New DNA Technology Helps Get Convictions

Posted by: on Feb 27, 2013 | No Comments

Newly developed DNA computer software is being praised for its assistance with two robbery convictions in Kern County, California. True Allele is a new computer software program capable of sorting through contaminated evidence using mathematical formulas. The software can help identify whether a particular person’s DNA was present at a crime scene even if the DNA has been in the field for a while or may be contaminated or degraded. True Allele was paid for with a $100,000 grant from the National Institute of Justice. Now that the new technology has been proven in the courtroom, more use of the software is expected.

Date of Article: February 20, 2013

Source: Forensic Magazine and KGET

Read the full article here.

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams}

Citation: (2013). KGET 17. New DNA technology helps convict criminals. Retrieved February 25, 2013, from http://www.kget.com/news/local/story/New-DNA-technology-helps-convict-criminals/JX2dC0lgpki4kD_tCdHsvQ.cspx

NYPD and Microsoft Create Crime-fighting Tech System

Posted by: on Feb 27, 2013 | No Comments

A new crime-fighting technology software is allowing the New York Police Department to instantaneously pool data from the department’s copious arrest records, emergency calls, over 3,000 citywide security cameras, license plate readers and portable radiation detectors, and assembles it into an easy-to-use and interactive map. The Domain Awareness System, otherwise known as “the dashboard,” began development back in 2009 when the NYPD approached Microsoft Corp. to build a software that would mine data for the Lower Manhattan Security Initiative, a network of private and public cameras and other tools monitored by the department’s counter terrorism bureau. From there, officers worked directly with programmers to create a system that is truly “by cops for cops.” The system is currently only being utilized by the NYPD, but Microsoft vice president in charge of program management, Dave Mosher, said that they are looking to bring the technology to smaller municipalities, law enforcement agencies, and companies that handle major sporting events.

 

Full article here.

[Abstract by ForensIQ Intern – Mark Lombard]

 

Citation:

Long, C. (2013, 20). Forensic Magazine. NYPD, Microsoft Create Crime-fighting Tech System . Retrieved February 26, 2013, from http://www.forensicmag.com/news/nypd-microsoft-create-crime-fighting-tech-system?et_cid=3103514&et_rid=515363537&linkid=http%3a%2f%2fwww.forensicmag.com%2fnews%2fnypd-microsoft-create-crime-fighting-tech-system

 

Washington Police Agencies Step Up Testing of ‘Crime Guns’

Posted by: on Feb 27, 2013 | No Comments

“Is the gun from your murder case hiding in the evidence vault of a neighboring police department?” firearms expert Pete Gagliardi asked the group of detectives and personnel from 31 police agencies at a Washington Criminal Justice Training Center seminar last week. Each time a gun is fired, it ejects a shell that has marks as unique as fingerprints. This important piece of evidence gives agencies that have collected firearms off the streets a great tool against murders with firearms and other gun crimes. However, many police agencies have several firearms that have not been tested and are simply sitting in their vaults. Brad Buckles, the ATF director  in 1999 when the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network (NIBIN) was created, said that “there are thousands, probably tens of thousands of firearms around the country in police department vaults that are never test-fired and are never entered into that system. Recently however, the ATF is following the Washington State Patrol’s Seattle crime lab’s lead in gaining more advanced analyses of shell casings through the use of a new 3D terminal that connects to the NIBIN network.

 

See the full article and a video here.

Source: forensicmag.com

[Abstract by ForensIQ Intern – Mark Lombard]

 

Citation:

Ingalls, C. (2013, 20). King5.com. Washington police agencies step up testing of ‘crime guns’. Retrieved February 26, 2013, from http://www.king5.com/news/local/KING-5-Investigation-prompts-WA-police-agencies-to-take-closer-look-at-their-crime-guns-192113341.html

 

