This is an HTML version of an attachment to the Official Information request 'The management of impartiality/bias within New Zealand Police Forensic Services'.

IR-01-23-13799 
13 July 2023 
Sean Doyle  
[email address] 
Dear Mr Doyle 
Request for information 
Thank you for your Official Information Act 1982 (OIA) request of 5 May 2023, in which you ask: 
‘What forms of impartiality, or bias as it is referred to by the New Zealand Police, and the 
management of that bias are integrated into forensic training for the Police in New 
Zealand? 
What impartiality or bias related forensic training is offered to Police staff who provide 
forensic services? 
What resources are employed in that training?  
Are copies of training materials available publicly?  
If so, where might they be found? 
How often is that training updated?  
How is its continuing fitness-for-purpose (i.e., effectiveness, relevance and accuracy) 
assessed? 
What processes and procedures are in place to counter the effects of bias in the work 
carried out by Police forensic staff?  
How is this monitored and managed?  
What reporting or audit is undertaken of these processes and procedures.’ 
In response to your request, I can advise that the awareness of the risks of cognitive bias (including 
contextual and confirmation bias) on forensic findings is integrated into New Zealand Police forensic 
training courses and standard operating procedures. 
Forensic training is delivered by trainers in a variety of settings, including face to face training, 
discussion groups, Court scenarios, practical scenarios, and self-directed training.  There is an 
emphasis on how bias can manifest using work examples, and how standard operating procedures 
must be fol owed to prevent or mitigate bias.  Training also includes a focus on the professional and 
impartial presentation of expert evidence in Court. 
Forensic training content is revised when new policy or process changes impact on training currency 
or content.  Fitness for purpose is managed through subject matter expert groups who have 
responsibility for monitoring and updating training content and standard operating procedures for their 
respective disciplines.  
Forensic training comprehension is managed through knowledge tests and work competency 
assessments.  Compliance with standard operating procedures is also monitored through peer 
review, quality control and national auditing processes. 



 
 
 
 
 
 
The potential effects of bias are managed by:  
•  ensuring that forensic staff are aware of the implications of cognitive bias; and  
•  having standard operating procedures which include protocols for checking and peer reviewing 
results.  The procedures also include protocols on how contentious results are managed to 
mitigate possible bias; and 
•  the requirement that expert witnesses comply with the High Court Rules 2016. 
 
Standard operating procedures for forensic groups include quality assurance management and 
auditing by line and national managers.  
 
Attached are the fol owing Police documents that are relevant to your request: 
i)  Fingerprint Officer Training Programme Module: Identification 2 Intermediate 1 (15 pages) 
ii)  Fingerprint Officer Training Programme Module: Law 2 (24 pages) 
iii)  New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure #2 – Latent 
Fingerprint Examination and Identification (5 pages) 
iv)  New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure #4 – Independent 
Evaluation Review: Fingerprint Identification (5 pages) 
v)  New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure #24 – Verification (5 
pages) 
vi)  Fingerprint Officer Training Programme Intermediate 1 Oral Questions: Identification 2 (2 
pages). 
 
I trust this information and material adequately addresses your request. 
 
Yours sincerely 
 
 
Warren Olsson  
Detective Inspector 
National Criminal Investigations Group 
Police National Headquarters 
 
 



 
Fingerprint Officer Training Programme 
 
Module: Identification 2 
Intermediate 1 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Document Owner: National Fingerprint Training Officer 
School of Investigations: Forensics training 
The Royal New Zealand Police College 
Papakowhai Road 
Private Bag 50906 
PORIRUA 
 
 
 
 
 
 
© New Zealand Police January 2019 
 
Copyright reserved 
 
This document, or any portion of it, may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any 
means, electronic or mechanical (including photocopying, recording or by any information 
storage retrieval system), without the express written permission of the New Zealand Police. 
 
 
Contact for copies:  Please contact the document owner if you want a copy of this manual. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police Fingerprint Officer Training Programme; Identification 2, March 2017 
 


link to page 6 link to page 6 link to page 6 link to page 7 link to page 8 link to page 8 link to page 8 link to page 9 link to page 9 link to page 9 link to page 10 link to page 10 link to page 10 link to page 10 link to page 11 link to page 12 link to page 12 link to page 12 link to page 12 link to page 12 link to page 13 link to page 14 link to page 14 link to page 14 link to page 14 link to page 14 link to page 15 link to page 16 link to page 16 link to page 16 link to page 16 Table of Contents 
Module Outline .............................................................................................................................. 5 
Overview ................................................................................................................................. 5 
Required reading ..................................................................................................................... 5 
Optional reading ...................................................................................................................... 6 
References ............................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined. 
Topic 1: Distortion ........................................................................................................................ 7 
Learning objectives .................................................................................................................. 7 
Definition ................................................................................................................................ 7 
Distortion ................................................................................................................................. 8 
Types of distortion .................................................................................................................. 8 
Evaluation ................................................................................................................................ 8 
Tolerance ................................................................................................................................. 9 
Development media ................................................................................................................. 9 
Deposition pressure ................................................................................................................. 9 
Pressure distortion ................................................................................................................... 9 
Problem solving ..................................................................................................................... 10 
Topic 2: Bias ................................................................................................................................ 11 
Learning objectives ............................................................................................................... 11 
Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 11 
Cognitive bias ........................................................................................................................ 11 
Confirmation bias .................................................................................................................. 11 
How do I manage bias? ......................................................................................................... 12 
Topic 3: Forgery and Fabrication .............................................................................................. 13 
Learning objectives ............................................................................................................... 13 
Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 13 
Fabricate ................................................................................................................................ 13 
Forge ...................................................................................................................................... 13 
Signs of fabrication ............................................................................................................... 14 
Considerations ....................................................................................................................... 15 
Office practices ..................................................................................................................... 15 
Signs of forgeries .................................................................................................................. 15 
End of module ....................................................................................................................... 15 

 
 
 

Module Outline 
 
Overview 
Fingerprint Officers’ main role is fingerprint identification.  
 
As you develop your experience in examining and comparing fingerprints, 
you will need be able to identify more complex prints.  
 
To that end, this module covers three topics:  
 
•  Topic 1: Distortion 
•  Topic 2: Bias 
•  Topic 3: Forgery and Fabrication. 
 
As you read and review the information and documents, you may wish to 
make a few notes in your personal learning journal. 
 
Required 
•  Ashbaugh D R, Quantitative Qualitative Friction Ridge Analysis: An 
reading  
introduction to basic and advanced ridgeology. Boca Raton FLA: 
CRC Press, 1999. Pp 108-148. 
•  Marcel S, Nixon M S, Li S Z, 2014. The Handbook of Biometric Anti-
Spoofing. Springer. Chapter 2: Forgeries of Fingerprints in Forensic 
Science, by Champod C, Espinoza M. 
•  Harper W W, 1937. Fingerprint Forgery – Transferred Latent 
Fingerprints. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol 28, Iss 4, 
Article 7
. Sourced from: 
http://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?ar
ticle=2745&context=jclc 

•  Maceo A, 2009. Qualitative Assessment of Skin Deformation: A Pilot 
Study. J For Ident, 390, 59 (4).  (Located in Required Reading folder). 
•  Venville N, 2010. Bias - A Review of Contextual Bias in Forensic 
Science and its Potential Legal Implications. (Located in Required 
Reading folder).
 
 

 

 
Optional reading  •  Edwards H T, 2014. Reflections on the Findings of the National 
Academy of Sciences Committee on Identifying the Needs of the 
Forensic Science Community
. Sourced from: 
https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/ncfs/legacy/2014/05/13/harr
y-edwards.pdf 
•  Busey T A, Dror I E, 2014. Fingerprint Sourcebook.  Chapter 15, 
Special Abilities and Vulnerabilities in Forensic Expertise. Sourced 
from: https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/225335.pdf 
•  Expert Working Group on Human Factors in Latent Print Analysis. 
Latent Print Examination and Human Factors: Improving the 
Practice through a Systems Approach.
 U.S. Department of 
Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 2012. 
Sourced from: http://www.nist.gov/oles/upload/latent.pdf 
•  Ferriola, T J, 2002. Scientific principles in friction ridge analysis and 
applying Daubert to latent fingerprint identification. Criminal Law 
Bulletin
(Located in Optional Reading folder). 
 

 

Topic 1: Distortion 
 
Learning 
The questions you need to answer for this topic include: 
objectives 
 
•  What are four factors that could result in a fingerprint lift showing 
distortion? 
 
•  What is the concept of ‘tolerance’ with reference to observable 
differences between a latent print and a fingerprint sample? 
 
•  When considering substrate distortion, what are three types of substrate 
that may influence the appearance of the latent print? What features are 
likely to be observed in the latent print for each type of substrate? 
 
•  With reference to matrix distortion, what are some of the features that 
may be observed in wet prints? 
 
•  With reference to matrix distortion, what are some of the features that 
may be observed with fingerprints made in blood or paint? 
 
•  When considering development media, what are the characteristics or 
features associated with each of the four development media (powder, 
ninhydrin, iodine, and cyanoacrylate)? 
 
•  What is the difference between deposition pressure and pressure 
distortion? 
 
•  What are six observable ‘red flag’ indicators of distortion in a latent 
fingerprint? 
 
Definition 
According to one of Webster’s New World dictionaries, ‘to distort’ is 
defined as: 
 
“To modify so to produce an unfaithful reproduction; to change or 
misrepresent; to change the usual or normal shape, form, or appearance.” 
 

 

 
Distortion 
With reduced quality of latents, distortion is likely to be present. As part of 
our analysis process, we must be able to discern the nature of the distortion 
and understand the behaviour of the ridges when they are subjected to these 
distortive forces. All prints will suffer from some sort of distortion.  
 
According to Ferriola, 2002:  
 
“Distortion could result from a number of sources, including the matrix 
(residue left behind), which comprises the print; the substrate (surface) on 
which the print was left; the direction of touch; the pressure of the touch; 
the reaction of the matrix with the development medium; etc. All of these 
factors should be assessed during the analysis of the latent print.” 
Sourced from: 
http://www.clpex.com/Articles/ScientificPrinciplesbyTomFerriola.htm 

 
Types of 
The types of distortion are: 
distortion 
1.  Pressure. 
2.  Deposition pressure. 
3.  Anatomical aspects. 
4.  Development: 
a.  Medium. 
b.  Substrate. 
c.  Matrix. 
 
