Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 127 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR CAREER DEVELOPMENT AND CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION
Subchapter M - LAW AND PUBLIC SERVICE
Section 127.632 - Criminal Investigation (One Credit), Adopted 2015
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 127.632
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements. This course is recommended for students in Grades 10-12. Recommended prerequisite: Principles of Law, Public Safety, Corrections, and Security. Students shall be awarded one credit for successful completion of this course.
(b) Introduction.
(1) Career and technical education
instruction provides content aligned with challenging academic standards and
relevant technical knowledge and skills for students to further their education
and succeed in current or emerging professions.
(2) The Law, Public Safety, Corrections, and
Security Career Cluster focuses on planning, managing, and providing legal
services, public safety, protective services, and homeland security, including
professional and technical support services.
(3) Criminal Investigation is a course that
introduces students to the profession of criminal investigations. Students will
understand basic functions of criminal investigations and procedures and will
learn how to investigate or follow up during investigations. Students will
learn terminology and investigative procedures related to criminal
investigation, crime scene processing, evidence collection, fingerprinting, and
courtroom presentation. Through case studies and simulated crime scenes,
students will collect and analyze evidence such as fingerprint analysis, bodily
fluids, hairs, fibers, shoe and tire impressions, bite marks, drugs, tool
marks, firearms and ammunition, blood spatter, digital evidence, and other
types of evidence.
(4) Students are
encouraged to participate in extended learning experiences such as career and
technical student organizations and other leadership or extracurricular
organizations.
(5) Statements that
contain the word "including" reference content that must be mastered, while
those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative
examples.
(c) Knowledge and skills.
(1) The student demonstrates
professional standards/employability skills as required by business and
industry. The student is expected to achieve business and industry
employability skills standards such as attendance, on-time arrival, meeting
deadlines, working toward personal/team goals every day, and ethical use of
technology.
(2) The student
explores criminal investigative procedures, investigations, and follow-up
according to the profession and its job functions. The student is expected to:
(A) analyze the field of criminal
investigations;
(B) compare and
contrast the characteristics of an effective investigator;
(C) examine preliminary investigations such
as initial response, point of arrival, priorities, emergency situations, and
protection of the crime scene;
(D)
research follow-up procedures for an investigation; and
(E) evaluate the effectiveness of
interrelationships with individuals involved in investigations such as police
officers, dispatchers, prosecutors, defense counsel, physicians, coroners,
medical examiners and forensic crime laboratories, citizens, witnesses,
victims, complainants, and media.
(3) The student uses proper equipment in
documenting the crime scene during field investigations. The student is
expected to:
(A) explain the use of field
notes;
(B) demonstrate an
understanding of when, what, where, and how to take notes;
(C) demonstrate how to effectively take notes
during an investigation;
(D)
distinguish between the advantages and disadvantages of photographs and video
at a crime scene and an investigation;
(E) plan how to use digital investigative
photography during an investigation at a crime scene;
(F) collect and organize a photographic
sequence of photographs of a crime scene such as injuries, tool marks,
fingerprints, tire impressions, footprints, bite marks, and other related
evidence;
(G) analyze, evaluate,
make inferences, and predict occurrences of events based on photographic
evidence; and
(H) formulate ideas
on admissibility of photographs in a court of law.
(4) The student uses critical-thinking and
problem-solving skills to create sketches for indoor and outdoor crime scenes.
The student is expected to:
(A) create a plan
and make observations before sketching a crime scene, both as an individual and
as a team;
(B) describe the
elements of a crime scene sketch such as measurements, compass directions,
scale of proportion, legend/key, and title;
(C) develop a crime scene sketch using
coordinates or measurements from fixed points;
(D) summarize the crime scene by taking notes
and recording details;
(E) analyze
and evaluate to assess the crime scene sketch; and
(F) research and describe the final sketch
such as finished scale drawing and computer assisted drawing.
(5) The student explores writing
effective reports for criminal investigations. The student is expected to:
(A) distinguish among organizing information,
structuring the narrative, and composing the content;
(B) identify the importance and uses of
reports;
(C) analyze common
problems with many investigative reports;
(D) research ways to record and dictate for
future report writing; and
(E)
demonstrate different ways to write a report such as in writing and
computerized.
(6) The
student recognizes legal searches and the Fourth Amendment as it applies to
searches. The student is expected to:
(A)
analyze the exclusionary rule, inevitable discovery exception, and good faith
exception;
(B) explain when an
officer needs a search warrant or consent to search during an
investigation;
(C) research Terry
v. Ohio and the legal ramifications it has on pat downs and frisks;
(D) evaluate a search incident to an
arrest;
(E) describe searching
during emergency situations and warrantless searches of vehicles; and
(F) demonstrate how to conduct an inventory
of a vehicle.
(7) The
student determines what search patterns should be used in exterior and interior
searches of crime scenes. The student is expected to:
(A) analyze the precedents that were
established by the Carrol v. United States, Chambers v. Florida, Chimel v.
California, Mapp v. Ohio, Terry v. Ohio, and Weeks v. United States
decisions;
(B) conduct a systematic
search of a simulated crime scene for physical evidence following crime scene
search patterns such as spiral, line, grid, and strip;
(C) demonstrate how to conduct building,
vehicle, suspect, and dead body searches; and
(D) explain how police canines are used to
conduct legal searches.
