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 selected published and proposed standards for forensic science. These written documents contain minimum requirements, best practices, standard protocols, terminology, or other information to promote valid, reliable, and reproducible forensic results.
The standards on the OSAC Registry have undergone a technical and quality review process that actively encourages feedback from forensic science practitioners, research scientists, human factors experts, statisticians, legal experts and the public.
The OSAC Registry approval process for published standards is used to review existing SDO published standards for technical quality and placement on the Registry. Please submit your comments by 11:59 p.m. ET on December 4, 2023, on whether the following SDO published standards should be included on the Registry:
The OSAC Registry approval process for OSAC Proposed Standards is used to review OSAC drafted standards for technical quality and placement on the Registry. The following draft OSAC 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 drafts are 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 11:59 p.m. ET on December 4, 2023.
Is your organization implementing standards on the OSAC Registry?
Complete OSAC’s Registry Implementation Declaration Form found on the OSAC website and send it to forensics [at] nist.gov (forensics[at]nist[dot]gov) to let us know. Your organization will subsequently be awarded an OSAC Registry Implementer Certificate.
Interested in learning more about implementation? Check out OSAC’s Implementation Recognition Factsheet.
ASTM recently published the following standards:
Stakeholders from the forensic science community are encouraged to provide input on standards as they are being developed at SDOs. For SDO published standards going through the OSAC Registry approval process, the public will have an opportunity to comment on a standard during the SDO’s public comment period but will not be given a second opportunity to comment through OSAC on whether the resulting standard should be placed on the Registry.
Visit OSAC’s Standards Open for Comment webpage to see the full list of forensic science standards open for comment at SDOs and how to submit your feedback. This page consolidates and tracks comment deadlines for you and will be updated on a weekly basis. It currently includes:
The OSAC Lexicon was recently refreshed to help bring better consistency and understanding in the way terms are used by the various forensic science disciplines. The OSAC Lexicon now includes:
Read more about the refreshed OSAC Lexicon and take a moment to tour it on the OSAC Lexicon website!
The OSAC Forensic Science Standards Board (FSSB) will have a public feedback session available during its upcoming quarterly meeting. The purpose for this public session is to provide stakeholders with an opportunity to share feedback with the FSSB related to agenda items or matters within the FSSB’s authority. The FSSB will consider all feedback from the public, and remarks can be made by the submitter or by the OSAC Program Office on behalf of the submitter.
The public session will take place virtually on Thursday, December 14, 2023. If you wish to share feedback with the FSSB, please complete this form by December 1, 2023.
The schedules and agendas for upcoming FSSB meetings can be found on the FSSB Meetings webpage.
The TWG3D2T is soliciting public comments on their draft “Best practice guide for the calibration and quality control of 3D surface topography measurement instruments used for Virtual Comparison Microscopy (VCM) of toolmarks.” Please visit www.twg3d2t.org to download the document and public comment form if you’re interested. The public comment period will start on November 1, 2023, and end on November 30, 2023. For more information or help with accessing the files, please email alan.zheng [at] nist.gov (alan[dot]zheng[at]nist[dot]gov).
Please check out the newly updated version of the Trace Evidence Collection App, which is available for free download on both Android and iOS platforms! The Trace Evidence Collection App is intended for use by crime scene investigators to have access to a quick and easy reference for the detection, recognition, collection, and packaging of commonly encountered types of trace evidence at various types of crime scenes. The newest version of the application (released August 2023) contains 19 demonstration videos covering topics from making a druggist fold to collecting primer GSR from hands to packaging questioned glass, and everything in between.
This project was a collaboration between the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Organization of Scientific Area Committees (OSAC) for Forensic Science), the National Institute of Justice Forensic Technology Center of Excellence (NIJ FTCoE), and independent non-profit research institute RTI International. The app contains information on Types of Crime Scenes (e.g., Arson, Hit & Run) and Types of Trace Evidence (e.g., Fire Debris, Glass). Each Type of Crime Scene section contains an overview, a list of relevant evidence types, and checklists for evidence collection from scene-specific sources (e.g., from victim, from scene/vehicle). Each Type of Trace Evidence section contains an overview, information about detection, recognition, collection, and packaging, as well as demonstration videos. If you have any questions or comments, please contact Daniel Mabel (he/him/his), OSAC Trace Materials Subcommittee Outreach Task Group Chair, at daniel.e.mabel.civ [at] army.mil (daniel[dot]e[dot]mabel[dot]civ[at]army[dot]mil).
The full collection of the mobile app’s demonstration videos are also available for download from the NIST video playlist .
https://forensiccoe.org/trace-evidence-collection-mobile-app/
As part of a cooperative agreement with NIST, the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS) is developing training, tools, and resources to enhance implementation efforts and broaden awareness of forensic science standards among communities of interest.