Evaluation  
According to Ferriola, 2002:  
 
“During the evaluation phase of the identification process, the examiner 
must consider all of the differences in appearance between the two images. 
It is an accepted tenant of fingerprint science that no two prints will ever be 
exactly the same in all respects.  
 
“First, any ‘touch’ is a contact between a complex curved surface (the skin) 
and, usually, a flat surface. This touch must necessarily be accompanied by 
distortion of the skin. Second, the amount and type of matrix (residue left 
behind) will differ. Third, the angle and pressure of the contact will change 
from one touch to the next. Fourth, the size of the area of skin coming into 
contact with the surface will vary.  
 
“Any number of other factors, some subtle and some extreme, may also 

 

contribute to differences in the appearance of two prints that result from 
two touches by the same region of friction skin. It is not sufficient to look 
only for similarities and ignore the differences, nor is it proper to look at 
only some features and ignore others. The fingerprint expert must consider, 
interpret and understand everything appearing in each image.” 
Sourced from: 
http://www.clpex.com/Articles/ScientificPrinciplesbyTomFerriola.htm 
 
Tolerance 
It is at this point that tolerance enters the equation (Ferriola, 2002). Based 
 
on an understanding of distortion and its sources, some differences in 
appearance fall within acceptable limits of tolerance. For example, it is easy 
to understand and to account for the differences in appearance between a 
print resulting from a light touch and a print resulting from a heavy touch. 
The differences in appearance between a fully rolled inked print and a 
crime scene mark are also easy to understand and easy to account for. 
These differences would be said to be within tolerance. Sourced from: 
http://www.clpex.com/Articles/ScientificPrinciplesbyTomFerriola.htm
 
 
Development 
1.  Powders – abrasive. Collects in pores. Tends to fill in third-level detail. 
media 
2.  Ninhydrin – concentration of amino acids are found at the pore 
openings on the ridges, therefore prints developed with ninhydrin can 
appear spotty.  
3.  Iodine fuming – absorbed into matrix. Non-abrasive so should show 
third-level detail clearly.  
4.  Cyanoacrylate – molecules polymerize with the matrix. The heat plus 
humidity method leaves a ‘spaghetti like’ matrix. The vacuum leaves a 
more ‘flaky’ appearance. Lighter coverage. 
 
Deposition 
Deposition pressure changes the shape of the ridges by flattening or 
pressure 
broadening each ridge, thereby narrowing the furrows. It describes vertical 
weight placed on the ridges. 
 
Pressure 
This is different from deposition pressure. Pressure distortion describes 
distortion 
pressure in the lateral or horizontal plane. It is usually accompanied by 
sideways sliding of friction ridges with a smeared appearance. 
 

 

 
Problem 
Some distortion indicators generate a need to be wary. These could be 
solving 
considered as ‘red flags’ for careful analysis of pressure and deposition 
 
pressure distortions. Indicators of distortion include:  
 
•  Ridge disturbances – sudden differences in the appearance of the matrix 
or development media. 
•  Lines through pattern area. 
•  Misaligned ridges. 
•  Extra thick ridges. 
•  Hatch ridges. 
•  Crossovers. 
•  Angular joints. 
•  Lack of harmony in distortions. 
•  Substrate artefacts. 
 
10 
 

Topic 2: Bias 
 
Learning 
The questions you need to answer for this topic include: 
objectives 
 
•  What is the concept of bias? 
•  What is cognitive bias and confirmation bias? 
•  How can you self-manage to try and avoid bias? 
 
Introduction 
The concept of bias was referred to in the previous module, Identification 1.  
 
Bias is not a fault; it results simply from the way the human mind works. 
For experts, bias is an unavoidable, inherent outcome of their very expertise 
and comes with the nature of our work. All information we receive 
potentially introduces bias. Bias must be recognized and accommodated for 
when undergoing the ACE-V process.  Quite simply, bias distorts the way 
we perceive and evaluate information. 
 
Cognitive bias 
This is defined as:  
“The tendency to make decisions or take action in an illogical way. For 
example, you might subconsciously make selective use of data, or you 
might feel pressured to make a decision by more influential or more 
senior colleagues.” Sourced from: 
https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newTED_79.htm 
 
Confirmation 
Confirmation bias happens when you look for information that supports 
bias 
your existing beliefs, and reject data that goes against what you believe. 
This can lead you to make biased decisions, because you don’t factor in all 
of the relevant information. It is the tendency to look for information that 
conforms to your hypothesis. Sourced from: 
https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/avoiding-psychological-bias.htm 
 
11 
 

 
How do I 
All information can introduce bias, so it’s important to: 
manage bias?  
•  Keep an open mind.  
•  Be impartial in your examination process. 
•  Never assume. 
•  Examine everything as if it were a blank script. 
•  Not compare the known print to the latent. 
•  Not be emotively swayed by the nature of the offence. 
•  Never assume it is an offender’s print. Do not allow your mind to be led 
to believe it should be an offender’s print.  
•  Manage the verification/peer review process. Verifications should 
always go ‘up’ the experience/ability ladder. 
 
12 
 

Topic 3: Forgery and Fabrication 
 
Learning 
The questions you need to answer for this topic include: 
objectives 
 
•  What is the difference between forgery and fabrication? 
•  What are the three methods of fabrication, and what clues might be 
observed in each case of the recovered fabricated latent? 
•  What are two methods of forgery and what clues might be observed in 
each case of the recovered forged latent? 
 
Introduction 
To help understand the differences between forged and fabricated, the 
following definitions provide a good insight. 
 
Fabricate 
“Fabricate” in the sense of “manufacture” has no moral or ethical 
implications, although it can be used in the sense of making things up and, 
by implication, lying. A statement which is a fabrication (a lie) would not 
be called forged. A “fabricated” latent print is manufactured or 
misrepresented by a person, possibly involved in the investigation, in order 
to enhance the case against a suspect. 
Sourced from: ell.stackexchange.com/questions/78989/forgery-vs-
counterfeiting-vs-fabrication 

 
Forge 
A signature, document, or painting could be forged. That is, we could 
reproduce it with the intention of having people mistake it as being 
authentic. Sourced from: 
ell.stackexchange.com/questions/78989/forgery-vs-counterfeiting-vs-
fabrication 
 
“A ‘forged’ latent print is the print of an innocent person that has been 
‘planted’ at a crime scene by the perpetrator (or another person) in an 
attempt to hide the true offender’s identity. 
 
“As part of your fingerprint knowledge, you will be expected to be vigilant 
and observe the appearance of prints in order to detect forged or fabricated 
evidence.” 
Sourced from: 
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=202212 

 
13 
 

Signs of 
According to Pat A Wertheim, Director of Training, Forensic Identification 
fabrication 
Training Seminars Ltd (see source below): 
 
“Examiners need to be alert to the signs of fabrication in latent print 
evidence submitted by others, and they need to follow procedures in their 
own cases to document absolutely the authenticity of their latent prints in 
order to preclude the charge of fabrication against their legitimate 
evidence.” 
 
Wertheim goes on to discuss methods of fabrication. The following text is 
summarised from the source (see below). 
 
The usual methods of fabrication are: 
 
1.  To lift the print from a known, inked print and then label it as having 
come from the crime scene. Clues – ink is a different shade of black 
than fingerprint powder. Lifted inked prints are usually the fully rolled 
prints, a phenomenon virtually impossible in real latent print work. Lifts 
from inked prints usually include fibres and microscopic fibre marks. 
2.  Mislabelling the print as having come from a crime scene when it was 
actually lifted from a more benign location. Clues – the most reliable 
method of detection is a close inspection of background noise. Each 
type of surface leaves a trademark background noise, and frequently, 
fabricators fail to take this into account. A mislabelled latent may also 
reflect an orientation inconsistent with normal handling. 
3.  Through the use of a staged photograph of the print. Clues – these 
photographs are usually taken slightly out of focus in an attempt to hide 
details which would disclose the fabrication. Or, such a photograph may 
be over or under-exposed. Strange lines or shadows may be present. 
The photographs may also contain stray images not expected on the 
surface from which the latent purportedly came, or background noise 
may not be consistent with the surface claimed. 
Sourced from: www.iowaiai.org/latent-fingerprint-fabrication 
 
14 
 

 
Considerations 
Kristi Mayo’s article (see source below) discusses the factors that an 
examiner should look out for to alert them to fabrication: 
 
“… a lifted print that does not match the surface from which it was 
supposedly taken; a lift that has different characteristics from the other lifts 
collected at the same scene; and inconsistency in lift tapes.  
 
The article also discusses collection techniques examiners can use to avoid 
any suspicion of fabrication: 
 
“… photograph the print in place before it is lifted; include the description 
of the latent print in crime scene processing notes; and using a marking, 
perhaps with a ballpoint pen, on the surface near the print to be included in 
a re-photograph of the print. Other techniques are to keep lifts together and 
to use serial-numbered lifts.” 
Sourced from: 
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/publications/abstract.aspx?ID=202212 
 
Office practices  We cannot categorically state the true origin of latent prints unless we were 
there ourselves and actually lifted the prints. It is for this reason that we do 
not report on the origin of the prints, rather we say ‘labelled as’ and why we 
copy the exact wording, misspellings and all.  
 
Signs of 
Forged fingerprints are rare. Clues – the ‘staged’ appearance of the prints. 
forgeries 
The locations of the prints might be in an unnatural or unlikely area. 
Locating any forged fingerprints relies on the scene examiner developing 
and lifting the planted prints.  
1.  Casting materials like stamps or latex moulds can be used. Clues – 
bubbles in the developed print (from air bubbles in the latex mould). 
The framing effect (halo) of the stamp or mould. Examine the pores and 
ridges carefully. Overall shape inconsistent with natural deposition.  
2.  Transfer of latent from one surface to another. Clues – careful 
observation of background noise, which will have transferred across 
with the latent print.  
 
End of module 
Congratulations, you have completed the Identification 2 module. Be 
 
prepared to answer questions on these topics. 
 
You are now ready to begin the next training module. 
 
