Drag and drop the various evidences in the appropriate places.
Explanation:
The various categories of evidences required in forensics can be divided into a number
of categories, depending on its reliability, quality, and completeness. These categories are as follows:
Best evidence: It is the original or primary evidence rather than a copy or duplicate of the evidence.
Secondary evidence: It is a copy of the evidence or an oral description of its contents. It is not as
reliable as the best evidence.Direct evidence: It proves or disproves a specific act through oral
testimony based on information gathered through the witness’s five senses.
Conclusive evidence: It is incontrovertible evidence, which overrides all other evidence.
Opinions: The following are the two types of opinions:
1. Expert: It offers an opinion based on personal expertise and facts.
2. Non expert: It can testify only to facts.Circumstantial evidence:It is the inference of information
from other, intermediate, relevant facts.
Hearsay evidence: This evidence is commonly not admissible in court. It is a third-party evidence.
Computer-generated records and other business records fall under the category of hearsay evidence
because these records cannot be proven accurate and reliable.
CISM Review Manual 2010, Contents: “Incident Management and Response”