"Each department or agency has a method which they use for written documentation of the crime scene. There investigator/technician should follow his/her departments assigned procedures for written documentation. The<em><u>importance</u></em> of <u>sharing information can never be over-looked.</u> This article is intended to share ideas in the area of uniform documentation as an example of the format that is used by my department. We use a narrative section of the report divided it into 5 categories. The categories are <u>summary, scene </u>(including a detailed body description if in a death investigation), <u>processing, evidence collected, and pending</u>." <u>I got this inforemation at, </u><u>https://www.crime-scene-investigator.net/document.html</u>
"General American" is not the name of a major American regional dialect, since the point of a dialect is that it is specialized. And the "general" is the opposite of specific in this case.