Hunt For Serial Arsonist Worksheet

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The NOVA activity, 'Hunt for the Serial Arsonist,' students use the 'At Your Fingertips' handout to determine which fingertip pattern is the dominant one in the class. They compare their results to the genereal population. Directed by Carl Charlson. With Stacy Keach, John Orr. Suspicious fires have broken out in Southern California and the fires have been set by a serial arsonist.

  1. Hunt For Serial Arsonist Worksheet Free
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Hunt for serial arsonist worksheet
Forensic Science‎ > ‎

Forensics Agenda Fall 2016


Final Exam
Thu 1/12

Project Presentations
Wed 1/4 - Mon 1/9

1. Project Presentations



Box Project

Week 16: 12/12 - 12/16
Fri

Box Project
Tue 12/13
2. Finished autopsy notes
4. Project discussion
-paint rules
-showed examples
HW: TV HW
Mon 12/12
2. Body farm video pt. 1


1. Time of death notes part 1

1. WU - 10 things to do in the Triangle

1. WU - 11 favorite songs
3. Wuornos video
HW: Test tomorrow. Bring notes and calculator. Get video form signed.
Tue 12/6
2. Dahmer video

1. Profiling activity - paired up with someone we didn't know to make guesses about that person's interests
3. Sociopath vs. Psychopath notes
HW: Get interim signed
Week 14: 11/28 - 12/2
Fri 12/2 - Early Release
Teacher note: add to materials: 2 bags, 1 cardboard.
Instruct students to get 2 new bags with 2nd piece of glass. Used nails go in glass box.
Tell them that the directions for 2nd piece of glass start on the 2nd page.
Thu 12/1
2. glass notes

Ballistics Lab
Teacher notes:
Projected pics of the crime scene, put bullets on cart in front of board.
Read the background to the class.
Groups of 4
1. Recorder
2. Converter Supervisor (conversions)
3. Caliper Expert
4. Balance Expert
The caliper expert picked up supplies, then trained those 8 students on how to use it
Then trained balance expert
Then told converter expert which portions of lab need conversions
Went over all other directions
Tue 11/29
2. Location of shooter worksheet

1. Cloud observation warm-up
3. Ballistics notes

Week 13: 11/21 - 11/25
Wed - Fri

1. Projectile challenge

1. Arson Test
3. Time to work on make-up work
Week 12: 11/14 - 11/18
Fri 11/18
2. Picdoku puzzle #9
Thu 11/17
2. Hunt for a Serial Arsonist
Wed 11/16
2. Arson video - CSI Season 1 E 12
Tue 11/15 - Sub, professional development
2. Pic a pix puzzle 11

1. Finished handwriting papers



Ransom Lab Day 3 - Media Center to write report
Wed 11/9

Ransom Lab Day 1 - analysis and outline
1. Shredder lab part 2 - cross shredder


Shredder Lab pt 1
Thu 11/3
2. Continued Food Drive Discussion
Wed 11/2
Check Lab Class Discussion (groups then whole group)

Halloween Lab
Document Book Work

Wed 10/26

1. Cursive practice

1. Criminal Minds - Zodiac S7E11

Fri 10/21 - EARLY RELEASE
1. Choice: puzzle, coloring page, clue, study hall

1. Career fair prep

Puzzles: Cryptogram #2 & Sudoku of choice

Bone Gender Lab - test grade
Mon 10/17

Fri 10/14
2. Bones notes

1. Blood unit test
3. Finished hoodwinked

Feedback on postermywall

Put lab summaries onto online posters via Postermywall.com
Mon Oct 10 - NO SCHOOL Hurricane Day
Week 6: Oct 3 - Oct 7
Fri 10/7
2. Blood Video - CSI Blood Drops
Thu 10/6

Blood Lab - day 1
Teacher note: Most groups finished around 1 hr mark
Tue 10/4
2. Lab discussion - who will take pics? How will they be shared?
4. Spatter notes
6. Punnett Square notes

1. Sticky Fingers Lab
3. Started Blood Notes
Week 5: Sept 26 - Sept 30
Fri 9/30 - EARLY RELEASE

1. Finished fiber lab
3. Zoom zoom zoom lab
Teacher note: Gave directions for both #2&#3 and let students work at their own pace.
Wed 9/28
2. Hair lab #2 - test grade
4. Fiber lab - test grade

