| A | B |
| Father of fingerprinting | Francis Galton |
| Anthropometry | Bertillon Measurements |
| Forensic Anthropology | Identifying skeletal remains |
| Biology Unit | Unit that would analyze blood |
| DEA | Govt agency that processes drugs |
| Frye v US | Allowed for scientific admissibility |
| Pathologist | Determines cause of death |
| Leon Lattes | Blood typing of dried blood |
| Use of teeth to identify body | Forensic Odontologist |
| Edmond Locard | Always a transfer of materials when objects come in contact |
| Use insects to determine PMI | Forensic Entemologist |
| Lead Investigator | Responsible for determing how a crime scene should be processed |
| Chain of Custody | Continuity of possession |
| Triangulation | Method for measurment using two fixed points |
| Charred debris | Should always be stored in air tight container |
| Buccal Swab | cheek cells |
| Daubert Ruling | Judge is the "gate keeper" |
| Trace | Small amount of evidence |
| Exculpatory | Evidence that exonerates |
| Plastic Print | Fingerprint that is left in soft material |