New fingerprinting technique reveals more

Published 2 August 2007

New method offers law enforcement information about the suspect’s gender, dietary habits, and substances he or she were in touch with recently

Can a better mouse trap be invented? Can a better finger printing technique be found? It is a good question, since finger printing has been around for a while. Still, scientists say that a new fingerprinting technique could potentially detect the diet and sex of a suspected criminal or terrorist, according to new research published in the August edition of the journal Analytical Chemistry. The team, led by Professor Sergei Kazarian from Imperial College London’s Department of Chemical Engineering, has devised a technique which collects fingerprints along with their chemical residue and keeps them intact for future reference. Chemical residues contain a few millionths of a gram of fluid and can be found on all fingerprints. Conventional fingerprinting techniques often distort or destroy vital chemical information with no easy way of lifting residues for chemical imaging, until now.

Imperial scientists found that the use of gel tapes, commercial gelatine based tape, provides a simple method for collection and transportation of prints for chemical imaging analysis. The prints, once lifted, are analyzed in a spectroscopic microscope. The sample is irradiated with infrared rays to identify individual molecules within the print to give a detailed chemical composition. The information is then processed by an infrared array detector, originally developed by the U.S. military in smart missile technology. The array detector chemically maps the residue. This process builds up a picture, or chemical photograph, and allows for the most comprehensive information obtained from a fingerprint. “The combined operational advantages and benefits for forensic scientists of tape lifting prints and spectroscopic imaging really maximises the amount of information one can obtain from fingerprints. Our trials show that this technique could play a significant role in the fight against crime,” said Kazarian.

In many cases, this information is enough to determine valuable clues about a person beyond the fingerprint itself. It could potentially identify traces of items people came in contact with, such as gunpowder, narcotics, and biological or chemical weapons. Chemical clues could also highlight specific traits in a person. A strong trace of urea, a chemical found in urine, could indicate a male. Weak traces of urea in a chemical sample could indicate a female. Specific amino acids could potentially indicate whether the suspect was a vegetarian or meat-eater.

Kazarian believes that this technique could allow forensic scientists to observe how fingerprints change in time and within different environments. “By focussing on what is left in a fingerprint after periods of time, scientists could potentially gauge how old a crime scene is. Studying what happens to prints, when they are exposed to high temperatures, could also be particularly significant, especially in arson cases where lifting prints has been notoriously hard,” he told Technology News Daily. Kazarian said that “In the courtroom of the near future, chemical images could feature as key evidence. I hope our work assists law enforcement authorities to bring dangerous criminals to justice.”

-read more in Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay, “Fingerprints Reveal Drug Habits: An Assay Detects Drug Metabolites Excreted in Sweat from the Hands,” Analytical Chemistry(1 August 2007): 5521 (sub. req.)