1. Hair/fiber video
3. Hair lab #1

1. Intro to scopes (1 microscope per table)
2. Evidence lab (8 pieces of trace evidence) - 1/2 the class
Half way through, we switched. Anyone who needs additional time can finish tomorrow
Week 4: Sept 19 - Sept 23
1. DNA Test

Webquest on Romanovs - Teacher note: Must use desktops or laptops
HW: Bring notes tomorrow - test on DNA
Wed 9/21
1. Finished conclusion questions from yesterday's lab
3. Paternity video
5. Paternity mix-up at the lab activity

1. DNA Video clip
3. Read Sanderson Criminal Report
5. Modeled lab together, and then students finished lab
We will take a few minutes at the beginning of class tomorrow to finish the conclusion questions
Mon 9/19
2. CSI: Facts - 10 forensics, 5 police procedure
Week 3: Sept 12 - Sept 16
1. Test: Observation, sketching, and fingerprints
Thu 9/15 - Sub due to off campus training
2. Logic puzzle
HW: Project due tomorrow. Test 1 tomorrow. Bring your notes!
Wed 9/14
2. Balloon Lab 1 (no names, id with a symbol. Use mod sheet and switch balloons with another group)

1. New Seats
3. Fingerprinting notes
5. Perfect prints (10 minutes individually practicing, 5 minutes taking partner's prints)
6. Perfect prints MOD sheet - printed ourselves and identified each print (turned in)

1. Logic puzzle #13 - did together
2. Logic puzzle choice of #7 or #25 - turned in for grade
HW: Finish any work from today that you didn't turn in
Week 2: Sept 5 - Sept 9
1. Crime Scene to Scale project - Last day to work on project in class. Due next week.
Thursday 9/8

1. Crime Scene to Scale project
Tuesday 9/6
Teacher note - start with groups of 3 next semester
Mon 9/5 - NO SCHOOL LABOR DAY
Week 1: Aug 29 - Sept 2
1. WU - Candy differences
3. Crime Scene Sketching lab - groups of 4, 2 witnesses 2 detectives
4. Broke into groups, went over next week's project
HW: If you did not finish the sketch artist lab, finish it and bring it Tuesday!
Thu 9/1
2. Sketch artist notes
4. Sketch artist lab

1. Brain Games - 15 facts about memory or law enforcement

1. Team building - 2 Truths & 1 Lie
Teacher note: students write, then line up and number off in groups of 6, sit together and play
2. Finished observation and perception notes/exercises including memory lab
4. Ron Cotton case - mistaken witness identification
Mon 8/29
2. Intro video
HW: Get your syllabus & electronics contract signed.

Thomas A. Sweatt is a convicted serialarsonist. Arguably one of the most prolific arsonists in American history, Sweatt set over 300 fires in and around Washington, D.C., most of which occurred in 2003 and 2004. Following his arrest in April 2005, Sweatt admitted to setting fires for more than 30 years. He is currently serving his sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution in Terre Haute, Indiana.

Methods[edit]

When Thomas Sweatt saw an attractive man, he would follow him home, but instead of talking to the object of his affection, Sweatt would set fire to the man’s house or car. For more than 30 years, Sweatt set hundreds of fires in the metro Washington, DC area. Sweatt often tossed incendiary devices into police cars and then watched them burn. Each time he set a fire, he used a similar gadget: he would fill a milk jug with gasoline and plug the opening with a piece of clothing that served as a wick. The wick burned plastic for more than 20 minutes and after the fire consumed the container, gas fumes escaped and caught fire. In two different fires, elderly women were unable to escape and later died.

