The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

High hopes research will catch paedophile­s

Dundee work may identify world’s child abusers

- STEFAN MORKIS smorkis@thecourier.co.uk

One of the UK’s leading forensics experts hopes techniques she developed in Dundee could identify child abusers around the globe.

Dame Professor Sue Black, now pro vice-chancellor for engagement at Lancaster University, was asked to help prove a trainee pharmacist had filmed himself raping a young child in 2014.

Although officers investigat­ing believed Jeremy Oketch had committed the offence they did not have enough evidence to convince a jury beyond all reasonable doubt as his face was not shown on the video.

Detective Chief Inspector Colin Lark provided Prof Black, who was working at Dundee University’s Centre for Anatomy and Human Identifica­tion at the time, with photos taken of Oketch’s hands in custody to compare to those seen in the video. She was able to prove the hands belonged to the same person by comparing their distinguis­hing feature and is now hoping to create an online database that will help match images of offenders around the world.

Prof Black said: “All the comparison is done by eye. It’s a spot the difference-type comparison, that game you used to play as a child.

“I’ve got this image, I’ve got that image. What’s the same and what’s different?

“We will look for patterns of skin pigment. We will look for vein patterns, superficia­l vein patterns.

“And we will look for the pattern of creases of skin over the knuckles.”

Regarding the Oketch case, she said: “Every anatomical feature that we had found in our offender images, matched within our suspect images.”

Prof Black said this process could now be used to trace sex offenders across the globe, adding: “If we’re able to automate, then we would be able to use these algorithms that we’ll develop, to sift through the millions of images that are held on databases by police forces around the world.”

“We will look for patterns of skin pigment. We will look for vein patterns, superficia­l vein patterns

 ??  ?? Dame Professor Sue Black hopes to create an online database to help match offenders’ images.
Dame Professor Sue Black hopes to create an online database to help match offenders’ images.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom