National Legal Aid & Defender Association Join NLADA
  About NLADA  | Civil Resources  | Defender Resources  | Training and Conferences  | Communication Resources  | Member Services  | Job Opportunities  | NLADA Insurance Program
 
American Council of Chief Defenders
Sections
Defending Immigrants Partnership
E-Library
Forensics Library
Funding/Resources
Government Relations
National Alliance of Sentencing Advocates and Mitigation Specialists
National Defender Leadership Institute
NIDC
Practitioner's Corner

Public Information
Public Opinion
Right to Counsel Resource Kit
Standards
Technology
Forensics Library
Printer Friendly Page

 
Arson

Fire examiners have been opining about the cause of fires for years. Often they are employed primarily by insurance companies.

How can they tell if a fire was caused by arson? For years, fire investigators were taught to look for key "indicators." Crazed glass, melted copper wiring, and melted steel were all said to indicate an unusually hot fire, consistent with the use of accelerants. Uneven burn patterns were said to reflect multiple ignition points, another indicator of arson. This conventional wisdom of fire investigation appears in textbooks and provided a "scientific" basis for expert testimony in thousands of cases.

More recent research suggests that much of the conventional wisdom of fire investigators is simply wrong. An analysis of 50 homes burned the 1991 Oakland Hills fire (a wild fire) showed a high frequency of traditional "arson indicators" where arson clearly had not occurred (Lentini, 1992). Fire investigators failed to realized the error in their conventional wisdom because there have been few careful, empirical studies of the results of "naturally occurring" fires. All of which raises serious questions about which opinions (if any) of fire investigators should be treated as "scientific knowledge."

  Submit a Document
 
  • Forensics Library
    • Arson & Explosives Arson & Explosives
      • Arson Research Arson Research
        Document TWGFEX Training Guidelines for Fire Debris Analysts Promulgated 8/2000. Some useful references to research, websites, and outline of scope of analysts' knowledge
        [ Submitter: D.C. PDS  |  more info ]
        Document Bibliography of Research Articles This 13 page bibliography assembled by TWGFEX covers contamination issues and the limits of fire analysis.
        [ Submitter: D.C. PDS  |  more info ]
        Document Unconventional Wisdom: The Lessons of Oakland Analysis of 50 homes burned the 1991 Oakland Hills fire (a wild fire) showed a high frequency of traditional "arson indicators" where arson clearly had not occurred. Lentini and colleagues suggest that fire investigators have not realized the error ...
        [ Submitter: Bill Thompson  |  more info/full abstract ]
        Document Arson Myths Fuel Errors: Debunked theories plague fire probes, lead to wron Article Maurice Possley in Chicago Tribune, October 18, 2004. 10pg.
        [ Submitter: D.C. PDS  |  more info ]
        Document Fire and Arson Scene Evidence: A Guide for Public Safety Personnel; NCJ Publication 181584, June 2000. DOJ Office of Justice Programs published these best practices recommended by the Technical Working Froup on Fire/Arson Scene Investigation.
        [ Submitter: D.C. PDS  |  more info ]
        Document TWGFEX Survey Presentation of results from TWGFEX scene survey. Survey covered procedure, member backgrounds, awareness of and adherence to established standards and much more.
        [ Submitter: PDSDC  |  more info ]
        Document Arson Questionnaire Survey of Fire/Explosion Scene Investigators. Survey covers education, training, investigative standards and protocols.
        [ Submitter: PDSDC  |  more info ]
        Document TWGFEX Members List of Members of TWGFEX (Technical Working group for Fire and Explosions)
        [ Submitter: PDSDC  |  more info ]
        Document Arson and Explosion Overview Lecture notes that give a brief overview of combustion principles, offer some links, and have a bibliography.
        [ Submitter: DC PDS  |  more info ]
        Document National Center for Forensic Science NIJ funded body that does training and research into DNA, Explosives, Arson, and Digital evidence. Extensive links, training schedule, topical overviews, topical bibliographies
        [ Submitter: DC PDS  |  more info ]