Chemical forensicsNew crime-fighting methods to deter, nab terrorists

Published 9 February 2012

The goal of an emerging field in forensics — chemical forensics — is to use the technology of chemistry to trace weaponized toxic substances and related materials back to their source

Fingerprints, ballistics, DNA analysis, and other mainstays of the forensic science toolkit may get a powerful new crime-solving companion as scientists strive to develop technology for “fingerprinting” and tracing the origins of chemical substances that could be used in terrorist attacks and other criminal acts.

This is the topic of the cover story in the current issue of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society.

Bethany Halford, C&EN senior editor, focuses on an emerging field known as chemical forensics, in which the goal is to use the technology of chemistry to trace weaponized toxic substances and related materials back to their source. An ACS release reports that a chemical forensic analysis could, for instance, show that ingredients in a terrorist’s weapon were produced in a specific factory. Criminal investigators then could check sales records to determine exactly who purchased those ingredients.

The article explains that the research in the field has expanded substantially during the last few years due mainly to funding from DHS Chemical Forensics Program. The release notes that with this research, DHS and chemical forensic scientists are sending messages to the public and to would-be terrorists, the article notes.

DHS wants the public to know that the agency is preparing for future attacks, and terrorists to be aware that science is preparing to nab them if they do attack.

— Read more in Bethany Halford, “Tracing A Threat,” Chemical & Engineering News 90, no. 6 (6 February 2012): 10-15