15 
 



 
 
 
Fingerprint Officer Training Programme  
 
 
Module: Law 2 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Document Owner: National Fingerprint Training Officer 
School of Investigations: Forensics training. 
The Royal New Zealand Police College 
Papakowhai Road 
Private Bag 50906 
PORIRUA 
 
 
 
 
 
 
© New Zealand Police 
 
Copyright reserved 
 
This document, or any portion of it, may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any 
means, electronic or mechanical (including photocopying, recording or by any information 
storage retrieval system), without the express written permission of the New Zealand Police. 
 
 
Contact for copies:  Please contact the document owner if you want a copy of this manual. 
 

Contents 
Topic 1: Understanding your place in the court system ............................................................ 1 
Expert witness purpose and role ............................................................................................................................ 1 
How Court processes work .................................................................................................................................... 3 
What we can and can’t say in court ....................................................................................................................... 5 
Disclosure .............................................................................................................................................................. 8 
Rules of Evidence and the Evidence Act ............................................................................................................... 8 
Topic 2: Explaining your work and profession ........................................................................ 12 
Fingerprint evidence ............................................................................................................................................ 12 
Relevant Case Laws - New Zealand .................................................................................................................... 13 
Relevant Case Laws – International - Daubert ..................................................................................................... 16 
Errors in Fingerprints overseas – McKie and Madrid Bombing .......................................................................... 18 
 
 
 i 
December 
2015 

Topic 1: Understanding your place in the court system 
Expert witness purpose and role 
 
How a case is 
A case will only be considered appropriate for prosecution if the various 
selected for 
factors, unique to that particular case, indicate that there is both evidential 
prosecution 
sufficiency and pubic interest in prosecution. 
 
 
The evidential sufficiency test is determined first. If that is satisfied then 
the officer must proceed to consider the public interest test. The weight of 
factors is not based on the number of factors; rather it is on how various 
factors relate to a specific unique offender and all the circumstances 
relating to that offender. 
 
The core 
An expert witness is engaged by the courts to assist the courts. While you 
purpose of an 
can be engaged by either prosecution or defence, your role is to maintain 
Expert Witness 
impartiality; you are neither ‘for’ the prosecution or the defence.   
 
 
The general position in the Evidence Act 2006 is that a statement of 
opinion is not admissible in a proceeding to prove the truth of what is 
believed. The reason for this is that witnesses in a case give evidence as to 
the matters they have experienced, not their beliefs or opinions, and that 
factual evidence has to be evaluated and a decision made on the legal and 
factual issues in dispute. However, from the earliest times, the courts 
recognised there were technical areas outside common knowledge where a 
court might benefit from the assistance of expert opinion in understanding 
the matters which it had to evaluate.  The courts admit expert evidence 
when the judge is satisfied that the matters which the expert evidence 
addressed were outside “common knowledge” and expert opinion is 
required. 
 
Expert evidence   Expert evidence is defined under the Act in terms which reflect the 
 
position at common law:  
“The evidence of an expert based on the specialised knowledge or skill of that 
expert and includes evidence given in the form of an opinion.”     
 

 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 1 
December 2015 

 
It is for the court to consider whether an expert is properly qualified to 
give expert evidence and whether the evidence which they will give is 
within the expert’s area of expertise.  A court will rule on this if there is a 
challenge to the evidence.  Opinions by non-experts on technical matters 
are inadmissible. 
 
The various codes of conduct adopted by the courts in the past decade 
emphasise that in giving this expert opinion, the paramount duty of an 
expert is to assist the court to understand the evidence in the case. 
 
The role of the 
An expert witness has a number of conflicting duties which need to be 
Expert Witness  
managed and resolved correctly: 
 
  The most important is the duty to the court and is to be treated as a 
paramount and overriding duty. At its core is an obligation to assist the 
court in arriving at the truth. It should be borne in mind that, it is the 
court which makes the ultimate decision and the role of the expert is to 
educate the court to the same level of understanding as the expert on 
the particular issue in question, in this case, fingerprints.  
  The expert is not an advocate for a particular party and should remain 
true to his or her profession and refrain from attempting ‘to win’ the 
case.  
  An expert witness is to ensure that all of the relevant points of the case 
are brought to the attention of the court.  
  An expert has a duty to comply with the directions or orders made by 
the court; these directions should be provided to the expert by the legal 
practitioner conducting the matter. Directions are usually 
straightforward and typically determine whether there will be a joint 
conference; the timeframes for serving reports; the dates for hearing; 
terms on which experts are to be briefed etc. Such directions will 
normally be made by the Judge, often by consent of the parties.  
  The expert has a duty to maintain his or her reputation by providing 
competent advice to the court (reasoned conclusions are preferred to 
bold conclusions) and refusing to put forward arguments that lack 
substance or credibility in an attempt to unreasonably advance the 
client’s case. It is inappropriate to allow the instructing lawyer or any 
outside party to ‘filter’ the expert’s report. The lawyer may provide 
advice on legal or procedural matters and may even provide advice as 
to the scope of the report and its relevance to the proceedings.  
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 2 
December 2015 

 
  With Joint Conferencing it is inappropriate to allow the instructing 
lawyer or any outside party to interfere with the independent expert 
witness process once a Joint Conference has commenced.   
  Your duties to the court include confidentiality; diligence especially in 
presenting the case fully and fairly; punctuality; and to quote fairly and 
transparently. The duty is to be truthful as to fact, honest as to opinion 
and complete as to coverage of relevant matters. Expert evidence must 
be independent, objective and unbiased. 
 
Presentation of 
A Statement of Evidence is where the expert sets out his opinion and 
Expert Evidence  qualifies themselves as an expert to the court. This should ideally be a 
 
complete document without the need for further amendment. An 
acknowledgement that the expert has read the ‘Code of Conduct’ and 
agrees to be bound by it should be contained in the statement of evidence.  
 
 
How Court processes work  
 
Integrity 
The integrity of the expert should be above reproach. You owe a duty to 
 
the court as the court seeks to gain assistance from the expert. It is 
important to have confidence in the opinions that you express. A primary 
requirement is to ensure that the statement is thoroughly prepared and that 
you, the expert, are familiar with all facts upon which the conclusions are 
formed. Knowledge plus careful preparation is the key to providing good 
testimony in court. 
 
The general 
a)  Witness gives evidence-in-chief (direct examination) then; 
framework of 
the trial process:  
b)  Cross-examination by other parties, then 
 
c)  Re-examination by the calling party. 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 3 
December 2015 

 
Direct 
At the hearing the expert is sworn in by taking an oath on the bible or 
Examination 
making an affirmation. Both carry the same obligations, which is to tell the 
 
truth. 
 
When called to the witness box, the expert should take his notes and 
documents. While we are generally ‘called’ by prosecution, we may 
occasionally be called by defence. Whichever party has called you will 
direct the evidence in chief, which is comprised of your statement. 
At this stage, leading questions are not allowed to be asked. That is, those 
questions which suggests to the witness how it is to be answered or puts 
words into the mouth of the witness to be merely repeated in his or her 
response.  
 
Refreshing memory. If you need to refresh your memory while giving 
evidence permission must be sought. You may refer to documents that 
were made by you when your memory was ‘fresh’ (contemporaneous 
requirement). Address the judge as ‘your honour/ma’arm’ or ‘sir/madam’ 
and ask his/hers permission to refer to your notes. 
 
Cross 
The main goal of cross examination is to investigate the truth of the 
Examination 
witnesses’ testimony in recognition of the adversarial nature of our trial 
 
processes. The object is to elicit information favourable to the cross 
examination team (generally defence but could be prosecution) and to cast 
doubt upon the accuracy of the evidence in chief. 
 
Cross examination is flexible and effective. You need not view the 
prospect of being cross examined with alarm; however you should ensure 
you know your facts thoroughly. You should express yourself as 
accurately and completely as possible. Be frank and be prepared to 
concede immediately anything that should be conceded. A successful cross 
examination can severely weaken or destroy an expert’s testimony, 
however a cross examination that reveals the accuracy of your expert 
opinion, the logic of your reasoning and the soundness of your 
conclusions, enhances the weight and reliability of your opinion and 
therefore your standing as an expert.  
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 4 
December 2015 

 
Re-examination 
If after cross-examination, it appears necessary to clarify some of the 
 
answers you have given, leave can be sought and usually obtained for ‘re-
examination’ of the matter needing clarification (as opposed to further 
evidence). This is often a frustrating exercise for the expert witness 
because leading questions cannot be asked during re-examination with the 
consequence that the witness may not then have the opportunity to further 
elaborate on a point or issue.  
 
Once you have finished giving your testimony, you will be directed to step 
down from the stand. However, you must not leave the court until you 
have been given explicit permission to do so. 
 
 
What we can and can’t say in court 
 
Prepare 
  Be well prepared. 
 
  If you are going to be referring to ‘level 3 detail’ in your analysis 
notes, ensure you point to or mark out some ‘level 3  detail’ in your 
crimcons. These are to assist the jury; the jury needs to see the level 3 
detail you refer to, rather than you simply saying it is ‘present’.  
 
Listen carefully 
  Listen to all the questions, all the time, in particular any questions from 
 
the judge. 
  Listen to a question fully and comprehend what is being asked before 
you begin to answer. 
  Listen carefully to the question from Counsel, especially long-winded 
questions as they can be effectively no more than a statement. If in 
doubt, ask for clarification or ask for the question to be repeated or 
broken into parts. They may drop it altogether! Be slow and 
methodical in your approach, don't appear overconfident but be 
articulate in your response. 
  Listen to the question and if it is not understood ask for it to be 
repeated or clarified  
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 5 
December 2015 

 
Answer 
  Questions in cross-examination will be put in a closed form - do not 
thoughtfully 
agree with propositions which are poorly informed or incorrect. 
 
  Where a concession is appropriate, make it. 
  Do not back down unnecessarily. If your position can properly be 
justified, then answer accordingly. 
  Do not put on any kind of a “show” for judge or jury. Keep your 
evidence as simple as possible. 
  if you have made an error, do not try to cover it up. 
   Do not become an advocate for the case of the party which instructs 
you. 
  Expert evidence must be objective, independent and unbiased 
 
Verbalise  
  If you use or refer to any visual aids or diagrams, these must be 
 
verbally articulated so the stenographer can explain what you are 
referring to in the transcript. For example, the transcript might read 
‘witness points to lift 12’. 
 