The forensicweek.com Show – Episode 012 – The National Law Enforcement Museum

Posted by: on Feb 21, 2013 | No Comments

The forensicweek.com Show is airing Episode 012 – The Making of a National Law Enforcement Museum – LIVE TONIGHT, Thursday, February 21, 2013 at 7:00 PM (EST).  Special guest Rebecca Looney, the museum’s exhibit content developer, will discuss the “Launching of the National Law Enforcement Museum in Washington, DC, paving the way for the nation’s largest and most comprehensive museum honoring the duty and sacrifice of America’s law enforcement officers.”   So join host, Tom Mauriello, and the rest of the forensicweek.com team and learn the “real” truth about the development of our nation’s first of its kind national law enforcement museum.  Watch the show LIVE or view it at your convenience after the show is aired.  Remember all previous episodes are there also.  Just GO TO www.forensicweek.com or directly to http://www.youtube.com/forensicweek/.

DOJ and NIST Announce Launch of National Commission on Forensic Science

Posted by: on Feb 21, 2013 | No Comments

The United States Department of Justice and the National Institute of Standards and Technology announced on Friday, February 15, 2013 the launch and establishment of a National Commission on Forensic Science. The commission plan is to strengthen and enhance the practice of forensic science. The National Commission on Forensic Science will be responsible for coordination between forensic science and the courtroom. With efforts from both the Department of Justice and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the commission will help standardize national guidance for forensic science practitioners. In addition, the commission will consider guidance on practices for federal, state and local forensic science laboratories developed by groups of forensic science practitioners and academic researchers administered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Source: United States Department of Justice

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams]

Citation: United States Department of Justice. (2013). Department of Justice and National Institute of Standards and Technology Announce Launch of National Commission on Forensic Science. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved from http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2013/February/13-dag-203.html

Estimation of Age at Death Using Cortical Bone Histomorphometry

Posted by: on Feb 21, 2013 | No Comments

The older a skeleton is, the harder it is to estimate the age at death. This difficulty is due to biological variability in age indicators and the different skeletal response to environmental factors that are unique to an individual. Thus, it is becoming increasingly important for anthropologists to improve age estimates through the use of multiple age indicators and various modalities of assessment (e.g., macroscopic and microscopic). Previously developed methods of age estimation using the femur have demonstrated significant methodological issues, affecting their reliability and accuracy. Christian Crowder’s research evaluates histological age estimation using the anterior femur and explores the biological limitations of bone turnover as an age indicator.

Read the pdf here.

View all recently added publications and multimedia.

 

Source: forensicmag.com

NY Police Department Standardizing Detective Work

Posted by: on Feb 21, 2013 | No Comments

Crime-solving tactics have mostly existed as an oral tradition, passed down informally in the confines of precinct station houses from one generation of investigators to the next. Precinct detective squads belonged to a culture independent from the rest of the department and boasted an autonomy that their uniformed colleagues did not have. Over the last three years however, the New York Police Department has been moving to standardize detective work and codify tactics for solving crimes. The level of instruction in the numerous memos varies from general guidelines and basic investigative methods, to spelling out the very words detectives must say in certain situations. Critics of Chief Pulaski’s mandates describe them as “encumbering the detectives’ mission…treating professional investigators like kids.” However, chief spokesman Paul J. Browne said the memos bolster accountability within the department and ensure that police procedures are “applied as consistently as possible” with the changing laws and focus on forensics.

Read the full article here.

Source: forensicmag.com

[Abstract by ForensIQ Intern – Mark Lombard]

Citation:

Goldstein, J. (2013, 18). The New York Times . Police Department Standardizing Detective Work . Retrieved February 20, 2013, from http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/nyregion/police-department-standardizing-detective-work.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0

 

Helping Solve Crimes Through Cutting Edge DNA Research

Posted by: on Feb 21, 2013 | No Comments

Advances in DNA technology are rapidly increasing with the help and knowledge of forensic scientists throughout the field. Forensic scientist, John Butler of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is one of the world’s leading experts on DNA analysis. He is responsible for numerous scientific advances in DNA analysis and technology including improvements on analysis of degraded DNA samples. Butler’s current focus centers on rapid DNA testing. His team has demonstrated that DNA testing that has previously taken eight hours to complete can be completed accurately in less than one hour. Butler’s work also includes isolating the male Y-chromosomes from DNA samples to make it easier to identify suspects of sexual assault.