(8) The student recognizes the procedures of
evidence collection while maintaining the integrity of a crime scene. The
student is expected to:
(A) compare and
contrast the roles of crime scene investigators, detectives, and crime scene
investigators;
(B) demonstrate the
ability to work as a member of a team;
(C) discover and recognize evidence at a
simulated crime scene;
(D) apply
knowledge of the elements of criminal law that guide search and seizure of
persons, property, and evidence;
(E) outline the chain-of-custody procedure
for evidence discovered in a crime scene;
(F) demonstrate proper techniques for
collecting, marking, photographing, packaging, preserving, and transporting
physical evidence found at a crime scene;
(G) explain and demonstrate the use of video
and still photography to preserve a simulated crime scene; and
(H) analyze the use of evidence in a court of
law.
(9) The student
recognizes the methods to process and analyze trace evidence commonly found in
a crime scene. The student is expected to:
(A)
demonstrate how to process trace evidence such as glass, blood, paint, fibers,
and hair collected in a simulated crime scene;
(B) identify shoe and tire impressions from
sample impressions;
(C) determine
the direction of a projectile by examining glass fractures;
(D) analyze bite marks from crime scenes and
investigations;
(E) compare and
contrast the microscopic characteristics of the human hair and animal hair;
and
(F) differentiate between
natural and synthetic fibers.
(10) The student analyzes collected
fingerprints or impressions from a simulated crime scene. The student is
expected to:
(A) compare the three major
fingerprint patterns of arches, loops, and whorls and their respective
subclasses;
(B) identify minutiae
of fingerprints, including bifurcations, ending ridges, islands, dots, short
ridges, and enclosures;
(C)
distinguish among patent, plastic, and latent impressions;
(D) perform laboratory procedures for lifting
latent prints on porous and nonporous objects using chemicals such as iodine,
ninhydrin, silver nitrate, and cyanoacrylate resin;
(E) perform laboratory procedures for lifting
latent prints on nonporous objects using fingerprint powders such as black
powder and florescent powders;
(F)
explain the Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) and describe the
characteristics examined in AFIS; and
(G) compare impression evidence collected at
a simulated crime scene with the known impression.
(11) The student analyzes blood spatter at a
simulated crime scene. The student is expected to:
(A) analyze blood stain patterns based on
source, direction, and angle of trajectory; and
(B) explain the method of chemically
identifying and locating an invisible blood stain using reagents such as
luminol.
(12) The
student explores toxicology laboratory procedures in crime labs. The student is
expected to:
(A) analyze the absorption,
distribution, and elimination of alcohol through the human body;
(B) research the blood alcohol laboratory
procedures as they relate to blood alcohol concentration;
(C) explain the levels of tolerance and
impairment due to alcohol consumption; and
(D) explain the precautions necessary for
proper preservation of blood samples while at a crime scene.
(13) The student explores serology
laboratory procedures in criminal investigations. The student is expected to:
(A) explain crime laboratory procedures to
determine if a stain detected in a crime scene is blood; and
(B) research methodologies used to collect
and analyze other body fluids.
(14) The student identifies drugs found at a
simulated crime scene. The student is expected to:
(A) classify controlled substances using the
schedules under the Controlled Substances Act; and
(B) identify controlled substances.
(15) The student evaluates bullet
and tool mark impressions in a criminal investigation. The student is expected
to:
(A) explain the individual characteristics
of tool marks;
(B) describe the
mechanism of modern firearms;
(C)
recognize characteristics of bullet and cartridge cases;
(D) describe the composition of and method of
analysis for gunshot residue and primer residue; and
(E) recognize the type of information
available through the National Integrated Ballistics Information
Network.
(16) The
student calculates the time and cause of death in relationship to decomposition
of the human body. The student is expected to:
(A) explain the process and timeline of rigor
mortis and its role in calculating time of death;
(B) explain post mortem lividity and its
importance when processing a crime scene;
(C) determine time of death using entomology;
and
(D) determine time and cause of
death methodologies through case studies.
(17) The student understands how physical
evidence can provide a basis for questioning people about a crime and how
questioning can provide leads for finding physical evidence. The student is
expected to:
(A) explain the terms victim,
complainant, witness, and suspect as they apply to a criminal
investigation;
(B) demonstrate
interviewing and interrogating throughout an investigation;
(C) demonstrate effective questioning
techniques and positive communication skills;
(D) analyze the importance of reading the
Miranda Warnings during interviewing and interrogating; and
(E) describe the techniques used to interview
and question children and juveniles.
(18) The student develops a suspect profile
when there is not a suspect at the crime scene and a suspect is not apprehended
nearby. The student is expected to:
(A)
compile information provided by victims, witnesses, and other persons likely to
know about the crime or the suspect;
(B) examine physical evidence left at the
crime scene to determine a suspect profile;
(C) identify a suspect Modus Operandi at a
crime scene;
(D) analyze
computerized composite sketch applications such as Identi-Kit;
(E) describe techniques used to create photo
line ups, identification, and mug shots; and
(F) research audio, video, and electronic
surveillance.
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