Know your role 
  It is not for you to determine what is best for the court, so refrain from 
 
saying you are ‘assisting the court’ or advising the judge on previous 
case law.   
  The court determines if you’re an Expert or not, for the purposes of 
that particular trail. If you are there giving evidence it can safely be 
assumed the court has accepted you as an expert in your field. So don’t 
be afraid to use the terms ‘In my experience” “in my opinion”.  You 
are deemed an ‘expert’ through your training and experience. 
 
Manage your 
  You should remain calm and polite and if necessary be firm but not 
demeanor 
argumentative. 
 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 6 
December 2015 

 
Know about our 
  Know the difference between verification and peer review! Peer 
processes 
review is a well defined scientific process and a process by which a 
 
scholarly work (such as a paper or a research proposal) is checked by a 
group of experts in the same field to make sure it meets the necessary 
standards before it is published or accepted. It constitutes a form of 
self-regulation by qualified members of a profession within the 
relevant field. Peer review methods are employed to maintain 
standards of quality, improve performance, and provide credibility. In 
Fingerprints, peer review is the review of our case files for court by 
two others, confirming we have used a recognized methodology to 
arrive at a conclusion and that another person can follow that 
methodology and arrive at the same conclusion. Verification is the 
final step in ACE-V and involves another examiner verifying the 
identification made and presented by an identifier, that is, do they 
support the ID. 
 
Understand our 
  We mention belonging to a ‘society’ or professional body in our 
professional 
statements; firstly because we are expert witnesses and membership of 
memberships 
 

a professional body supports this and secondly, because it implies we 
abide by their code of ethics. If you have a professional membership in 
your statement, you must ensure you know about this organisation and 
the rules it expects you to abide by. 
 
Initiate when 
  Ensure any exhibits you refer to have already been presented in court. 
appropriate 
If not, you may wish to prompt prosecution politely. For example: 
 
“Sir/Madam, if I could now produce exhibit xyz, this will assist me in 
demonstrating this point’. 
  Do not hesitate to request that documents be shown to you that will 
assist you in giving evidence.  
 
Code of conduct 
At all times the expert must abide by the High Court code of conduct for 
 
expert witnesses and remain professional and polite.  
 
Refer: 
http://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1908/0089/latest/DLM1817947.
html 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 7 
December 2015 

Disclosure 
 
Rules of 
The Criminal Disclosures Act 2008 came into force in 2009. Disclosure 
Disclosure 
under the Act occurs in a number of stages. Initial disclosure by the 
 
prosecution must be made within 21 days of commencement of the 
proceedings. This includes a summary of the facts of the alleged offence, 
the penalties applying to the offence and a summary of the defendant‘s 
previous convictions. Following this, the defendant can request further 
disclosure, including the names of witnesses to be called, a list of exhibits, 
copies of all interviews and notes on evidence. Full disclosure occurs after 
the defendant has pleaded in a summary proceeding, elected trial by jury, or 
made an appearance in court. The prosecution must disclose all relevant 
information, together with a list of any information that the prosecution is 
refusing to disclose. The defendant can, once again, request that the 
prosecution make additional disclosure. Under the Act, the prosecutions 
obligation to disclose is ongoing. Disclosure by the defendant is limited to 
disclosure of an alibi, if one will be argued, and disclosure of any expert 
witnesses that will be called.  
 
All disclosure occurs through the OC file, which in our instances will be a 
police member. He/she determines what evidence is required to be disclosed 
and will undertake to do so. You must always submit your disclosure pack 
to the OC file for them to deal with as appropriate. They should never be 
sent directly to either prosecution or defence counsel.  
 
 
Rules of Evidence and the Evidence Act 
 
Introduction to  Evidence is determined by both the common law and the Evidence Act, 
Evidence 
2006. It covers a whole list of rules; the ones discussed here have some 
 
relevance to your role as a Fingerprint Officer in court or when preparing 
statements and cases for disclosure.  
 
The Purpose of  Stated in S6 of the Act; the main objective of the Act is to “help secure the 
the Act: 
just determination of proceedings”. This is achieved through six objectives; 
 
1.  providing for facts to be established by the application of logical rules 
2.  providing rules of evidence that recognise the importance of rights 
affirmed by the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act, 1990 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 8 
December 2015 

 
3.  promoting fairness to parties and witnesses 
4.  protecting rights of confidentiality and other important interests 
5.  avoiding unjustifiable expense and delay 
6.  enhancing access to the law of evidence 
 
In order to be admissible, evidence must be relevant and will only be 
admitted if its probative value outweighs any unfairly prejudicial effect that 
it may have on the proceeding 
 
Relevance 
Section 7(1) states the general rule that, unless otherwise provided, relevant 
 
evidence is admissible in court proceedings. Evidence that is not relevant is 
inadmissible. Relevance is defined in section 7(3) if it has a “tendency to 
prove or disprove anything that is of consequence to the determination of 
the proceeding”. This consists of two factors; materiality and probativenss. 
 
Materiality asks if it is sufficiently relevant to an issue before the court and 
probative is whether the evidence has the tendency to prove or disprove that 
issue. 
 
Looking at the above statement again, we break it down as follows: 
 
“tendency to prove or disprove (probativeness) anything that is of 
consequence to the determination (materiality) of the proceeding”. Both 
these must be satisfied for evidence to be relevant. 
 
There is always a cost, in terms of money, time, multiplication of issues, or 
possible prejudice, of introducing any piece of evidence.  The probative 
value of the evidence must be weighed against these costs.   
 
General 
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is 
Exclusion 
substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the 
 
issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of 
time or needless presentation of cumulative evidence. Exclusionary rules 
exist to govern this. 
 
Section 8(1) sets out the rules of exclusion of evidence that is otherwise 
relevant. These are mandatory. As a general rule, evidence MUST be 
excluded if (a) its probative value is outweighed by its unfairly prejudicial 
effect or (b) it will needlessly prolong the proceeding. 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 9 
December 2015 

 
1.  Unfair Prejudice – e.g. danger a jury may give more weight to it than it 
deserves or be misled by evidence. An example of unfair prejudice is 
with previous convictions. The Fingerprint Officer must generally avoid 
mentioning or alluding to previous convictions or arrest sets of 
fingerprints. Care must be taken with giving evidence around prints held 
on AFIS. 
2.  Photographs and Videos. – Generally admissible but may be excluded if 
the judge considers they may prejudice the jury. 
 
Hearsay rule 
A hearsay statement is defined as an out-of-court statement made by a 
and its 
person other than the witness, tendered for proof of its content. The focus 
Exceptions 
however is on the purpose or use of the statement. The following exceptions 
 
apply to this rule; 
1.  ‘State of mind’ evidence – may apply to show the state of mind, 
knowledge, emotion of the hearer (the witness) or the speaker (the 
maker). For example a statement could be held to not be hearsay if its 
use was to explain why the witness did or believed something 
2.  Exclusionary rules of Hearsay - General Admissibility of hearsay 
statements – A hearsay statement is admissible if it is reliable (“the 
surrounding circumstances must provide reasonable assurance that the 
hearsay statement is reliable”)
 and unavailable (“a person who is 
unavailable as a witness”). 

a)  There are some further statutory exceptions to hearsay statements;  
i)  Admissions 
ii)  Business records – this covers disclosing our documentary 
evidence in court, that is, our normal everyday business 
documents. 
 
Opinion 
Under S23 the general rule is that opinions are not admissible as evidence. 
Evidence 
The reason for this is that a witness should testify only to what a witness has 
 
perceived. There are of course exceptions to this as follows:  
1.  Non-expert opinion S24 – Allows opinion evidence if it is necessary to 
enable a witness to communicate what the witness saw, heard or 
otherwise perceived. For example, non-expert opinion as to a person’s 
sobriety is admissible but must state the observed facts that lead to that 
conclusion and cannot express an opinion on matters such as their 
fitness to drive. 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 10 
December 2015 

 
2.  Expert opinion Evidence S25 – This is fingerprint testimony. The 
opinion must be of an ‘expert’ and it must offer ‘substantial help’ to the 
fact finder in understanding other evidence or ascertaining any fact in 
the proceedings. 
a)  Expert – someone with specialist knowledge and/or skills based on 
training, study or experience. 
b)  Substantially helpful – impose a higher threshold than the general 
admissibility balance of probative v prejudicial. 
 
Risks of 
There is a higher standard of accuracy and objectivity required in assessing 
Expert 
the admissibility of an expert opinion. This is because the testimony of an 
Opinion 
expert is likely to carry more weight. “An expert witness should provide 
Evidence. 
 

independent assistance to the court by way of objective unbiased opinion to 
matters within his expertise…An expert witness… should never assume the 

role of advocate”. 1 
 
 
 
                                                            
Cresswell, J. The Ikarian Reefer 1993, 2 LILR 68, 81-82 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 11 
December 2015 

Topic 2: Explaining your work and profession 
Fingerprint evidence 
 
Standards for 
Fingerprints have been used in courtrooms since the early 20th century, and 
Identification 
judges have generally regarded them as scientifically sound. 
 
Globally there are various standards (criteria) for identification in 
fingerprint examination. At present, there are two well-known standards:  
1.  The empirical approach (also called “minutiae threshold” or “numerical 
standard”)  
2.  The holistic approaches (also called “non-numerical approach”).  
 
New Zealand 
New Zealand has adopted the holistic approach and has never required a 
Standards 
numerical threshold to reach a conclusion of identity. There is a fallacy held 
 
by some in the court system that we once obeyed a 12 point rule, that is, 
followed an empirical approach. (This may have come from their 
knowledge of Edmond Locard’s work. Locard stated in 1918 that if 12 
points were the same between two fingerprints, it would suffice as a positive 
identification.) 
 
The holistic 
The holistic approach calls for an assessment by the examiner of each 
approach 
comparison based on its own merit (in terms of quality and quantity as 
 
revealed by the mark and the print). The expert concludes on an 
individualisation when he/she is satisfied that there is “sufficient” 
correspondence (or sufficient discordance in the case of an exclusion) 
between the compared images. This informed judgment is based on training, 
experience, and expert knowledge. 
 
This was successfully argued in 1973 when the International Association for 
Identification, IAI, adopted a resolution rejecting an arbitrary number of 
corresponding points as the required basis for identification.  
 
