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Re: NC Law Review on Fire Investigation
Posted by:
Sir Gary (IP Logged)
Date: September 08, 2020 02:25AM
Ran into this issue years ago with lab accreditation (ISO 17025);
powers-that-be wanted validated methods, proficiency testing etc..
(with standard deviations, etc.) - impossible to do with Fire Investigation.
You can insist on accredited training & IAAI/NAFI-certification,
but this is no guarantee for expertise, capability nor objectivity.
You can assess their casework, but other than picking up obvious errors/-omissions,
you are still dependent on what the FI chose to collects & -include to present.
Closest we ever got to proficiency testing was during training,
where the wannabee-FI was required to tag along to fires with the designated-FI,
take his own photographs & notes, and draft his own full FI-report for evaluation.
They all generally needed > 50-odd of these (of which the last 20-odd needed to be on the money)
before signing them off as competent (on top of some theory testing).
I'm still trying for local FI-accreditation, a (recent) process not dissimilar to IAAI-certification,
just also with casework (of their selection randomly off a list of two year's of one's work)
submitted for evaluation.
Be interesting to see what happens; as a lone FI, I have had no colleague to review my work;
you develop your own style of reporting, and any errors in logic/deduction go unchecked
(unless it hits a courtroom...)