Person

Fingerprint officer Opportunities

Fingerprint officer

Fingerprint officers work to identify fingerprints taken from crime scenes.

Salary

£18,000 - £30,000

Typical hours

37 to 39 a week (between 8am and 6pm)

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What it takes

Skills and knowledge

You'll need:

  • to be thorough and pay attention to detail
  • patience and the ability to remain calm in stressful situations
  • the ability to accept criticism and work well under pressure
  • knowledge of public safety and security
  • the ability to think clearly using logic and reasoning
  • to be flexible and open to change
  • the ability to work on your own
  • legal knowledge including court procedures and government regulations
  • to be able to use a computer and the main software packages competently

Restrictions and Requirements

You'll need to:

You'll usually need a driving licence.

How to become Fingerprint officer

You can get into this job through:

  • a university course
  • applying directly

University

You could give yourself an advantage by doing a relevant degree in:

  • forensic science
  • criminology
  • applied science
  • chemistry
  • biology

Entry requirements

You'll usually need:

  • 2 to 3 A levels, or equivalent, for a degree

More Information

Direct Application

Each police service sets its own entry requirements, but to start as a trainee fingerprint officer you'll often need one or more of the following:

  • 5 GCSEs at grades 9 to 4 (A* to C) including maths, English and a science subject
  • A levels or equivalent qualifications
  • experience of working in the police service

Police services will carry out checks into your background and employment history. This might also include checks on your close family members.

More Information

Career tips

Some knowledge of forensic and photographic techniques is helpful though not essential.

What you'll do

Day-to-day tasks

As a fingerprint officer, you could:

  • attend crime scenes to collect fingerprint evidence
  • take prints from bodies at incident scenes or in a mortuary
  • compare prints with those of suspects
  • scan police fingerprint forms into national fingerprint database systems
  • analyse prints and marks to uncover links between crime scenes
  • work with forensic staff to collect traces of other evidence left by fingerprints
  • eliminate prints to rule out people not under suspicion
  • classify records and maintain fingerprint databases
  • prepare and present evidence for investigators and for court
  • attend training on new fingerprint methods and technology

Working environment

You could work in a laboratory.

Your working environment may be emotionally demanding.

You may need to wear protective clothing.

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