Ne’urim 
This standard was endorsed by the International fingerprint community in 
Declaration 
the 1995 Ne’urim Declaration which states, “No scientific basis exists for 
 
requiring that a pre-determined minimum number of friction ridge features 
must be present in two impressions in order to establish a positive 
identification” 11 countries were represented, including New Zealand.  
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 12 
December 2015 

 
Other 
While we adopt the holistic approach for identification, as we follow the 
standards in 
Ne’urim declaration, this only forms our identification standards. Other 
our work 
standards in our work are set by: 
 
  Selection (a preference for tertiary study in a related field and/or 
experience) 
  Training (a rigorous 5 year programme of study and exams at tertiary 
level concurrent with workplace ‘on the job’ learning and assessments, 
resulting in a Diploma) 
  Image quality/ quantity of detail 
  Proficiency testing (Collaborative Testing Services (CTS,) an overseas 
independent proficiency testing service) 
  Case work quality assurance and the requirement of two verifiers before 
each identification is released 
  Standard Operating Procedures (SOP’s) 
 
Points to 
  Bias – refer to your module and readings on bias, you may be asked 
Remember: 
about bias in court or whether or not you have been biased in your 
 
examination.  
  We have a tendency to offer too much in response to a question. K.I.S.S. 
saying ‘yes’ is a perfectly acceptable answer, you do not need to 
elaborate and explain on every point.  
  Understand your training programme. Who assesses you? Who governs 
it and controls it? Who reviews the training? Is it peer reviewed?  
 
 
Relevant Case Laws - New Zealand 
 
Introduction 
Case law (or common law) refers to any set of rulings on law which is 
 
guided by previous rulings. Cases that are legally similar will generally be 
decided the same way, conforming with the decisions of a higher court. This 
is called the rule of ‘precedent’, and ensures consistency and certainty in 
how the law is applied. 
 
There are several cases and decisions which have set precedents for 
fingerprint aspects in the New Zealand courts. 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 13 
December 2015 

 
R v Mokaraka.  Peer review (verification process) regarded as hearsay evidence. However it 
 
was conceded that scientific evidence is often the result of team work. It is 
therefore conceivable that there is or should be, a ‘common law exception to 
the hearsay rule’ for this type of evidence. 
 
R v Buisson 
1990 – Court of Appeal considered the admissibility and nature of 
and Ratana 
fingerprint evidence. The court ruled;  
 
a)  ‘It is for trained fingerprint experts, who are able to see features not 
apparent to a lay person, to determine the existence of characteristics 
or points of similarity. That is not matter for the jury.” The evidence 
for the jury to consider was the opinion tendered by each expert, and 
in assessing its reliability they had to decide what they made of his 
claim to have discovered various points of similarity and his 
conclusions based upon them. The jury were entitled to reply on 
what they had been told about those points of similarity if they were 
satisfied with the experts reliability; and  
b)  (b). A fingerprint expert is not obliged to produce and show in court 
the original prints of the fingerprints, but may be required to do so if 
their evidence is to be contested. It is the expert’s testimony which is 
the evidence, not the prints, which could not be understood of 
themselves by the jury.  
c)  It was determined that there was no requirement for 12 points to be a 
criterion for identification, but rather the ‘standard of proof is one of 
beyond reasonable doubt rather than scientific certainty’. 
“Something less than 12 points may be acceptable for safety, and in 
some special cases as few as 6 points” 
 
Queen v 
– in a ‘voire dire’ the defense tried to say the FP evidence was inadmissible 
Sidney Te 
as its prejudicial value outweighed the probative value. Here the court 
Paiho  
upholds the fact that there is no requirement for there to be 12 points (as per 
 
R v Buisson) and that the surrounding (that is, sequential fingers) and other 
prints identified to the offender on the same exhibit, add value/weight to the 
identification overall. In this case there were prints on a bed head from a 
rape scene.  
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 14 
December 2015 

 
R V Krausch 
This was a ruling on the ‘value of fingerprint evidence’. This was a 
(1913) – 
landmark case where the judge determined that fingerprints were 
 
established scientific facts. Fingerprints “may be regarded as established 
facts. The first of these facts is that finger-markings remain absolutely 
unaltered from birth to death... the second is that..the characteristics are 
random, in comparing prints of two individuals you may chance to find a 
close agreement as to a particular point, but the whole weight of scientific 
testimony shows that even this is rare”. 
 
The same Judge, Chapman J, reaffirmed this several years later during R v 
Gunn,
 where he again expounded on the technique and value of fingerprint 
identification and the guilty verdict was seen as a ‘vindication of the 
fingerprint system’. 
 
R V Carter 
– there was a question as to ‘admissibility’ of the fingerprint evidence. 
(19/12/05, 
Fingerprint Experts can base opinion of identity on the ‘quality and quantity 
CA155/05) 
of information in the images’. The court also reiterated a finding in R v 
 
Calder that stated that there needed to be a ‘minimum threshold of 
reliability’ to be admissible (the reference being to peer review). The 
essential comments here are that with regards to fingerprint evidence: 
“Ordinary principals of expert evidence apply – experts must give reasons 
for their conclusions”. 
 
The courts stated that new methodologies had developed since R v Buisson, 
a four-step process involving, analysis, comparison, evaluation and 
verification. Evidence linking a fingerprint to a particular person is expert 
evidence, and the expert must identify the steps undertaken in the process of 
analysis and the major factors that influenced the expert to reach the opinion 
expressed. In this instance whilst the expert explained the methodology 
used, ACE-V, and the need for individual identification by an expert, he 
failed to explain the major factors (other than reliance on peer review) that 
led him to the view that the fingerprint could be identified as Mr. Carter’s. 
(There was an absence of ‘reasons’ to justify the opinions reached.) 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 15 
December 2015 

Relevant Case Laws – International - Daubert 
 
Introduction to 
The opinion governs the admissibility of scientific evidence in Federal 
Daubert v 
court in the US. It states that the Federal rules of evidence supersede the 
Merrell Dow 
‘general acceptance’ tests for admissibility which came out of Frye v 
Pharmaceuticals.  
 

United States. 
 
Daubert Opinion  Daubert opinion states that: 
 
a)  The judge must screen scientific evidence to ensure it is relevant 
and reliable 
b)  The focus is on principles and methodology, not on the 
conclusions they generate. 
c)  The court should include the following factors: 
i)  Testing and validation 
ii)  Peer review 
iii) Rate of error 
iv)  General acceptance 
 
Testing Daubert 
Well over 40 Daubert hearings have since tested this and all fingerprint 
 
evidence has been accepted. The first of these Daubert hearings was in US 
v Byron Mitchell. In this case the defendant claimed that there was no 
scientific basis for the assertion of individuality in the matching of 
fingerprints. The judge upheld the admissibility of the fingerprint evidence 
and rejected the challenge by defense to exclude it. Most importantly, the 
court took judicial notice of two factors: 
 
Human friction ridges are unique and permanent throughout the area of 
friction ridge skin including small ridge areas. 
 
Human friction ridge skin arrangements are unique and permanent. 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 16 
December 2015 

 
Fingerprints 
The science of fingerprints meets the standards set forth in Daubert: 
Science and 
Daubert 

  Testing. The reliability of fingerprint analysis can and has been tested 
 
over an extended period of time. There has never been an instance in 
which two different individuals have been found to possess the same 
fingerprint. 
  Error Rates. There is much ongoing debate about this issue. There is 
no error rate for the methodology of fingerprint analysis, however 
there is practitioner error. There are erroneous identifications, but 
those are not the fault of the science of fingerprints. “The analogy 
most often given is, No science is more precise than mathematics, 
however that does not prevent the practitioner of math from saying 
that two plus two equals five. That is not the fault of mathematics, but 
the fault of the mathematician.
 The same thought applies to the science 
of fingerprints.” Gary W Jones; Courtroom testimony for the 
fingerprint expert, 2nd Ed. 

  Peer Review. Refers to published material on fingerprints which are 
open to peer review by others in the scientific community. 
  Acceptability in the Relevant Scientific Community. The reliability 
of fingerprint analysis has been accepted in the scientific community 
for over a hundred years. 
 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 17 
December 2015 

Errors in Fingerprints overseas – McKie and Madrid 
Bombing 

 
Background to 
The case of the murder of 57 year old Marion Ross in Scotland. The main 
McKie 
suspect was David Asbury and a number of fingerprints were recovered 
 
throughout the investigation that were identified to him, including on a 
gift tag in the victim’s home and on a tin that contained 2000 pounds 
which also had the victims prints on it.  However there was another print 
recovered from the door frame in the victim’s house which was identified 
to a police officer Shirley McKie. McKie was adamant she had never set 
foot in the house. Mckie was subsequently fired, arrested and charged 
with perjury. A trial ensued and four fingerprint experts concurred that the 
print did indeed belong to McKie. The trial became an issue in that, if 
McKie was telling the truth then the fingerprint evidence in this case, in its 
entirety, would be flawed. Two fingerprint experts from the U.S. were 
asked to examine the prints and both concluded that the print did not 
belong to McKie. Additionally, the Scottish parliament invited overseas 
experts to examine the print and 171 experts stated the two prints did not 
match. The fingerprint evidence was ultimately rejected and as such 
Asbury’s conviction was also overturned.  
 
McKie Inquiry 
An inquiry into the case was begun in 2008. Included in its terms of 
Findings 
reference was the task of finding out what went wrong and making 
 
recommendations to avoid these shortcomings in the future. The inquiry 
report was published in 2011 and the findings included: 
  The marks Y7 and QI2 Ross were both misidentified by the Scottish 
Criminal Record Office fingerprint examiners due to human error and 
there is nothing sinister about the fact that these two errors occurred in 
the same case.  
  The misidentifications of Y7 and QI2 Ross expose weaknesses in the 
methodology of fingerprint comparison and in particular where it 
involves complex marks.  
  Fingerprint examiners are presently ill-equipped to reason their 
conclusions as they are accustomed to regarding their conclusions as a 
matter of certainty and seldom challenged.  
  There is no reason to suggest that fingerprint comparison in general is 
an inherently unreliable form of evidence but practitioners and fact-
finders alike are required to give due consideration to the limits of the 
discipline 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 18 
December 2015 

 
There were 86 recommendations that came out of the inquiry. Other work 
from the fingerprint officers was checked for accuracy with no other 
mistakes found.  
 
