I have attached the rubric and the mock crime scene scenario. I WILL add the pic

Humanities

By Robert C.

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I have attached the rubric and the mock crime scene scenario. I WILL add the pictures later. I just need help with creating the PowerPoint and following the rubric. DO NOT CHANGE ANYTHING. Here are the Unit Outcomes that will help add more to the PowerPoint. Please keep in mind that there needs to be an overview of the whole case and a description on every slide, as well as a narrative in the notes portion of the PowerPoint, including citations if needed. The overview portion requires an overview as well as a narrative in the notes portion. Below is useful information you will need:
OVERVIEW AND OUTCOMES
DEATH INVESTIGATIONS
In this unit, you will take an in-depth look at homicide investigation, including cases of murder, suicide, and accidental death. The homicide crime scene, examination of the body, and examination of the outdoor/indoor crime scene are all covered. Of all major crimes, homicide investigation requires the greatest effort on the part of the police. The finding of a body is the starting point and initial focus of the death investigation. Once the investigation has begun, the investigator should find and collect any evidence that may be used in the case.
After completing this unit, you should be able to:
Determine cause of death.
Explain the time of death.
Explain the examination of the body at the crime scene.
Examine remains of clothing and other objects in homicide investigations.
Analyze serial homicides.
Determine the signs of a struggle.
Chapter 18 describes the investigation of homicide. Of all major crimes, homicide investigation requires the greatest effort on the part of the police. The investigator is responsible for collecting a vast amount of evidence and for coordinating information from a variety of sources, including witnesses, the suspect, the officers involved with the crime scene, the forensic pathologist, and the criminalist.
The finding of a dead body is the starting point and initial focus of the death investigation. Death investigation requires a team effort, and only through cooperation of persons from many disciplines, coordination of efforts, and meticulous attention to detail can a successful conclusion of an investigation be realized.
https://legalbeagle.com/4894831-write-crime-scene-report.html
https://www.crime-scene-investigator.net/interviewingtips.html
https://www.cga.ct.gov/2014/rpt/2014-R-0071.htm
Outdoor crime scene examination: The examination of a crime scene located outdoors must be planned quickly and carried out as soon as possible. Changes in weather conditions may completely jeopardize the chances of finding evidence that is there. A number of different clues easily detected at first may disappear in a very short time; for example, by precipitation, drying, vegetation, flood conditions, animals, etc. It is even more difficult to examine such a scene at night.
Signs of struggle: Indicators of a fight or an attempt at self-defense at the crime scene. In a room, the signs of a struggle generally consist of bloodstains, pulled-out hair, overturned or displaced articles of furniture, rumpled rugs, marks of weapons, and injuries caused by the deceased in self-defense. If these are found at the scene of a death, the case may be determined from the start to be one of death by violence by the action of another person.
Suicide: The act of intentionally killing oneself. The common modes of death by suicide are drowning, hanging, shooting, poisoning/overdosing, jumping from heights, cutting arteries, stabbing, and strangulation.