New detergent washes away stains of murder: study


It always amazes me how the pop­u­lar media con­tin­ues to edu­cate crim­i­nals on how to “cover their tracks”.

Original arti­cle posted here.

Wed Nov 5, 2008 1:04pm EST

By Ben Harding

MADRID (Reuters) — A new gen­er­a­tion of clean­ing prod­ucts could help crim­i­nals get away with mur­der by mak­ing blood­stains invis­i­ble to foren­sic tests, Spanish researchers said Wednesday.

A team at the University of Valencia found that new wash­ing pow­ders and other chem­i­cals that gen­er­ate oxy­gen rather than use chlo­rine erase tell­tale traces of hemo­glo­bin, the pro­tein inside blood that trans­ports oxy­gen around the body.

Police often rely on blood-splattered cloth­ing to link a mur­derer to a crime. Even after 10 washes, foren­sic experts have been able, up to now, to iden­tify blood using a cock­tail of chem­i­cals to unmask the stains.

But new deter­gents like Reckitt Benckiser’s ‘Vanish’ that con­tain the active ingre­di­ent sodium car­bon­ate per­ox­y­hy­drate pro­duce a fizz of oxy­gen bub­bles that degrade blood even though the stain may remain vis­i­ble to the naked eye, accord­ing to the study pub­lished in the German jour­nal Naturwissenschaften and reported in the New Scientist.

Fernando Verdu, a foren­sic sci­en­tist at the University of Valencia, said his three-member team would next inves­ti­gate if the new oxygen-producing chem­i­cals also destroyed DNA, which can pro­vide cru­cial evi­dence in mur­der investigations.

“The major­ity of crim­i­nals are not that smart. They don’t do things as you expect them to and read this kind of news. It is very sim­ple to com­mit a crime, the dif­fi­cult part is to not get caught,” said Verdu.

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