45. The overlays are compared with the photograph of the
bite marks.
46.
47. Different people may have the same dental
codes
In the past, the strength of a match between a
PM dental code and an AM dental code is
based on the clinical experience of the dentist
OdontoSearch provides an objective means of
assessing the frequency of occurrence for a
dental code
48.
49. Genuine Matching Distance = 4.22
Query Image
Matching Distance = 27.57
Imposter
Genuine image has a smaller matching distance than the imposter
image. Images with smaller distance are included in the candidate list.
51. National Dental Program
In 1997, The Criminal Justice Information Services Division (CJIS) of the
FBI created a dental task force (DTF).
State Dental Program
Three states: Maryland, Washington, and California
Best Collectors of Dental Records (>10%)
52. Bite mark analysis
Identification
Serological analysis of bite mark
53. The most famous bite mark case
The bite mark was on Transparent overlays Wax bite exemplar
the body of a victim superimposed
54. Ted Bundy, was an American serial killer who
murdered numerous young women between
1974 and 1978.
He confessed to 30 murders, however the total
amount of victims remains unknown. He would
bludgeon his victims, then strangle them to
death. He engaged in rape and necrophilia.
55. in summer 1997 In a small town near
yarkshaire wooden house catches fire and
collapse, 2 bodies were found, remains were
intermingled .
Bodies were identified as 14 years old girl
And 40 years old lady
anatomical features and dental record.
56.
57. •At ground zero, among 973 victims identified in the first
year (with only one method), about 20% of victims were
identified using dental records.
58. “Around mid-March, (of some
800+ identified bodies) 90% were
identified by dental records …
If you post pictures of your loved
ones on the bulleting boards/web
boards, choose picture with a
broad smile so that front teeth can
be seen. A better approach is to
post dental X-ray films and leave
email/phone number of the
dentist.”
----- Tsunami Relief A forensic expert examines a film of the
website teeth of a tsunami victim in Phuket of
Thailand, on Jan. 11, 2005.
59. A bite mark was
identified and preserved
impression was obtained
reconstruction of assailants teeth was done
Impression was compared with the record of
suspects and finally the assailant was arrested .
60.
61.
62.
63.
64. State of Indiana v.
Jeffery Jones
Indianapolis
Police Department
case no. 5610144G
65. A naked dead body of 38 years old lady was
found near garbage container near her
residence.
Crime scene investigators (CSI) closely analyze
the body and found a bite mark on her neck
and left breast.
Saliva sample was collected from bite mark
Sample send for DNA profile analysis .
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71. Conclusion:
The DNA profile obtained from Item (s)
M16 and M17 does not match the
DNA profile of Item S1 and could not
have originated from their initial
suspect, Michael Willey.
72. Conclusion:
The DNA profile obtained from Item(s) M16 and
M17 was searched in the Indiana DNA Database
and was found to be consistent with the convicted
offender sample of Jeffery Jones (DOC inmate
#974912).
73. Conclusion:
In the absence of an identical twin, Jeffery Jones is
the source of the DNA obtained from Items M16
and M17 to a reasonable degree of scientific
certainty .