Pubdate: Mon, 16 Feb 2009 Source: Alton Telegraph, The (IL) Copyright: 2009 The Telegraph Contact: http://www.thetelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1207 Author: LINDA N. WELLER REALITY SHOW: CITIZENS POLICE ACADEMY LETS PUBLIC SEE HOW COPS WORK ALTON - Blood splatters, plaster tire impressions, fingerprint lifts, a marijuana leaf and pipes with which to smoke illegal drugs all were real at last week's Citizens Police Academy. Detectives from the Alton Police Department also were real - unlike slick actors who dress up, snatch that key piece of evidence and solve the murder case in less than an hour. In reality, police explained it can take hours or days to collect evidence, and sometimes months to obtain results from a state crime lab. It seemed straight off of television, but it "really" wasn't. "This job can be dirty," said evidence officer Pfc. Michael Metzler. "That's why I don't wear $1,000 suits like they do on TV." Capt. Scott Waldrup and Pfc. James Hunter also said a television error is when investigators pick up a beer bottle or soda can on which there might be fingerprints and drop it into a plastic bag. Plastic holds in moisture, so a print would get smeared. "Paper bags breathe; they won't destroy the prints," Hunter said. "TV uses plastic bags. We would never use plastic; they will destroy the prints. And the lab doesn't hand you the 'bad guy' like on television." The same holds true for blood or cannabis plants, said detective William Brantley. If those substances are placed in a plastic bag, they will mildew and decompose. Throughout the evening, both police and many of the 80 attendees at the academy's second session compared what detectives demonstrated - and patiently explained - with what they see on crime scene investigation shows. "Seventy-five percent of the tools we use, you can put your hands on (that night)," said Lt. David Hayes, chief of detectives. "I watch all the cop shows, 'CSI' and 'Numbers.' I love 'whodunits,'" said Alix Andrews, 49, of Alton. "This interaction is very interesting. The officers are doing a real good job of explaining things." Andrews said she was not disappointed that real-life investigations aren't the same as those on television. Police Explorer Crystal Stiritz, 15, of Alton, said the event makes her even more interested in pursuing forensics as a career. Police Chief Chris Sullivan said such shows are informative for the public, but the event "is to inform them better." He was working at a microscope station where people examined hairs. Attendee Floy Shaw, 64, of Alton said she was pleased with her experience at the academy. "I've been here all my life and never interacted one-on-one with them or see what they do," Shaw said. "People are so quick to criticize police. They don't know the time (police) put into this. It was very interesting. This was different - to see so many police here and to see what they are doing and have them explain it. I never knew about fingerprinting. I see it on TV, but it is not the same." The session, in the gymnasium of East Elementary School, 1035 Washington Ave., featured a trail of tables and one dark room where Alton detectives and other police officers showed how they collect and process evidence. At one table, drug unit detectives showed how they conduct a Valtox field test for the presence of drugs. They also had a three-part display showing photos of various illegal drugs, from amphetamines to heroin and rock and powder cocaine. There also was a small, green, laminated cannabis leaf that attracted the attention of an older couple. "That's a marijuana leaf! I have never seen one before," the woman commented. Sgt. Gary Cranmer and Pfc. Rory Rathgeb, who is on loan to the FBI's Safe Streets Task Force, also showed a colorful collection of glass "bongs" and smaller pipes used to smoke cannabis or hashish. There also were some small, clear tubes containing fake roses used for smoking crack cocaine. Cranmer told the group at that station that drugs remain a problem in Alton, and he is interested in arresting the low-to mid-level dealers, because those are the ones lowering quality of life in the city. "I am working with 45 informants," he said. "Every day I come to work, I make a drug 'buy.'" He said methamphetamine manufacturing is declining in the region, because dealers are buying the drug imported from Mexican "cookers." At the next table, Waldrup and Hunter showed how detectives drop Super Glue onto an accelerant in a small metal dish that they then place into a plastic bin with objects that may have fingerprints. The chemical reaction sets off a glue fog that coats and preserves the prints for "dusting" later. The dusting station was on the gym stage. Detective Sgt. Jake Simmons and his crew showed curious visitors how to dust for prints, using a fluffy nylon brush or magnetic applicator. People would apply either a black graphite or magnetic filament-volcanic ash dust on a CD case to reveal fingerprints, apply clear tape, pull it up and place it on white cardboard to reveal the prints. Brantley and Lt. Mike McNamara told how detectives use measuring tools and trigonometry to determine the angle at which someone was struck. They also demonstrated how to swab suspected wet or dried blood and how to determine whether a substance actually is blood - but not necessarily from a human. Brantley applied rubbing alcohol, then phenolphthalein and hydrogen peroxide on the cotton swab with the suspected blood. If it is blood, the swab turns pink. "I've heard of that; I watch CSI," Andrews said. In a dark room, officer Dustin Christner showed how orange fluorescent powder brings out the location of fingerprints, bodily fluids and fire accelerants when he turns on a blue light, enhanced by orange goggles. He also used Luminol to detect blood. Session 1 covered information about the department's operations and services, climaxed by dramatic drills by two of the department's energetic canines, Ezop and Bach. The third and final session Monday, which is free and still open to the public, will cover police defensive tactics, use of force, handcuffing, non-lethal weapons such as pepper spray and pepper balls, and two people planning to get Tasered. It will run from 6 to 9 p.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin