Mr. Ball. And the fingerprint equipment, is that the dusting powder you mentioned?

Mr. Studebaker. Yes.

Mr. Ball. And what else?

Mr. Studebaker. Just anything we had in the truck. We have the truck complete.

Mr. Ball. You have different kinds of fingerprint dusting powder for different substances?

Mr. Studebaker. Yes.

Mr. Ball. How many different kinds of powder do you have?

Mr. Studebaker. Well, we have a gray powder that we use for lifting prints and use under an ultra-violet light and we have a black volcano powder that we use on white or grey surfaces, and then just recently we purchased this new powder—it's a magnetic powder. It's a new type of powder that you just use something like a pen to lift your powder out of the jar that it's in and it will lift a print off of a paper better than your regular dusting powder. It's more accurate in lifting a print than anything I have ever seen. It's a new type powder—a magnetic powder is what it is, and they have a jet black and a gray and a silver-gray and different types of powder in there that you can use on different types surfaces.

Mr. Ball. By "lifting the prints," you mean it stands out?

Mr. Studebaker. Raising the print up, raising the invisible print which is a latent print and it will raise the moisture out of the paper that it is pressed on. It takes 7 pounds of pressure to leave a latent fingerprint and the moisture in your fingers, in the pores of your skin, is what leaves the print on the paper, but it is invisible until you put your powder on there and then it raises it.