This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with Seagate US LLC

Your EAP offers these great resources.

Fingerprint Evidence in Criminal Cases

Learn how fingerprint evidence is gathered and used in criminal investigations and trials.

Fingerprint evidence, although sometimes not as high-profile as other high-tech crime-solving methods like DNA typing, is still very much used in criminal investigations and cases. While the principle that no two people can have the same fingerprints cannot be scientifically validated, fingerprint evidence is generally considered to be highly reliable and is particularly accessible to juries: You don't need a Ph.D. or a scientific lecture on genetics to understand that your own fingers contain a contour map of ridges and whorls that is completely unique. 

Matching Fingerprints

Fingerprint evidence rests on two basic principles:

  • A person's "friction ridge patterns" (the swirled skin on their fingertips) don't change over their lifetimes.
  • No two people have the same pattern of friction ridges. Even identical twins have different fingerprints.

Police officers use fingerprints to identify defendants by comparing prints found at a crime scene with prints already in police files. (Today, the FBI has a collection of prints that numbers in the millions.) People's fingerprints can be on file for a variety of reasons. For example, people may be fingerprinted when they are arrested or when they begin certain occupations. And it is increasingly popular for parents to ask local police departments or schools to fingerprint their young children, a grim reminder that children who are abducted or are the victims of other heinous crimes often cannot be identified otherwise.


Fingerprint experts can disagree about how many “points in common” are needed to declare a match between two sets of fingerprints. For example, some experts will declare a match based on only 12 “points in common,” whereas other experts may require up to 20 “points in common” before declaring a match.

How Fingerprints Are Found

Friction ridges contain rows of sweat pores, and sweat mixed with other body oils and dirt produces fingerprints on smooth surfaces. Fingerprint experts use powders and chemicals to make such prints visible. The visibility of a set of prints depends on the surface from which they're lifted; however, with the help of computer enhancement techniques that can extrapolate a complete pattern from mere fragments, and laser technology that can read otherwise invisible markings, fingerprint experts increasingly can retrieve identifiable prints from most surfaces.

The age of a set of fingerprints is almost impossible to determine. Therefore, defendants often try to explain away evidence that their fingerprints were found at crime scenes by testifying that they were at the scene and left the prints at a time other than the time of a crime.

To learn more about fingerprint and other evidence, read The Criminal Law Handbook: Know Your Rights, Survive the System, by Paul Bergman and Sara Berman (Nolo).

http://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/fingerprint-evidence-what-you-need-29818.html

More about this Topics

  • Fighting a Traffic Ticket for Improper Turning

  • Arson

  • DUI and DWI Overview

  • Fight Your Speeding Ticket: What Is the Law?

  • What is an Alibi?

Other Topics

    • Fight Your Speeding Ticket: Determining Your Speed
    • Juvenile Court: An Overview
    • Preservation of Evidence in Criminal Cases
    • When Juveniles Are Tried in Adult Criminal Court
    • Going to Court: Surviving the Courtroom
    • Help for International Crime Victims
    • Help for Crime Victims
    • Coping with Crime Victimization
    • Getting a Restraining Order Against an Abusive Partner (Part 2)
    • Getting a Restraining Order Against an Abusive Partner (Part 1)
    • Leaving an Abusive Relationship (Part 1)
    • What You Can Do if You're a Victim of Crime