Crime Scene Reconstruction

 

 

 

 

 

QUESTION

Describe two major limitations of crime-scene reconstruction. At the end of your report answer add a section that estimates the distance from the shooter-to-target based on the descriptions of the bullet holes:

A few widely scattered gunpowder particles with no soot around the entrance hole.
A dark ring around the bullet hole but no soot or gunpowder particles.
A halo of soot surrounding the entrance hole along with scattered specks of powder grains.
Scorch marks and melted fibers surrounding the entrance hole.

 

Sample Solution

states. Passporting rights are, therefore, highly significant and underpin the ‘ecosystem’ that is the single market for financial services. There are nine different passports that financial services companies can utilise in order to deliver their core services to businesses and customers cross the EU. The inherent concept of passporting is based around community-wide principles established by the EU’s common prudential capital regime and on the granting of mutual recognition of licences. Explicit in its very nature, passporting is the preserve of countries that are members of the EU or European Economic Area (EEA). Unequivocal assessments of the terms of the UK’s departure from the EU cannot yet be given but it seems almost certain that the UK is bound to leave the single market and, by default therefore, will lose passporting rights. Such an outcome can only be considered sub-optimal to many in financial services and has the potential to cause huge disruption and substantial business loses. Nevertheless, Michael Randall’s article in the Edinburgh Law Review, presents a convincing argument that whilst a loss of passporting rights is not a triumph, the prognosis is not as bleak as some would suggest particularly in the longer term. The argument that Randall proposes: that core regulation is likely to remain similar between the EU and UK when further consideration is given to mutual, recognition and free trade agreements (a comprehensive one being sought by the British government as a matter of priority) is a strong one. Recent British domestic legislation on financial services has been heavily influenced by EU law, moreover, Randall correctly identifies the opportunities that Brexit may present for the UK to independently innovate in the longer term. This is especially true with respect to FinTech. This essay will scrutinise passporting, most prominently with regard to its application in different sectors, the EU legislation that grants passporting rights, such as Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) directive, and the third country equivalence regime.

The European third country equivalence regime is a recent European innovation that provides the opportunity for non-EU/EEA countries (“third countries”) to operate in EU/EEA member states in certain sectors, in situations where the regulatory regime in the third country “is seen by the EU to have a broadly-equivalent regulatory regime”. The consequence of fulfilling this criteria is that financial institutions headquartered in third cou

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