VR Forensics
Immersive Crime Scene Investigation Training for Procedural Readiness
Vector Forensics gives police academies, law enforcement training teams, forensic science programs, and criminal justice educators a repeatable way to practice crime scene observation, evidence collection, documentation, tool selection, and investigative reasoning in immersive virtual scenarios.
When connected to Vector Gov, training activity and performance data can support verification workflows, instructor review, follow-up actions, and readiness visibility.
Bring one crime scene scenario, forensic skill, course objective, or evidence-processing workflow. We’ll show how Vector Forensics can support immersive CSI practice and connect to Vector Government workflows when configured.
Practice CSI procedure. Review missed steps. Connect training evidence to Vector Government.
Vector Forensics Delivers the CSI Simulation Layer Inside Vector Government
Vector Government organizes readiness across objectives, verification workflows, dashboards, evidence, governance, and sustainment.
Vector Forensics delivers the immersive CSI practice experience: the virtual scenes, evidence interactions, documentation steps, tool-selection moments, and forensic reasoning exercises that help learners move from classroom instruction to applied investigative procedure.
Together, Vector Forensics and Vector Government help organizations move from CSI training activity to clearer performance insight.
Why Vector Forensics Exists
Crime scene investigation training needs repeatable practice, consistent procedures, and structured review.
Physical mock scenes can be difficult to reset. Rare scene types can be hard to provide consistently. Instructor review can vary by cohort, location, or scenario.
Vector Forensics gives learners a controlled way to practice observation, documentation, evidence recognition, collection sequence, and investigative reasoning before moving into physical mock scenes, supervised field exercises, or more advanced training environments.
What Learners Practice
Vector Forensics can support CSI and forensic training scenarios such as:
Scene entry and orientation
Practice controlled entry, scene awareness, and initial observation.
Evidence recognition
Identify relevant items, potential evidence, and areas requiring closer inspection.
Documentation discipline
Practice notes, observations, photographs, and scene-recording steps.
Tool selection
Choose appropriate tools or collection methods for the evidence type.
Evidence collection sequence
Practice order of operations, handling steps, and procedural consistency.
Blood spatter analysis
Observe patterns, interpret directionality, and connect findings to scenario context.
Forensic reasoning
Connect observations, evidence placement, and scenario details to investigative hypotheses.
Missed-step review
Identify overlooked evidence, skipped documentation, or procedural gaps for follow-up practice.
Core Modules
Evidence Collection Module
Learners practice identifying, documenting, selecting tools for, and collecting evidence in a controlled virtual crime scene.
The module can reinforce observation, sequence, documentation, evidence-handling choices, and procedural consistency.
Blood Spatter Analysis Module
Learners examine bloodstain patterns in a virtual scene and practice interpreting location, directionality, distribution, and scenario context.
The module can support applied reasoning and structured review before learners encounter more complex physical or field-based training environments.
How Vector Forensics Works
Vector Forensics gives teams a structured way to move from CSI instruction to repeatable applied practice.
Choose the scenario.
Select the crime scene type, forensic skill, course objective, or evidence-processing workflow.
Enter the virtual scene.
Learners navigate a controlled immersive environment where they observe, document, inspect, and make procedural decisions.
Process the evidence.
Learners identify relevant items, select tools, document findings, and practice collection sequence.
Review missed steps.
Instructors can review overlooked evidence, skipped documentation, hesitation points, and procedural gaps.
Repeat or remediate.
Learners can revisit scenarios to reinforce observation, documentation, tool selection, and reasoning.
Verify when configured.
When connected to Vector Government verification workflows, performance can be scored against approved objectives, rubrics, thresholds, and critical-error criteria.
Practice and Verification Are Not the Same
Vector Forensics supports learning through immersive CSI practice. Vector Government supports formal verification when training evidence is required.
Coach Mode
Helps learners build familiarity with scene processing, evidence recognition, documentation, tool use, and investigative reasoning.
Verify Mode
Is used when organizations need scored performance against approved objectives, rubrics, thresholds, and critical-error criteria.
Practice helps learners improve. Verification creates the record instructors and leaders can use to support training decisions.
From CSI Practice to Training Visibility
CSI simulation becomes more valuable when instructors and leaders can see what learners practiced, what was missed, and what needs follow-up.
When connected to Vector Government, Vector Forensics performance can support visibility into:
- who completed practice
- who has been verified
- which evidence items were missed
- which documentation steps were skipped
- where tool-selection or sequence errors occurred
- which scenarios or modules need reinforcement
- which cohorts, teams, or learners may need additional support
- what training evidence can be reviewed for training decisions
This helps programs move from simulation participation to clearer performance insight.
Who Uses Vector Forensics
Vector Forensics is designed for public safety, forensic, and criminal justice training environments where realistic CSI practice matters.
Police academies
Law enforcement training teams
Criminal justice programs
Forensic science education
Public safety training centers
Military police and investigative training
Continuing education and refresher programs
Scenario-based instructor-led training
Different programs. Same core need:
Give learners repeatable CSI practice before procedures are practiced in physical mock scenes, supervised field exercises, or advanced training environments.
See a CSI Training Scenario Flow
Bring one crime scene scenario, forensic skill, course objective, or evidence-processing workflow. We’ll show how Vector Forensics turns it into immersive CSI practice and how Vector Government can connect performance to verification workflows, training evidence, and follow-up actions when configured.
This is not a generic platform walkthrough. We’ll focus the demo on one investigative training workflow and show what the simulation-to-verification path could look like.