This Standards Bulletin from the Organization of Scientific Area Committees (OSAC) for Forensic Science provides a monthly update on:
Bulletin Summary:
The OSAC Registry is a repository of high-quality, technically sound published and proposed standards for forensic science. These written documents define minimum requirements, best practices, standard protocols and other guidance to help ensure that the results of forensic analysis are reliable and reproducible.
The OSAC legacy process for Registry approval is used to review existing SDO published standards for technical quality and placement on the Registry. Please submit your comments by the deadline on whether the following SDO published standards should be included on the Registry.
Comment deadline March 2, 2021 by 11:59 p.m. ET:
Comment deadline April 2, 2021 by 11:59 p.m. ET:
The OSAC Registry approval process is used to review OSAC drafted standards (i.e., OSAC Proposed Standards) for technical quality and placement on the Registry. The following OSAC draft proposed standards are being considered for submission to an SDO. The final draft provided to the SDO will be available on the OSAC Registry as an “OSAC Proposed Standard.” OSAC welcomes comments on whether the current draft is suitable for release to the SDO as well as suggestions for improvements in content and wording. To be considered, comments must be placed in the OSAC Comment Form and sent to comments [at] nist.gov (comments[at]nist[dot]gov) by the deadline.
Comment deadline March 2, 2021 by 11:59 p.m. ET:
Comment deadline April 2, 2021 by 11:59 p.m. ET:
Visit the Standards Under Consideration webpage to see all of the standards being considered for the Registry and where they are in the approval process.
Is your organization implementing standards on the OSAC Registry?
Complete OSAC’s Laboratory Implementation Declaration Form and send it to mark.stolorow [at] nist.gov (mark[dot]stolorow[at]nist[dot]gov) to let us know.
Share your implementation experience and be featured in a future OSAC news post.
The following document has recently been published by ASTM and is currently being considered for the Registry:
*Comments on a re-circulation will only be accepted on revised sections of a document, comments made to text not revised from the original comment period will not be accepted.
For the ASB documents listed above, download the comment template and return it to asb [at] aafs.org (asb[at]aafs[dot]org) by the comment deadline.
The following documents are being initiated and are expected to result in new or revised standards.
ASB:
On February 5, 2021 a Project Initiation Notification System (PINS) was published on page 2 in the ANSI Standards Action. This will begin a 30-day period for public comment on the initiation of ASB’s work on the following documents:
BSR/ASB 159, Best Practice Recommendation for Guiding Principles for Scene Investigation. This document describes the minimum guiding principles for scene investigation. These best practices establish a framework for expected behavior and for decision-making. These principles include legal considerations, personnel
safety, scientific reliability and validity, preserving context, maintaining evidence integrity, transparency, and managing bias.
BSR/ASB 160, Best Practice Recommendation for Initial Response at Scenes by Law Enforcement. This best practice recommendation provides guidance for the initial response by law enforcement to scenes. The guidance includes arrival procedure, safety considerations, medical intervention, assessing the scene, scene containment and control, evidence preservation, turning the scene over to investigators, and document actions and observations. It does not include guidance for a complete scene investigation.
For more information or to submit comments, please contact the standards developer directly within 30 days of the publication of this PINS announcement.
ASB contact: Teresa Ambrosius (tambrosius [at] aafs.org (tambrosius[at]aafs[dot]org)).
Four professional forensic science organizations, all represented on the OSAC FSSB, have recently released statements declaring their support for the development and implementation of forensic science standards.
Read the statements from the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors (ASCLD), the Association of Forensic Quality Assurance Managers (AFQAM), the Society of Forensic Toxicologists (SOFT), and National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) on OSAC’s Registry Implementation webpage.
Our colleagues at The Center for Statistics and Applications in Forensic Evidence (CSAFE) will be hosting two webinars this spring. These webinars are free and open to the public, and researchers, collaborators and members of the broader forensic science and statistics communities are encouraged to attend.
For more information and to register for any of these webinars, visit https://forensicstats.org/events.
OSAC offers a variety of ways for members, affiliates and other experts in the forensic science community to participate in the standards advancement process. Click here to learn how you can help make an impact on the forensic science community through standards.