Background to 
Train bombing in Madrid, Spain. Interpol requested the analysis of latent 
Madrid 
prints from the scene. The case was assigned to a latent print supervisor 
Bombing 
and the Spanish police sent through electronic images. Eight images of 
 
low resolution were submitted, with no scale. An AFIS search occurred 
with a negative result. Latent prints asked for higher resolution images 
with a scale. Interpol submitted more emails with the prints and 5 suspect 
sets of tenprints. The latents were compared to the knowns but no ID 
could be made as the tenprints were of poor resolution. One of the latent 
images was searched in AFIS on 7 points; the misidentified candidate was 
#4 on the list. The comparison was done using the on-screen images 
against the supplied latent image. The job went to verification and the 
verifier requested an original ten print set and the images was 
subsequently verified using the high resolution digital copy and the 
original ten prints. The unit chief did not make a thorough examination 
prior to releasing the ID. 
 
Madrid 
Findings included: 
Bombing 
Findings – 

  If the FBI had insisted on more information (e.g., an image with scale 
Human Failure 
for proper enlarging and an overall shot for orientation and proper 
 
finger determination), this error may have been avoided. (Object 
photographs that were available to the committee established that the 
candidate's finger determination was not probable.) This comment was 
not meant to mitigate the error. The error was a "human" failure and 
not a methodology or technology failure.  The prescribed methodology 
(Analysis, Comparison, and Evaluation–Verification or ACE-V) used 
for this examination was appropriate. It was the examiners' application 
of this methodology that failed. 
 
 
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 19 
December 2015 

 
Madrid 
  The apparent mind-set of the initial examiner after reviewing the 
Bombing 
results of the IAFIS search was that a match did exist; therefore, it 
Findings – 
Mindset 

would be reasonable to assume that the other characteristics must 
 
match as well. In the absence of a detailed analysis of the print, it can 
be a short distance from finding only seven characteristics sufficient 
for plotting, prior to the automated search, to the position of 12 or 13 
matching characteristics once the mind-set of identification has 
become dominant. This would not be an intentional misinterpretation 
of the data, but it would be an incorrect interpretation nevertheless.  
  Once the mind-set occurred with the initial examiner, the subsequent 
examinations were tainted. Latent print examiners routinely conduct 
verifications in which they know the previous examiners' results 
without influencing their conclusions. However, because of: 
   the inherent pressure of such a high-profile case 
   the power of an IAFIS match in conjunction with the similarities 
in the candidate's print, and  
  the knowledge of the previous examiners' conclusions (especially 
since the initial examiner was a highly respected supervisor with 
many years of experience) 
 
… it was concluded that subsequent examinations were incomplete and 
inaccurate. To disagree was not an expected response.  
 
New Zealand Police FPO Training Programme Intermediate 2 Law 2   page 20 
December 2015 

NEW ZEALAND POLICE FINGERPRINT SECTION 
 
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE 
LATENT FINGERPRINT EXAMINATION AND IDENTIFICATION    
S.O.P #: 2 
Procedure category: OPERATIONAL 
Effective date: 01 - 01 - 2015   
Review date:  2021 
Process owner 
PFO Hamilton 
Fingerprint Management Group (Lead -  
Moderators 
Manager: National Fingerprint Service 
Centre) 
 
1.0 
Purpose 
 
To provide standards for examining latent fingerprints, and making and recording 
identifications of latent fingerprints. 
 
2.0 
Scope 
 
This procedure applies to Fingerprint Assistants, Assistant Fingerprint Officers, and 
qualified Fingerprint Officers undertaking latent fingerprint examination and 
identification. 
 
 
3.0 
Rules governing New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section’s Identification 
 
Standards 
 
A pre-determined minimum number of friction ridge characteristics / details / features 
is NOT required to be present in two impressions in order to establish a positive 
identification.  
Friction ridge identification is established through the agreement of friction ridge 
formations, in sequence, having sufficient uniqueness to individualize. 
 
Nothing in this standard shall be seen to override the internal policies, procedures 
and quality controls of individual jurisdictions. 
 
4.0 
Key Terms 
 
Term 
Definition 
ACE-V 
The methodology used in examining and identifying 
fingerprints; where A = Analysis; C = Comparison; E = 
Evaluation; V = Verification. 
Complex examination 
May include, but not exclusively, identifications made 
predominantly on third-level detail, distortion, multiple 
impressions. 
Feature 
The structure and flow of friction ridges formed during 
biological development and to include characteristics, ridge 
edge shape and pores. A temporary or permanent influence, 
eg scars, crease, wart, etc, not being a component of the 
friction ridge development. 
Characteristic  
Galton points, bifurcation, ridge ending, dot. 
 
Levels of detail 
1 - pattern (classification), ridge flow/path; 2 - characteristics, 
ridge flow/path; 3 - supporting information, edgeoscopy, 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 2 
poreoscopy, creases, scars, incipient ridges, ridge flow/path. 
Friction ridge impression 
Fingerprint, palmprint, or footprint. 
 
Fingerprint 
In the context of this SOP, the term 'fingerprint' equates to 
'friction ridge impression' as defined.  
Latent fingerprint 
Generic term referring to the 'unknown' prints to also include 
patent and contaminant prints. 
Verification 
Independent undertaking of the ACE process to determine if 
you reach the same conclusion as the identifier. 
Exemplar 
Recorded print from known source. 
 
 
5.0 

Roles / Responsibilities 
 
Role 
Responsibility 
Fingerprint Assistant  
Analysis of latent fingerprints; 
Assistant Fingerprint Officer 
comparison of latent fingerprints to 
 
known fingerprints; and evaluation of 
 
result. Identification of latent fingerprints. 
 
 
 
Analysis of latent fingerprints; 
Fingerprint Officer 
comparison of latent fingerprints to 
Senior Fingerprint Officer 
known fingerprints; and evaluation of 
Principal Fingerprint Officer 
result. Identification of latent fingerprints. 
Verification of fingerprint identifications. 
 
6.0 
Procedure 
 
 
Procedure 
Action 
Responsibility 
 
 
The examiner/identifier: 
 
In comparing two friction ridge 
FPO / SFO / PFO/ 
6.1 
impressions, use the ACE-V 
methodology. 
Trainee 
Examine the latent fingerprint to 
 
determine the presence or lack of 
FPO / SFO / 
features that may permit 
PFO/Trainee 
6.2 ANALYSIS     
comparison; the quantity and 
quality thereof; and the presence 
or lack of factors that may render 
a comparison complex.  
Make a comparative assessment 
 
of the configurative, sequential, 
FPO / SFO / 
and spatial relationships of 
PFO/Trainee 
6.3 COMPARISON   identifying features between the 
two fingerprints. 
 
Initiate the Comparison process 
 
by referencing the features within 
6.4 
FPO / SFO / 
the latent print and searching for 
PFO/Trainee 
them in the exemplar print. 
Assess the level of agreement of 
identifying features between the 
6.5 
FPO / SFO / 
two fingerprints to establish 
EVALUATION 
PFO/Trainee 
whether (a) there is agreement, 
and (b) if the level of agreement 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 2 
constitutes a sufficient basis on 
which to base an opinion of 
identity. 
Ensure you have located a 
number of corresponding 
identifying features between the 
latent and exemplar prints which, 
in your opinion, could not have 
FPO / SFO / 
6.6 
originated from more than one 
PFO/Trainee 
source. That is, the configuration 
of features is specific and unique 
to the individual producing the 
print. 
Reach a conclusion as a result of 
the ACE process, which may be 
one of the following: 
- Identification - the latent 
fingerprint and the exemplar have 
originated from the same source.  
- Exclusion - the latent fingerprint 
and the exemplar have NOT 
6.7 
FPO / SFO / 
originated from the same source.  
 
PFO/Trainee 
- Inconclusive - there is insufficient 
recorded detail in either fingerprint 
(latent or exemplar) to come to 
either of the above conclusions. 
- Unsuitable – the quality or the 
clarity of information contained 
within the print is so low as to 
render the print valueless.  
Two qualified fingerprint officers 
undertake the ACE process 
independently to reach an 
evaluation/conclusion.  The 
verifiers must follow the same 
process as above to determine 
6.8 
whether they reach the same 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
VERIFICATION 
conclusion as the identifier. If they 
reach a different conclusion, refer 
to SOP # 4.  
SOP # 24 guides further on the 
verification process.  
 
Once the verification process has 
been completed, that is, two other 
qualified experts have reached the 
same conclusion as the identifier, 
then an identification has been 
6.9 
established and the notification of 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
identification can be released. 
(Note: This notification must NOT 
be released before the verification 
process is completed.) 
 
Having completed the ACE 
6.10 
process and formulated a 
FPO / SFO / 
DOCUMENTING 
hypothesis of identity, produce an 
PFO/Trainee 
IDENTIFICATIONS 
image of the latent fingerprint (and 
corresponding known exemplar), 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 2 
and mark on them corresponding 
features until you have reached 
the opinion of identification. These 
form your working notes. 
Use the latent fingerprint lift as the 
reference for marking the 
FPO / SFO / 
6.11 
identifying detail, unless a 
PFO/Trainee 
photograph is the method you 
used to preserve the fingerprint. 
Work from the latent fingerprint to 
the known fingerprint. 
In rare occasions where the 
FPO / SFO / 
6.12 
quality of the latent fingerprint 
PFO/Trainee 
exceeds that of the known 
fingerprint, this could occur 
interchangeably. 
Ensure you mark the correct type 
and location of identifying 
features. 
Where a feature appears to have 
been recorded differently between 
two fingerprints (eg ridge ending 
FPO / SFO / 
6.13 
on one, bifurcation on another), 
PFO/Trainee 
use all available information, 
including other sets of known 
fingerprints, to form an opinion as 
to which is correct, and 
appropriately mark both features. 
Ensure identification 
FPO / SFO / 
6.14 
characteristics are marked in the 
PFO/Trainee 
correct ridge sequence. 
Endorse the image of the latent 
fingerprint with the identified AFIS 
FPO / SFO / 
6.15 
number, lift or image number, 
PFO/Trainee 
finger identified, date and 
identifier's initials. 
Complete an identification file 
consisting of: 
- marked images 
- SOC documentation 
- SOCO notes, or photographs 
FPO / SFO / 
6.16 
- identified person's NIA Dossier 
PFO/Trainee 
Summary sheet 
- identification cover sheet 
- other relevant notes or 
documents 
Follow SOP # 24 for verification 
FPO / SFO / 
6.17 
procedures.  
PFO/Trainee 
 
The verifiers: 
 
Complete an independent 
comparison and evaluation 
process to determine if you reach 
6.18 
the same conclusion, or not, as 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
the identifier.  
Sign the documentation, and initial 
and date the image to show you 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 2 
have undertaken a verification 
process.  
Do not sign an identification 
unless you would be prepared to 
6.19 
give the evidence of identity 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
yourself, should you be required 
to do so. 
If there is a disagreement about 
sufficiency or identity, you may 
6.20 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
apply the Independent Evaluation 
Review SOP#4.  
If an identification has been made 
on Level 3 detail alone, the PFO 
6.21 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
should refer it to the FMG for 
consultation.  
 
