Evidence can vary depending on the circumstances, the weather, and how long it has been hanging around.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Circumstantial evidence is evidence.
Oftentimes, the only evidence left behind at the scene of a shooting are bullet shell casings.
History is obviously dependent on the evidence, and it's always amazing to me how much evidence there is.
Many police departments still use DNA evidence the way they have used fingerprints and tire tracks: to determine whether a suspect committed the crime.
While you're finding evidence of innocence, you also find evidence that points to other people.
In reality, those rare few cases with good forensic evidence are the ones that make it to court.
Everyone has a smart phone, and everything is recorded. One event spills into another. Conclusions come quickly at the near total expense of consideration of what just actually happened.
It's nice to know about something as soon as it happens, and obviously a newspaper can't provide that.
No apparent, perceived, or claimed evidence in any field, including history and chronology, can be valid if it contradicts the Scriptural record.
The physical evidence does not change because of public pressure or personal agenda. Physical evidence does not look away as events unfold nor does it blackout or add to memory. It remains constant and is a solid foundation upon which cases are built.