The grid search is another kind of search that can be conducted in larger, outdoor, crime scenes. Like the strip search, the investigator would weave in and out through the scene as described above. However, when finished, the investigator would conduct the same search again, just in the opposite direction of the scene (so one set of directions would be called north and south, while the second search would consist of east and west). This allows the search to be done from four points of direction instead of the two in the strip search (Young & Ortmeier, 2010). …show more content…
This is done again with the placards in place in each shot. It is important that the orientation of the photos, which is the next step in the process, is done correctly. “Each picture needed to have a directional in it, typically indicating where north is. This is important because then the photos can be accurately matched up to the diagrams that will be drawn of the scene” Before all of this occurs, the time, location, and date, are also re-recorded. The same general rules from general crime scene photography that were used after the initial evidence search are used here as well (Young & Ortmeier,