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OverviewWithout a doubt, a photo speaks one thousand words in a dog bite case. In all cases, the victim needs to be photographed at several points in time: immediately after the attack, during the initial treatment (in the hospital or doctor's office), immediately after treatment, one day later, two days later, one week later, at every point where the injury changes or there are additional surgical procedures, when photographs are needed for settlement or court purposes, and when the injury has reached maximum medical improvement. In the past, it was necessary to retain a professional photographer for most of these photos. Today, the extraordinary functionality of digital cameras makes it possible for a dedicated amateur to take most or all of the necessary pictures. It must be remembered, however, that these are entirely different than family photos or casual snapshots. They will indeed say one thousand words, so like anything else that will be going to court, those "words" have to be "phrased" correctly. Specifically, the pictures must be an accurate and complete depiction of the wounds. To accomplish this, amateur and professional photographers need to follow the directions given below. Instructions for the amateur photographerThe following instructions can be read here and also can be downloaded for free from the Dog Bite Law Bookstore.Instructions for taking photos on film The instructions given above need to be followed. Additionally, a film camera presents some other issues:
Use a 35 mm camera, not a Polaroid camera. Use ISO 200 or ISO 400 color negative film. It also is known as ASA 200 and ASA 400. The brand of film does not matter. Make sure that the expiration date of the film is in the future. After you take the photographs, have them developed. Ask the developer to make at least 4 prints of each negative. After you get the prints back, keep one set and send the other three sets to your attorney or insurance company. If your attorney asks you to send negative, then do so. However, do not send negatives to an insurance company or any opposing party. Do not send the negatives in the same envelope as the prints. You have to make sure that the negatives are not lost. Therefore, retain the negatives until at least receipt of confirmation that the other party has the photographs. At that point, send the negatives. Instructions for the professional photographerThese instructions are actually used by Attorney Kenneth Phillips' law office. The questions were received from photographers who photographed our clients: "Do you want prints, files, or what?"We need the original files. Send them to us on a CD ROM. The CD ROM must, must, must have the victim's name on it, and the date of the session. If there is no extra charge, also send us either a set of 4x6 prints OR something that looks like an old fashioned contact sheet. "Which file format do you want? Do you want JPG, TIF, or RAW?"JPG files suit us the best. TIF files are too big for us. BMP and RAW files are not useful to us at all. "Which file size do you want? How many megapixels do you want?"The size must be between four and six megapixels. "How do you want the files organized on the CD ROM?"We want one folder that contains 36 files, if you took 36 photos. We want only one version of each photo; do not give us a JPG, a RAW, a TIF, etc. "Do you want studio light or natural light? What kind of lighting do you want?"From amateur photographers, we want natural light. Take the photos in "open shade" -- outside, on a sunny day, but making sure that no sun is hitting the victim or the background or anything else. We always remind amateur photographers to do a perfect, custom white balance prior to taking the photo. If you don't know what that means, look at your camera's manual. If you don't have the manual, use the "cloudy" setting on the camera itself. From pro photographers, we would like studio light because it is more controllable. Keep the following in mind: if the bite wounds turned into raised or lowered scars, the main light has to be at an angle so that the eventual print will show the dimensionality of the scar. And keep this in mind too: we need perfect white balancing so that we can see the exact color of the scar and the exact color of the skin. "What do you want in the photo? What should the photos show?"This depends on where the bite wounds were. If the injury is to the face, you must take photographs of the head, not the face. The entire head should show in all of the photographs. This means that we should be able to see space over the head, on each side of the head, and halfway down to the elbows. There should be three photos take from directly in front, three from 45 degrees to the left, and three from 45 degrees to the right. If the injury is to the face, profiles from the right and left are not necessary unless the accident has damaged the profile. If the injury is to the lips or near the lips, the lips must be slightly apart, from the center of the victim's mouth all the way to each corner of his mouth. And the mouth must be relaxed, without expression. Start with the mouth open to the point that the victim can feel that the lips are not touching at the CORNERS. Then for the second shot, the lips can BARELY touch at the corners. Then for the third shot, the lips can be a bit more closed BUT STILL APART. Remember: no expression in the face. If the area is covered with bandages, take the shots of the bandages and then, if you can, take more shots of the wounds themselves. In a facial injury case, the center of the camera lens has to be located straight in front of the tip of the victim's nose. It must not be positioned higher or lower than that, even by an inch. The photo must not be looking up at him or looking down on him. If the injury is to a part of the body other than the face, make sure that the first three shots show the entire surrounding region. There's nothing more strange than seeing part of a limb in a photograph, because the viewer will have no idea how big the limb actually is, or who it belongs to. An arm injury should show the neck, entire chest, and hip. A leg injury should show the foot to the hip. A calf injury should show the foot to halfway between the hip and the knee. Furthermore, we also need some shots that depict the wounded area and the corresponding area on the other side of the victim's body. For example, if the hand was bitten, then we need photos that show both hands in the same frame, so we can compare them. If the leg was bitten, then we need photos that show both legs in the same frame. "What should the victim be wearing? How should the victim look?"Clean. No dirty face, dirty nose, dirty ears. Shaved or hairless face, if an adult. No day-old beard on a man. No hair on the upper lip of a woman. No make-up. Conservative clothing -- clothes that would be appropriate for a meeting at the bank, or for testifying at court. However, if the wounds were to an area that clothes would cover, then that particular clothing should be removed. If undergarments appear in the photograph, they too should be conservative, and the victim's face should not appear in the same picture as the undergarments if possible. If the wounds are to the buttocks, thighs, breasts or another private area, there must be conservative clothing around it so that the victim appears modest. Conservative appearance even if the bite wounds are on the buttocks, thighs, breasts, etc. Nothing that would embarrass the onlooker or the victim, if it can be avoided. The victim must appear modest. Body position should be natural and conservative. Unless it is physically impossible, the victim should be standing, even if the wounds were to the legs or feet. Serious. The victim must not smile. No smiles except where the smile has been affected by the bite wounds. Eyes looking straight ahead, with little or no expression. However, if the scars or wounds affect the victim's smile or any other expressions, then there should be a series of photos in which the victim is smiling or making those expressions, so that there is a complete photographic record. Show the relaxed face and then the expression in adjacent shots. No pressed lips. Mouth to be slightly open, relaxed -- except in an "expression" photo. No crying. No tears. No photos soon after crying. Do not point at anything. Do not point at wounds. No doggie images on clothes. No doggie in the photo. No friends or family in the photo. No jewelry or wristwatches should appear in the photo. A list of the necessary photographsSeveral types of photographs should be taken and gathered.
The proper format for photographsPhotographs must be presented to the defendant's insurance company or preserved for court in the correct format.
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