Leicester Mercury

Fresh hope for unsolved cases with breakthrou­gh

CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES CAN BE FOUND IN PRINTS

- By STAFF REPORTER

NEW light could be shed on cold crime cases after county scientists’ breakthrou­gh in forensic fingerprin­ting research.

A groundbrea­king method capable of detecting drug substances from fingerprin­ts lifted from crime scenes could provide fresh insights, experts from Loughborou­gh University have demonstrat­ed.

They have shown that drug residue – namely the fast-acting sleeping pill Zolpidem, which has been linked to drug-facilitate­d sexual assault and drink spiking – can be detected on gel-lifted fingerprin­ts.

However, they believe the method could also be applied to gun residues, paints and dyes.

Dr Jim Reynolds and Dr Ayoung Kim say the breakthrou­gh could offer fresh hope for cold cases and unsolved crimes as forensic gel lifters – which transfer prints onto a gelatine surface – are used globally by scenes of crimes officers to preserve and visualise fingerprin­ts.

“This is the first time that analysis of gel-lifted prints for a drug substance has been accomplish­ed and shows that lifted prints and other forensic marks can be interrogat­ed for useful informatio­n,” said Dr Reynolds. “Since gel-lifted prints and marks can be stored for many years, the technique could be of real use in cold cases where additional informatio­n may prove useful to either link or exonerate a suspect to the investigat­ion.

“Working with police forces and applying the method to cold case samples could help bring criminals to justice who may have thought they have got away with it.”

A number of tests exist which can detect drugs directly from fingerprin­ts, but these face limitation­s. They can be destructiv­e to the fingerprin­t, degrade drug residues, and are affected by environmen­tal interferen­ces.

It has long been speculated that gel-lifted prints contain valuable chemical informatio­n and could offer more accurate drug detection. However, traditiona­l techniques used to analyse the chemicals present in a sample have previously not been suitable for gel lifters. This is because they detect all chemicals present, including those that make up the gel, making it difficult to identify specific substances.

The method used by Dr Reynolds and Dr Kim, called sfPESI-MS, overcomes this issue using a rapid separation mechanism that distinguis­hes the drug substance from the background of the gel. The process involves sampling the chemicals from the gel lifters into tiny liquid droplets. The chemicals extracted are then ionized, which means they gain or lose electric charge depending on their chemical properties.

The drug substance chemicals are more surface active than the chemicals originatin­g from the gel, which enables them to be separated from the mixture. This separation enables the direct detection of a drug substance using mass spectromet­ry, a technique that identifies chemicals by measuring their molecular weight.

Published in a paper in the Drug Testing and Analysis journal, the researcher­s have successful­ly tested the technique using Zolpidem-laced fingerprin­ts lifted from glass, metal, and paper surfaces in a lab setting. They now hope to work with police forces to analyse stored gel-lifted prints and use the method to identify other substances.

Dr Reynolds said: “Zolpidem was the focus of our research, but the method could just as easily be applied to other drug substances a person may have been handling and could be applied to other chemicals such as explosives, gunshot residues, paints, and dyes.

“By linking chemical informatio­n to the fingerprin­t, we can identify the individual and link to the handling of an illicit substance which may prove useful in a prosecutio­n. This could be useful to detect individual­s who have been spiking drinks, for example, if the drug they are using gets onto their fingertips, then they will leave evidence at the scene.”

Dr Kim, who is the first author of the paper and completed the research as part of her PhD at Loughborou­gh, said: “We would like to apply our method to real samples from criminal investigat­ions, it would be good to know my PhD research has helped bring criminals to justice.”

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