'CSI:
Crime School's In'
Experts:
Criminals picking up tips from
television crime shows
Monday,
January 30, 2006; Posted: 8:35 p.m. EST
(01:35 GMT)
Actor
William Petersen holds a brain in an
episode from the CBS hit series "CSI:
Crime Scene Investigation."
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -- When Tammy Klein
began investigating crime scenes eight
years ago, it was virtually unheard of
for a killer to use bleach to clean up a
bloody mess.
Today,
the use of bleach, which destroys DNA,
is not unusual in a planned homicide,
said the senior criminalist from the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Department.
Klein and
other experts attribute such
sophistication to television crime
dramas like "CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation," which give criminals
helpful tips on how to cover up
evidence.
Prosecutors have complained for years
about "the CSI effect" on juries -- an
expectation in every trial for the type
of high-tech forensic evidence the
show's investigators uncover. It also
appears the popular show and its two
spinoffs could be affecting how some
crimes are committed.
"They're
actually educating these potential
killers even more," said Capt. Ray Peavy,
also of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department and head of the homicide
division. "Sometimes I believe it may
even encourage them when they see how
simple it is to get away with on
television."
A man
charged in a recent double-homicide in
northeast Ohio was a "CSI" fan and went
to great lengths to cover his tracks,
according to an affidavit filed by
Trumbull County prosecutors.
Jermaine
"Maniac" McKinney, 25, allegedly broke
into a house, killed a mother and
daughter and used bleach to remove their
blood from his hands, prosecutors said.
He also allegedly covered the interior
of a getaway car with blankets to avoid
transferring blood.
Prosecutors said McKinney burned the
bodies, his clothing and removed his
cigarette butts -- which would contain
his DNA -- from the crime scene.
According
to the affidavit, he also tried to throw
some evidence into a lake, including a
crowbar used to bludgeon one of the
victims. The lake was frozen though and
he shouted a profanity when the crowbar
remained on the surface.
Investigators later recovered the
evidence. McKinney, who was indicted
this month on two counts of aggravated
murder, aggravated burglary and other
charges, could face the death penalty if
convicted.
Cases
where suspects burn and tamper with
evidence seem to be increasing, said
Chuck Morrow, chief of the criminal
division in the Trumbull County
Prosecutor's office.
"People
are getting more sophisticated with
making sure they're not leaving trace
evidence at crime scenes," Morrow said.
Klein
said most crimes aren't well planned and
that detailed attention to prevent
leaving trace evidence typically occurs
in cases where someone has killed a
family member or business partner.
"For the
most part, our killings involve gang
bangers who for the most part are pretty
stupid," she said.
Sophisticated planning and concealment
of evidence are aberrations, not the
norm, said Larry Pozner, former
president of the National Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers.
"Most
people who commit crimes are not very
bright and don't take many precautions,"
Pozner said. "CSI and all the other
crime shows will make no difference."
Yet, in
the six years since CBS, which did not
return phone calls seeking comment,
introduced "CSI," there's been a trend
of fewer clues like hair, cigarette
butts and the killer's blood left behind
at crime scenes, Peavy said.
The more
sophisticated the television story lines
get, the better equipped criminals will
be, Peavy said, adding that he never
watches "CSI" because it's too
unrealistic.
Copyright
2006 The
Associated Press.
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