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From YouTube: Where's Brian? | Fingerprinting
Description
On today’s show we’re working with a division that uses both high tech and old techniques to collect information. Staff here relies on the finest of details to complete their work. Do you know where I am today?
A
On
today's
show,
we're
working
with
a
division
that
uses
both
high-tech
and
old
techniques
to
collect
information
staff
here
rely
on
the
finest
of
details
to
complete
their
work.
Do
you
know
where
I
am
today,
I'm
brian
phillips?
On
most
days,
I
work
in
an
office
for
the
aim
city
manager,
since
starting
here,
I've
learned
a
lot
about
the
different
job
city.
Employees
have
many
of
them.
A
The
Ames
Police
Department
Records
Division
facilitates
general
public
fingerprinting,
while
the
Criminal
Investigations
Division
collects
fingerprint
information
at
crime
scenes
today,
we'll
look
at
how
they
do
fingerprinting
and
how
it
is
used
in
general
investigations,
hi
Jason
Brian,
how
you
doing
pretty
good
so
tell
me
a
little
bit
about
the
Ames
police
department.
What
are
some
of
the
services
that
you
provide?
Well.
B
Many
many
employers
will
request
their
employees
to
go
through
a
fingerprint
background
process.
And
so
we
take
those
fingerprint
cards
that
we
get
from
the
employees
and
we'll
finger
print
them.
And
then
the
employees
will
then
submit
those
back
to
their
employer
and
they
will
be
sent
to
the
FBI
to
see
if
they
have
any
type
of
criminal
record
and.
B
B
B
A
B
C
A
C
They
roll
your
fingers
in
ink
and
then
they
roll
the
impressions
on
the
card,
and
then
they
send
the
card
off
to
the
FBI
and
the
FBI
will
run
those
fingerprints
against
all
the
fingerprints
in
the
world
that
they've
collected
to
see.
If
you
really
are
who
you
say,
you
are
or
you've
committed
some
sort
of
heinous
crime
where
they
have
the
latent
fingerprints
in
the
system.
Okay,.
A
C
A
A
C
C
A
C
A
A
C
That
is
a
loop.
It
comes
in
one
side,
loops
around
and
out
the
same
side.
Okay,
most
of
the
loops
are
owner
loops,
which
means
they
come
in
from
the
outside
of
your
body.
Loop
around
and
go
out
the
same
way.
Okay,
but
every
now
and
then
especially
rare
fingerprints
is
not
a
rate,
an
owner
new
owner
loop,
and
you
have
my.
A
B
A
C
I
would
say
every
day,
every
tuesday
and
thursday,
since
we've
had
the
volunteers
doing
the
program,
there's
probably
at
least
five
or
six
people
that
come.
You
know
within
the
hour.
So
it's
good
to
see
that
people
are
coming
in
and
getting
it
done,
and
we
are
so
thankful
that
those
volunteers
come
in
because
that's
that's
a
lot
of
different
people
that
they
help
get
what
they
need
every
day.
Yeah.
A
C
B
C
B
A
C
A
A
C
B
A
C
A
C
Now
that
we
know
there's
probably
a
fingerprint
there
and
that's
something
that
the
suspect
probably
touched
that
helps
a
little
bit,
because
if
you
can
imagine
like
a
gas
station
robbery
or
something
like
that,
there's
fingerprints
everywhere.
C
B
C
C
A
A
A
A
C
C
A
C
A
C
C
A
C
A
A
B
C
C
C
A
C
C
A
A
A
C
A
A
C
C
A
C
Whenever
you
get
arrested,
that's
part
of
the
process
you
get
fingerprinted
your
fingerprints
go
into
the
system,
then
the
latent
fingerprints
are
compared
to
those
mathematically
and
what
the
duck
then,
what
the
computer
does
is
it
spits
out
a
list
first,
most
likely
second,
most
likely
match
third,
most
likely,
and
then
a
person
has
to
take
the
first
most
likely
match
or
the
known
suspect
and
sit
down
and
look
at
them.
Side-By-Side.
Ok,.
B
B
C
B
B
C
A
C
A
C
School
they
always
joke.
They
put
a
some
of
that
fingerprint
powder
around
the
eye.
So
when
you
put
your
face
on
it,
then
you
have
a
little.