The identifier: 
 
If the identification is of a Child or 
Young Person (18 or under), you 
must ascertain that the set of 
known fingerprints used to make 
FPO / SFO / 
6.22 
the identification is lawfully held. 
PFO/Trainee/M:NFPSC 
If in doubt or it is unclear, these 
should be referred to your PFO, 
who will seek guidance. 
 
6.0 
History of Change 
 
SOP / 
Description of SOP / Revision 
Date / Staff QID 
Revision No. 
 
 
19/02/2015 - FMG 

Clarified verification process and 
25/9/2018 – TVM910 
added additional step to 5.27. Added 
SOP # 2 as reference.  

Aligned with new SOP # 24 
2/8/2019 

Updated for SOP#4 name change 
27/8/2020 - M:NFPSC 
 
7.0 
Attachments 
nil 
 
8.0 
References 
New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Identification Standard: No scientific basis 
exists for requiring that a pre-determined minimum number of friction ridge 
characteristics / details / features must be present in two impressions in order to 
establish a positive identification. 
SOP # 4 Independent Evaluation Review  
SOP # 24 Verification 
Annexure  

NEW ZEALAND POLICE FINGERPRINT SECTION 
 
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE 
INDEPENDENT EVALUATION REVIEW: FINGERPRINT IDENTIFICATION   
S.O.P #: 4  
Procedure category: Quality Management 
Effective date: 01 - 01 - 2015   
Review date:  2021 
Process owner 
PFO Christchurch and PFO Hamilton. 
Fingerprint Management Group (Lead -  
Moderators 
Manager: National Fingerprint  Service 
Centre) 
 
1.0 
Purpose 
 
To provide a standard procedure to be followed when the verification of a 'fingerprint 
identification' cannot be confirmed between the staff conducting verification (technical 
review). 
 
2.0 
Scope 
 
This procedure applies to all operational fingerprint staff who conduct the analysis, 
comparison, evaluation and verification of crime scene fingerprint evidence to known 
exemplars of ink and LiveScan impressions.  
 
3.0 
Key Terms  
 
Term 
Definition 
Identifier 
The person who makes the identification. 
Verification 
The process of verifying the identification. 
PFO - Principal 
Officer in Charge, Crime Print Section - The Principal or 
Fingerprint Officer 
Acting Principal Fingerprint Officer. 
 
4.0 
Roles / Responsibilities 
 
Role 
Responsibility 
Senior / Fingerprint 
Informing the PFO that a fingerprint identification conflict 
Officer 
exists and submitting a referral to the Manager: National 
Principal Fingerprint 
Fingerprint Service Centre.  
Officer 
 
Manager: National 
Forwarding identifications referred for independent review 
Fingerprint Service 
to the PFO of another Crime Print Section. Ensuring that 
Centre  
the site to which jobs are referred is rotated. 
 
Manager: National Fingerprint Service Centre: Making 
any enquiry, and/or taking any advice or action necessary 
to satisfy himself/herself of the correct course of action to 
be taken if he/she is not a qualified Fingerprint Officer 
and is referred an identification as a result of the 
Resolution Policy protocols following a review, or 
receives a report or appeal from any member concerned 
about the outcome of any Resolution Policy process. 
 
Manager: National Fingerprint Service Centre: provides a 
final decision.  

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 4 
 
5.0 
Procedure 
 
Prerequisites 
 
These procedures are written on the basis that national procedures within the 
individual sites are adhered to. Refer to the Identification Process SOP. 
 
Review 
 
If at any point during the verification process there is disagreement as to the 
sufficiency or validity of the identification, then the file in its entirety is to be forwarded 
to the PFO.  
There are two defined and separate areas for review as given below. 
 
 
 
 
 
Scenarios 
 
Scenario 1: Both verifiers agree with the 
 
correctness of identification, that is, the identified 
 
person may have made the latent impression in 
 
question, but one verifier contends that there is 
 
insufficient detail in the latent fingerprint to allow 
any opinion of identity to be formed, and that 
he/she would not personally confirm the 
identification or give evidence of identity. 
 
Scenarios 2 and 3: One verifier disagrees with 
 
the correctness of the identification, contending 
 
that the identified person is not the source of the 
latent impression in question. 
 
Review scenarios and resolution procedure 
 
Procedure 
Action 
Responsibility 
 
Scenario 1: 
 
If either verifier disagrees that there is sufficient 
 
detail present to confirm an identification, that 
 
verifier should mark and include a copy of a 
 
crimcon endorsed 'insufficient detail'. 
 
 
 
Procedure 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
The verifier is to forward the identification to the 
PFO who will then take one of the following 
courses of action. 
 
5.1 
•  If the PFO, agrees with the sufficiency of 
detail, the PFO signs and endorses the 
paperwork accordingly including 'PFO' / 
'acting PFO'. The PFO then refers the 
identification to the Manager: National 
Fingerprint Service Centre for delegation for 
additional verification. 
•  If the PFO, agrees with the sufficiency of 
detail, AND one other has also agreed, the 
PFO signs and endorses the paperwork 
accordingly including 'PFO' / 'Acting PFO', 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 4 
and then releases the identification in 
accordance with policy. 
•  If two verifiers disagree with the sufficiency 
of detail, they ensure the identification is 
disallowed.   
 
 
Scenario 2: Correctness of Identity 
 
If either verifier does not reach the same 
 
evaluation as the identifier.  
 
 
 
Procedure 
 
The verifier (or identifier) is to refer the 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
identification immediately to the PFO, unless the 
verifier is the PFO, then Step 5.3 applies). The 
verifier is to make the notation 'no match' on an 
individually marked copy of a crimcon. 
5.2 
 
•  If the PFO agrees with the identification, they 
refer the identification to another site. 
•  if the PFO disagrees with the identification, 
they ensure the identification is disallowed. 
The identifier retains a right of appeal and 
the PFO refers the matter to the Manager: 
National Fingerprint Service Centre  
 
Scenario 3:  
 
If the verifier is the PFO and disagrees with the 
 
identification. 
 
 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
5.3 
Procedure 
The PFO is to refer the identification to the 
Manager: National Fingerprint Service Centre for 
actioning under this procedure. 
 
Referral for independent review 
 
Identifications for referral to other sites are to be 
 
directed from the Officer in Charge (PFO) of the 
 
site where the difference of opinion has arisen. 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
 
The PFO of the site where the query has arisen 
forwards the relevant job, complete with 
5.4 
paperwork, to the Manager: National Fingerprint 
Service Centre, PNHQ. 
 
The PFO includes a report to the Manager: 
National Fingerprint Service Centre briefly listing 
the circumstances of the difference of opinion. 
The Manager: National Fingerprint Service 
 
Centre forwards this file to another PFO for 
 
review. 
Manager: National 
5.5 
 
Forensic Services 
The Manager: National Fingerprint Service 
Centre rotates the site to which he/she sends 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 4 
files of this nature. 
The PFO or Acting PFO of the reviewing site is 
 
responsible for the identification review. 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
 
Under no circumstances are identifications for 
review to be sent or received by persons other 
5.6 
than the PFO or Acting PFO. 
 
Any person erroneously receiving such an 
identification for review must report the matter 
immediately to the PFO of his/her Section. 
 
Duties of Principal Fingerprint Officer or Senior Fingerprint Officer Conducting 
the Independent Review 
 
Where the identification has been referred as a question of sufficiency of detail: 
 
The appointed reviewer may not support the 
 
original evaluation of identification. In this case 
SFO / PFO 
5.7 
the identification is not verified and therefore not 
to be allowed. 
 
The reviewer may confirm the identification and 
5.8 
SFO / PFO 
signs as second verifier. 
The reviewer reports his/her findings to the 
 
5.9 
Manager: National Fingerprint Service Centre for 
SFO / PFO 
return to the originating Fingerprint Section. 
Following the review, and where the identification   
has been referred as a question of correct 
 
identity: 
 
 
 
•  If the reviewer is in agreement with the 
 
referring PFO, the Manager: National 
 
Fingerprint Service Centre returns the file to 
Manager: National 
Fingerprint Service 
the referring site for appropriate action. 
Centre 
 
•  If the reviewer is in disagreement with the 
5.10 
referring PFO, the Manager: National 
Fingerprint Service Centre takes such action 
as he/she deems necessary in the 
circumstances including seeking appropriate 
guidance / advice. 
 
•  The Manager: National Fingerprint Service 
Centre must be advised where court requests 
for jobs actioned under this Standard 
Operating Procedure are received. 
 
Appeal 
 

New Zealand Police Fingerprint Section Standard Operating Procedure # 4 
Any identifier/verifier having concerns about the 
 
outcome of the review process has the right to 
 
appeal or report such concerns to the Manager: 
FPO / SFO / PFO 
5.11 
National Fingerprint Service Centre, who must 
enquire into such concerns and take such action 
as is appropriate to the circumstances. 
 
 
6.0 
History of Change 
 
SOP / Revision No. 
Description of SOP / Revision 
Date / Staff QID 
 
 
19/02/2015 - FMG  

Updated to reflect SOP # 24 
2/8/2019 – 
M:NFPSC 

SOP name change. Flow Chart 
21/7/20 – FMG  
updated and hyperlink to Flow 
Chart restored.  
 
