A NEW BREED OF
LOCKSMITH
James H. Glazier, CML
“From a drop of water, the logician could
infer the possibility of an Atlantic or a Niagara without having seen or heard
of one or the other. So all life is a great
chain, the nature of which is known whenever we are shown a single link of
it. Like all other arts, the Science of
Deduction and Analysis is one which can only be acquired through long and
patient study, nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the
highest possible perfection in it.”
Sherlock
Holmes, In Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Book of Life”.
Not
too long ago investigators had to find the smoking gun to convict a
suspect. Now all they need is the
smoke.
On December 16, 1989, federal court judge Robert Vance
opened a small box that had been mailed to his home in Mountain Brook,
Alabama. When he lifted the lid the box
exploded, killing him instantly and seriously wounding his wife. Two days later, Savannah, Georgia, attorney
and alderman Robert Robinson died in his office when a second package bomb
exploded as he opened it. That same day
a third bomb was discovered during a routine screening of packages mailed to
judges in the Atlanta federal courthouse.
A fourth package bomb was delivered to a female employee of the NAACP
legal counsel in Jacksonville, Florida.
She left it on her desk and went to run some errands, intending to open
it when she returned later that afternoon.
But her car broke down as she drove back to the office and had to be
towed, so she went home. On the news
that night she heard of the explosion in Savannah and realized that the package
on her desk was similar to the one that killed Robert Robinson. The next morning she called the Jacksonville
bomb squad. And she lived to tell about
this!
The
crimes above were termed as the VANPAC investigation and eventually became one
of the most massive investigations in FBI history, a year long investigation
involving hundreds of agents and law enforcement personnel. More than six thousand people were
interviewed and millions of documents examined. The case was finally solved on the third floor of the FBI
Building in Washington, DC, in the FBI Crime Laboratory.
Investigators
used to come upon a crime scene and turn on the brightest lights they could
find at varying angles, all to “shed some light on the scene” and locate
possible evidence. No more! Now specialists come into the crime scene
fitted with lasers and ultraviolet light and infrared light, conduct chemical tests
to gather minute pieces of evidence with special vacuums and other specialized
equipment to try to get a glimpse of the invisible world which may hold a very
crucial piece of evidence. Castings are
made of tool marks, paint scrapings are taken and sealed in containers as
possible future evidence.
No
one knows how many hundreds of years ago the principles of science and
technology were first applied to crime solving. But the use of science to develop evidence and solve crimes,
which is traditionally known by the rather prosaic term “forensic science”, has
evolved slowly and with much struggle.
Many years ago in Chicago, Illinois, a young Chicago Police Officer by
the name of Art Paholke, also a locksmith and 44th member of ALOA,
saw the need for “forensic locksmithing”.
He retired some years ago as the Chief Forensic Comparative Tool Mark
Examiner for the Chicago Police Crime Lab.
Art Paholke is considered to be the “father” of “forensic or
investigative locksmithing”. During his
career Art wrote many articles about the value of examining and comparing marks
on locks and locking devices.
Hans
Meljhede CML, a locksmith and “forensic examiner” in Denmark has contributed
much to this field of locksmithing through numerous “Forensic Locksmithing”
classes at the ALOA Convention each year.
Don Shiles RL, a locksmith and Federal Investigator developed a class
known as “Investigative Locksmithing” which has been given at ALOA each year as
well as taught throughout the United States and Canada by Don and Jim Glazier,
a Certified Master Locksmith and President and founder of the International
Association of Investigative Locksmiths.
As a result of this new interest in the locksmithing field, a new
generation of locksmith is evolving, the “Investigative/Forensic locksmith”.
The
locksmith is often the first person called after the police in a burglary and
many times is first to arrive at the scene or often arrives while the police
are still at the scene. Unfortunately,
most police officers are unfamiliar with locks and locking devices and have
little if any training in “crime scene searches”. Unless this is a “major” case, the officer will make a report,
which may or may not be referred to an investigator for further investigation. With the number of burglaries today, many
never reach the desk of a trained investigator, or if they do, it may be too
late to secure valuable evidence. This
is where the locksmith can be a great assistance to law enforcement and the
public in general. Our commitment is to
security, both before and after the fact, is it not? If this is the case then should we not be prepared to at least
suggest that the cylinder, which was wrenched from the aluminum stile door, be
kept as evidence by the police? The
marks left by the implement can be compared later should a suspect be
apprehended with the tool or implement.
The same is true with paint scrapings or tool marks on a door jam.
Today it is possible to examine the pins from a cylinder
and ascertain if it has been picked, and in some cases the style pick used to
neutralize this cylinder. Many locks
can be “by-passed” with other tools that are on the market today. All of these tools leave their identifying
mark. These can be viewed with a
30-power microscope available from Radio Shack for less than $15.00. It has even been suggested that a process
that has been called “Key Pathway Analysis” can determine the last key used to
operate a lock. This process has never
been subjected to any peer review and all evidence at this time tends to discredit
such assertions. Several very intense
studies have been conducted that show this is not possible and until such time
as the individuals who are promoting this theory have subjected their claims to
peer review, one would be foolish to accept such as scientific evidence.
Lawyers
and Insurance Companies are constantly looking for those with expertise who can
testify to various matters involving locks and access control devices. As a result a need was seen for an
organization which could bring together those locksmiths, law enforcement
officers, insurance investigators and others who could offer a valuable service
to law enforcement, the criminal justice system, and the public in
general. As a result, The International
Association of Investigative Locksmiths, Inc. was born in March of 1998 to fill
this void in our industry. I.A.I.L.
will be certifying locksmiths and others as “Certified Forensic Locksmiths” as
a part of their charter.
Membership
is open to any locksmith, law enforcement officer, insurance investigator or
federal investigator who is interested in this most interesting and lucrative
field. You can obtain further
information from their website at www.iail.org
or write to them at I.A.I.L. P.O. Box 144, Mt. Airy, and MD 21771 requesting an
application and brochure on membership.
You may find this to be a very lucrative addition to your locksmithing
professionalism.
Note:
Jim is available to provide assistance to Intelnet members regarding anything
you want to know about locks, locksmithing, and locksmith forensics. He is a Distribution List member of
Intelnet.