Arsons[edit]

Goals of a serial arsonist

Starting in 2003, Washington, D.C. and Prince George's County, Maryland became infested with a rash of arson fires. Sweatt was a fry cook and later the manager of a Washington fast food restaurant. He was linked to the fires through DNA evidence found at two scenes where a fingerprint, some skin cells on a wick and a single hair all matched his genetic profile. Sweatt was captured after a Marine Corps security camera identified his vehicle at the scene of a car fire by a barrack. Sweatt was obsessed with the Marines, both as self-identification and as part of a sexual fascination with men in uniform. He had been rejected by the United States Navy in the 1970s. In his guilty plea, Sweatt confessed to nearly 400 fires, several of them fatal.[1]

Arrest and charges[edit]

On Thursday, August 4, 2005, two fatal arson cases in the District of Columbia were closed with the arrest of 50-year-old Thomas Sweatt of the 500 block of Lebaum Street SE. He was formally charged in both cases with second degree murder while armed. The first offense occurred at approximately 4:05 am on Tuesday, February 5, 2002. Members of the Fifth District received a radio assignment for a house fire at 1208 Montello Avenue NE. Once on the scene, officers located 93-year-old Annie Brown of the Montello Avenue address. DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services personnel responded to the scene and transported the victim to the George Washington University Hospital, where she was admitted in serious condition. On February 14, 2002, Ms. Brown was pronounced dead. An autopsy performed by the DC Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined the cause of death to be smoke inhalation and the manner of death to be a homicide. The second incident occurred at approximately 4:30 am on June 5, 2003. DC Fire and EMS personnel responded to 2800 Evarts Street NE for the report of a house fire. Upon extinguishing the blaze on the first floor of the residence, firefighters located 85-year-old Lou Edna Jones of the Evarts Street address inside. She was transported to the Washington Hospital Center's MedSTAR Unit, where she was pronounced dead.[2]

The story of Sweatt and his capture was featured on truTV and Investigation Discovery Channels and as part of the Forensic Files series.[3] During the Forensic Files episode, it was said that Sweatt revealed the motive for his crimes to the police but, in exchange for his confession, he asked that the motive remained secret. The only things that were revealed in the episode was that he set the fires to silence 'voices' that he heard and to 'relieve stress'.

Hunt For Serial Arsonist Worksheet Free

Guilty plea and sentencing[edit]

Sweatt pleaded guilty before U.S. District Court Judge Deborah K. Chasanow to various counts: possession of destructive devices; destruction of buildings by fire resulting in personal injury; possession of destructive devices in furtherance of a crime of violence; and in the criminal information originally filed in the District of Columbia, first degree premeditated murder (felony murder) and second degree murder, resulting in a mandatory life sentence before the same judge on September 12, 2005.

Later deadly admission[edit]

On January 11, 1985, Sweatt finished his late shift as a cook at one of the Roy Rogers Restaurants and followed a male stranger in his 30s, whom he found attractive, to his house. Sweatt actually had a desire to meet him. Wanting to see the stranger again, Sweatt went home and returned to his house with a two-liter soda bottle filled with gasoline. From the front porch of the stranger's house, he poured the gasoline under the front door, and lit it. On the second floor of the house, the stranger (Roy Picott) and his wife, daughter and stepdaughter, were all sleeping. His son and stepson were asleep in the basement and were unharmed. The others suffered severe burn injuries and his wife, Bessie Mae Duncan was killed. Roy Picott also later died from his injuries on March 5, 1985. The official fire report at the time mistakenly blamed a dropped cigarette for the reason the fire started.

Hunt For Serial Arsonist Worksheet Pdf

Investigators closed 353 cases with Sweatt's confession.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^Dave Jamieson (2007-06-07). 'Letters From an Arsonist: Thomas Sweatt'. Washington City Paper. Retrieved 2010-05-26.
  2. ^D.C. Metropolitan Police Department (2005-08-05). 'Suspect Formally Charged in Two Arson Deaths'. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
  3. ^. Internet Movie Database. 20 October 2008 https://web.archive.org/web/20120406011002/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1630880/. Archived from the original on April 6, 2012. Retrieved 2010-08-04.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help); Missing or empty title= (help)
  4. ^Dave Jamieson (2007-06-08). 'Why Thomas Sweatt Set Washington on Fire Thomas Sweatt torched hundreds of houses and cars in the nation's capitol to satisfy his sexual fetishes and power fantasies. Serving life in prison, the arsonist tells his story'. Washington City Paper, alternet.org. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
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