Source: Forensic Magazine and The Washington Post

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams]

Citation: The Partnership for Public Service. (2013, February 19). Helping solve crimes through cutting edge DNA research. The Washington Post. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/federal_government/helping-solve-crimes-through-cutting-edge-dna-research/2013/02/15/068420ac-7789-11e2-8f84-3e4b513b1a13_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines

Bloodstains to Bullet Holes: Mapping the Virtual Crime Scene

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

Advances in forensic technology have led to the development of 3D scanners that create a virtual portrayal of a crime scene, analyzing such evidence as bloodstains to bullet holes. The device, FARO’s Laser Scanner Focus 3D, is placed in the center of a crime scene atop a photographer’s tripod and can capture 85 photographs and millions of points surrounding the scene within minutes. The scanner allows law enforcement officials and jurors to “walk through” the crime scene and allows law enforcement to analyze points and other details through their computers. The device saves tremendous amounts of time as it captures a 360-degree image in significantly less time than it would take to typically document the crime scene. Various aspects of the device allow law enforcement personnel to construct the crime scene and measure between critical crime scene points.

ForensIQ has partnered with Transcon Imaging Solutions, Annapolis, MD who provides this very service.  Click here to learn more about how ForensIQ and Transcon can provide this valuable tool when needed.

Date of Article: February 5, 2013

Read Full Article Here.

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams]

Citation: Barrie, A. (2013). Bloodstains to bullet holes: Mapping the virtual crime scene. Retrieved February 8, 2013, from http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2013/02/05/bloodstains-to-bullet-holes-virtual-crime-scene/

Artist Collects and Analyzes DNA Samples To Create 3D Portraits in “Stranger Visions”

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

 

The next time you comb your hair in a public restroom or aimlessly pick a stray strand off your coat, take a moment to think about the personal information you’re leaving behind. In the case of artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg and her Stranger Visions project, she’s picking up stray hairs, cigarette butts, and finger nails in public places where people might inadvertently leave traces of themselves behind, and using these samples to sequence and analyze the DNA contained within. Using facial recognition algorithms and collaboration with biologists, she and her team are developing and building a 3D modeling software that would reconstruct the images of the unknown individual. Dewey-Hagborg uses the information collected to develop images of what these people look like based off their genetic makeup and DNA sequence.

Date of Article: February 7, 2013

Source: Forensic Magazine and The Creators Project

 

Read Full Article Here.

 

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams]

 

Citation: Kaganskiy, J. (2013). Artist collects and analyzes DNA samples to create 3D portraits in “stranger visions”. Retrieved February 8, 2013, from http://www.thecreatorsproject.com/de/blog/artist-collects-and-analyzes-dna-samples-to-create-3d-portraits-in-stranger-visions

Robot inquisition keeps witnesses on the right track

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

Memory is a strange and very impressionable thing. Police constantly run into problems with witnesses recalling potential crimes, and must carefully choose their words when interviewing so as not to influence the witnesses’ recounting of events. This issue, known as the misinformation effect, refers to the influence of using intense words during questioning of witnesses. One such example is using “smash” rather than “bump” or “hit” in cases of car accidents, which actually causes witnesses to report higher speeds and more serious damage. But what happens when a robot asks the questions? Mississippi State University tested this phenomenon by conducting an interview with two separate groups: one with a human and the other with a robot, controlled in a Wizard of Oz like set-up. When asked by a human interviewer, the questions caused the accuracy of witness recall to drop by 40 percent, whereas the questions posed by the robot interviewer had no effect.

 

Full article here!