7.0 
Attachments 
Independent Evaluation Review Flow Chart  <click> 
 
8.0 
References 
Standard Operation Policy > Competency Standard > Identification Errors, Mistakes 
and Discrepancies 
 
Code of Conduct 
 
Independent Evaluation Review Flow Chart  <click> 
 
SOP # 24 Verification 
 
SOP # 2 – Latent Fingerprint Examination 
 
SOP # 23 Proficiency in the workplace – internal auditing  
 
 
 

NEW ZEALAND POLICE FINGERPRINT SECTION   
   
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE   
VERIFICATION      
S.O.P #: 24    
Procedure category: OPERATIONAL   
Effective date: 15 - 07 - 2019     
Review date:  2021   
Process owner   
Manager: National Fingerprint Service   
Centre 
 
Moderators   
Fingerprint Management Group  
  
  
1.0   
Purpose   
   
To provide the standard procedure for the process of verifying identifications of 
prints from scenes of crime, exhibits or as a result of any other work.  
   
 
2.0   
Scope   
   
This procedure applies to all qualified Fingerprint Officers.   
   
 
3.0   
Key Terms   
   
Term   
Definition   
Verification 
Independent undertaking of the ACE process to determine if 
you reach the same conclusion as the identifier.  
Qualified Fingerprint Officers 
Fingerprint Officers / Senior Fingerprint Officers / Principal 
Fingerprint Officers 
Prints 
Includes all palms, fingers, phalanges and feet either taken 
under Section 32 of the Police Act or for elimination 
purposes or volunteered or taken from deceased.  
Single impression 
Cases where only one print has been identified to a person. 
identification 
Blind Verification 
A completely independent undertaking of the ACE process 
by a second competent examiner who does not have 
information about the first examiners conclusions. Complex 
identification, the process will be semi-blind.  
   
 
 
4.0   

Roles / Responsibilities   
   

Role   
Responsibility   
Fingerprint Officer (FPO)  
Ensuring the process outlined in this SOP 
Senior Fingerprint Officer (SFO)   
is adhered to.   
Principal Fingerprint Officer (PFO) , 
   
including the Manager: National Fingerprint 
   
Service Centre 
 
PFO/SFO/FPO’s 
Maintaining proficiency in verification and 
completing 
the 
verification 
training 
pathway.  
PFO 
One of the verifiers and final ‘gatekeeper’ 
for  all  identifications  wherever  possible. 
PFO  may  delegate  other  staff  into  this 
role. 
   
 
5.0   
Procedure   
   
Procedure    Action   
Responsibility   
FPTSO   
A  print  contained on  a  lift  or  image  taken  from  a  crime  AFO   
scene  or  exhibit  is  evaluated  as  ‘identified’  to  a  set  of  FPO   
5.1   
prints  held  on  the  database,  or  otherwise  taken  under  SFO   
controlled conditions. 
PFO  
  
 
All ‘identified’ prints must be subjected to the 
FPO   
5.2 
verification procedures as directed under SOP #2 Latent 
SFO   
Fingerprint Examination  
PFO  
 
 
The purpose of the verification process is to undertake an  FPO   
SFO   
5.3 
independent  ACE  process  to  determine  if  the  same  PFO 
evaluation as the identifier can be reached.  
   
 
 
 
There are two routes that an ‘identified’ print may follow  FPO   
SFO   
5.4 
through the verification process and those routes are 
PFO  
defined as standard or complex identifications. 
 
 
 
 
Standard identifications are those with high levels of 
FPO   
quality and quantity comparison features in both the 
SFO   
PFO  
known and unknown prints. 
 
 
Complex identification prints may include, but are not 
5.5 
exclusively limited to: 
•  Poor quality print 
•  Low quantity of features  
•  Movement or distortion 
•  Overlaid or multiple impressions 
•  Poor contrast 

•  Poor photographic focus 
•  Single impression identifications 
•  All scenes we have attended 
 
These may apply to the unknown or known prints. 
 
Identifications made on 3rd level detail alone are also to 
follow SOP # 2  
 
 
 
The determination of which verification process is 
FPO   
applicable to an identification is made by the ‘identifier’.   SFO   
PFO  
 
 
This does not, as per standard practice, preclude a 
verifier from using unmarked copies of the prints to form 
their own evaluation for any case they are to verify. 
 
If a verifier in the simple pathway determines the 
identification should undertake the complex pathway, 
5.6 
the verifier should seek guidance from the PFO.  
If a verifier in the complex pathway determines the 
identification should undertake the simple pathway, the 
verifier shall take no action and leave the identification 
in the complex pathway.  
 
If the file contains a mix of complex and simple pathway 
verifications, it must go through the complex verification 
pathway, however, only the complex images need to 
follow the complex process.  
 
 
 
Standard identifications: 
 
 
FPTSO    
AFO   
5.7 
The marked copies of the working notes, crimcons (or 
FPO   
other) or ABIS screens, are forwarded to the first verifier  SFO   
for them to follow the process as defined in SOP # 2. 
PFO  
 
 
 
 
If the first verifier confirms the evaluation of the 
FPO   
SFO   
5.8 
identifier then the file is to be forwarded to the second 
PFO  
verifier to follow the same process. 
 
 
 
 
If  the  outcome  of  the  verification  process  confirms  the  FPO   
SFO   
5.9 
original  evaluation  then  an  identification  has  been  PFO  
established.  
   
 
 
 
FPO   
5.10 
The working notes, crimcons, ABIS print outs or other, 
SFO   
are to be signed and dated by both verifiers to confirm 
PFO  
 

they are verifying the identification, then SOP # 2 
applies. 
  
 
 
Complex identifications: 
FPO   
 
SFO   
PFO  
The original identification and all working notes related 
 
to that, and the main file is retained by the identifying 
5.11   
officer. 
All other contents of the file that are relevant to the 
identification, are to be forwarded for verification, 
including unmarked copies of the known and unknown 
prints, and are to be provided to both verifiers 
simultaneously.   
 
 
Each verifier will independently mark-up crimcons (or 
FPO   
other working notes), following the process as defined in  SFO   
5.12 
PFO  
SOP # 2, in order to demonstrate the evaluation that 
 
they reach. A semi-blind verification process is to be 
undertaken. 
 
Each verifiers will reach a conclusion as defined in SOP #  FPO   
SFO   
5.13   
2  and  each  pass  their  working  notes,  containing  their  PFO  
evaluations, back to the identifier on completion.   
 
 
 
The  identifier  will  review  both  outcomes  of  the  FPO   
SFO   
5.14 
verification  process  and  if  both  ‘confirm’  the  original  PFO  
evaluation then an identification has been established.  
   
 
The  identifier  will  collate  the  file  with  the  two  FPO   
independently  semi-blind  verifications  included  and  SFO   
PFO  
5.15 
check  for  data  accuracy  and  ID  memo  accuracy.  The   
identifier  may  record  in  FIMS  the  QID’s  of  the  two 
verifiers at that stage.  
 
 
All  independently  marked  crimcons,  ABIS  print  outs  or  FPO   
SFO   
5.16 
other working  notes,  are to  be  attached  to  the file  and  PFO  
notification of the identification may be released, as per     
SOP # 2  
 
 
If the outcome of the verification process from either of  FPO   
the  verifiers  under  either  the  standard  or  complex  SFO   
PFO  
5.17 
processes does not confirm the original evaluation then     
the  procedures  detailed  in  SOP  #  4,  Conflict  Resolution 
applies. 
 
 
 

6.0   
History of Change   
   
SOP / 
Description of SOP / Revision   
Date / Staff QID   
Revision 
No.   
   
   
02/07/19 – 
MHK981   

 
16/7/2019 - FMG 

To incorporate feedback  
26/7/19 - FMG 

To add clarification 
2/8/19 – M:NFPSC 

To incorporate FPTSO role and reflect name  19/8/20 - 
change to SOP#4 
M:NFPSC 
   
 
7.0   
Attachments   
   
   
8.0   
References   
SOP # 2 – Latent Fingerprint Examination and Identification. 
SOP # 4 – Independent Evaluation Review    



 
 
Fingerprint Officer Training Programme 
 
Intermediate 1 Oral Questions:  
Identification 2 
 
NOTE: The following sample questions serve as a guide for you only; they do not have to be asked 
exactly as they are written but serves as an idea as to the type of questions that could be asked from 
this module. If the trainee answers to the standard you consider appropriate for their level and 
demonstrated a good understanding of the module content that is all that is required. Remember even 
though these oral questions serve as a ‘gateway’ to a Knowledge test the process can also serve as 
learning exercise for them as they respond to questions that could be asked in moot or real court.  
Therefore it is important to provide feedback on how well they responded to / dealt with being asked 
questions on certain subjects. Consider how articulate, accurate and convincing they were in their 
responses. 

List four factors that could result in a fingerprint lift showing distortion. See Module, Topic 1 
Describe the concept of ‘tolerance’ with reference to observable differences between a latent print and 
a fingerprint sample. See Module, Topic 1 
When considering substrate distortion, describe three types of substrate that may influence the 
appearance of the latent print. Describe the features that are likely to be observed in the latent print for 
each type of substrate. See Module, Topic 1 
With reference to matrix distortion, what are some of the features that may be observed in wet prints? 
See Module, Topic 1 
With reference to matrix distortion, what are some of the features that may be observed with 
fingerprints made in blood or paint? See Module, Topic 1 
When considering development media, what are the characteristics or features associated with each 
of the four development media (powder, ninhydrin, iodine, and cyanoacrylate)? See Module, Topic 1 
Explain the difference between deposition pressure and pressure distortion. See Module, Topic 1 
List six observable ‘red flag’ indicators of distortion in a latent fingerprint. See Module, Topic 1 
Describe the concept of bias. See Module, Topic 2 
Describe cognitive bias and confirmation bias. See Module, Topic 2 
Describe how you can self-manage to try and avoid bias. See Module, Topic 2 
Fingerprint Officer Training Oral Questions / Intermediate 1 / Identification 2 / v April 2016 
 

Describe the difference between forgery and fabrication. See Module, Topic 3 
Describe the three methods of fabrication, and include a description of what clues might be observed 
in each case of the recovered fabricated latent. See Module, Topic 3 
Describe two methods of forgery and include a description of what clues might be observed in each 
case of the recovered forged latent. See Module, Topic 3 
 
Fingerprint Officer Training Oral Questions / Intermediate 1 / Identification 2 / v April 2016 
 

Document Outline