Crime + investigation

Crime Scene Tape: The Back Story

Why is it yellow? Can you really get two years behind bars for crossing it? What's Locard's Theory of Transfer? Learn more about the origins of crime scene tape.

A dark, nighttime street scene with a yellow police tape barrier cordoning off an area, suggesting an incident or investigation taking place.
Published: June 23, 2017Last Updated: September 25, 2025

"Yellow lines separate traffic flowing in opposite directions…A solid yellow line indicates that passing is prohibited." –Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices

As any crime-scene tech will attest, there's a reason why yellow tape is so ubiquitous, both on TV and in real life. It has to do with something called Locard's Theory of Transfer, which asserts that when people enter a crime scene, they leave evidence behind and take evidence with them. Random people wandering around crime scenes contaminate evidence, potentially undermining a case. That's why it's possible to be arrested for crossing crime-scene tape; in some states, the penalty is as much as two years in prison.

Why yellow? Scientifically speaking, it's believed to be the most eye-catching color. Because of the way light bounces off the eye's rods and cones, we see it more quickly than, say, red. And it's also likelier to be seen by more color-blind people than other hues.

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Over the decades, yellow has also come to be associated with avoiding physical hazards, according to the nonprofit American National Standards Institute. In 1939, education professor Frank W. Cyr convened educators and got them to agree to standardize school bus appearance by painting them a high-visibility yellow.

As for the warning tape itself, it was first developed in the U.S. in the early 1960s by California-based Harris Industries, Inc., according to a 1998 article in The Miami Herald. Called non-adhesive barricade tape, it's made from lightweight polyethylene, with a standard roll, 3 in. x 1,000 ft., coming in a variety of thicknesses. According to the manufacturer's website: "Tapes help prevent accidents by increasing visibility of hazards and can be tied, stapled or nailed in place."

Caution tape shows up now in all kinds of contexts, as a kind of symbol of mayhem and rebellion—at parties, on bedding or even on rock-star-worthy guitar straps.

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Citation Information

Article title
Crime Scene Tape: The Back Story
Website Name
A&E
Date Accessed
September 25, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
September 25, 2025
Original Published Date
June 23, 2017
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