Sourced from forensicweek.com

Citation:

Hodson, H. New Scientist . Robot inquisition keeps witnesses on the right track. Retrieved February 9, 2013, from http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21729036.100-robot-inquisition-keeps-witnesses-on-the-right-track.html?cmpid=RSS|NSNS|2012-GLOBAL|crime-and-forensics

West Virginia University Forensic Science Initiative Offers Online Forensic Courses

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

West Virginia University’s Forensic Science Initiative (FSI) is presenting a collection of online forensic courses, including Forensic Science 101: An Introduction, Science of Fingerprints, Principles of Death Investigation, Introduction to Bloodstain Pattern Analysis, Crime Scene Investigation, and Fundamentals of Forensic Toxicology. FSI also offers the Continuing Education Program Tracks (CEPT) in four areas: Crime Scene Investigation, Forensic Chemistry, Forensic Biology, and Specialized Skills. The tracks contain a capstone that is a comprehensive exam of the knowledge students have gained from the courses taken.

These courses are open to everyone from forensic professionals to the general public. Federal employees can take courses for $30 per course and the general public can take courses at a fee of $225 per course. The general public can also take advantage of the Continuing Education Program Tracks (CEPT), which decreases the cost to $100 per course.

For a complete list of courses offered by FSI and more information, please visit here.

 

Source: forensicmag.com

Estimation of Death Using Cortical Bone Histomorphometry

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

Estimating the age at death in the human skeleton can be a challenging task due to the significant physical, biological and general individualistic differences of the body. Determining the age of death of individuals over the age of fifty has proven to be even more difficult. Further developments and models are continually being developed to assist anthropologists in determining age estimates. Early models of age of death estimations based their focus on the femur but this basis has revealed unreliable and inaccurate results. A recent study conducted by Dr. Christian Crowder of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in New York City has shown that focusing on the anterior cortex and the biological limitations of bone turnover has shown to be an accurate model for estimating the age of death for those individuals over the age of fifty. A significant advantage of this model over historical models includes accounting for ninety to ninety-five percent of the spatial variation in osteons within the anterior cortex.

Read the full study here.

Source: Forensic Magazine

[Abstract by ForensIQ intern, Andrea Williams]

Citation: Crowder, C. (2013). Estimation of Age at Death Using Cortical Bone Histomorphometry. Retrieved February 12, 2013, from http://www.forensicmag.com/news/estimation-age-death-using-cortical-bone-histomorphometry.

Walker proposes expanding DNA collection

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is seeking to expand DNA collection efforts to include anyone arrested on a felony charge and anyone convicted of a crime.  Wisconsin currently collects DNA only from convicted felons and sex offenders, but Walker says that the expansion would be “tremendously powerful” for solving cold cases. Some argue that this move is a civil rights infringement that will put more stress on the state’s justice system, but supporters say it offers a sure-fire genetic identifier upon arrest, which will identify more criminals and solve more cases. Among the proposal to expand DNA collections, Walker wants to provide grants for GPS monitoring of high-risk offenders, spending $1 million to hire five new full-time employees at the DoJ task force, and to replace surcharge money with $4 million from the state’s general fund to assist victims of sexual assaults.

Read the full article here.

 

Source: forensicmag.com

Citation:

Bauer, S. SFGate. Walker proposes expanding DNA collection . Retrieved February 13, 2013, from http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Walker-proposes-expanding-DNA-collection-4271689.php

 

 

Regional Firearms Laboratory joins Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences

Posted by: on Feb 14, 2013 | No Comments

In an effort to integrate all forensic science disciplines into one, science-based organization, the oversight of the Harris County Sheriff’s Office’s Regional Firearms Identification Laboratory is transferring to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. The firearms lab processes approximately 2,000 cases per year for the Harris County Sheriff’s Office and 53 other law enforcement agencies. Under the Institute of Forensic Sciences, the lab will share the same accreditation and be held to the same exacting quality standards and comprehensive oversight as the Institute’s current forensic disciplines. Harris County officials say that this adoption will advance leadership in forensic testing and improve the forensic science background of the county.

 

Full article here.

For more information on the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences, visit www.harriscountytx.net/ifs.

 

Citation:

Thomas, S. Your Houston News. Regional Firearms Laboratory joins Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. Retrieved February 13, 2013, from http://www.yourhoustonnews.com/kingwood/news/regional-firearms-laboratory-joins-harris-county-institute-of-forensic-sciences/article_1e271418-7544-11e2-8fd6-0019bb2963f4.html