News

The Marty Miller case : introducing forensic anthropology / Dawnie Wolfe Steadman and Steven A. Andersen -- Multidisciplinary approach to human identification in ...
Forensics—fingerprints, DNA, time of death—may seem like hard science. But the practice is still evolving and as these ...
This talk will give an overview of the field of forensic anthropology and delve into real life scenarios from the field in Hawaii. In 1893, the Hawaiian Kingdom was overthrown in a bloodless coup ...
In 1994, Kevin Keith was sentenced to death in Ohio for a triple homicide, as recounted in Kim Kardashian’s new podcast The System. Keith was scheduled to be executed in September 2010, but just ...
The University of Nevada, Reno, in collaboration with the College of Liberal Arts and the Department of Criminal Justice, is excited to announce the launch of Nevada’s first-ever Forensic Studies ...
Prof. Trais Pearson contributed a chapter to a new edited volume on the global history of forensic science and medicine. The volume, titled Global Forensic Cultures: Making Facts and Justice in the ...
SAN DIEGO — Students at George Mason University in Virginia are learning forensic art techniques by working on an unidentified remains case from San Diego. The class, led by veteran forensic artist ...
The Saint Louis University Forensic Science program offers courses with hands-on learning opportunities. FRSC 2600 - Survey of Forensic Science 3 credits Students learn scientific methodology, its ...
German company MVZ Medizinische Labore Dessau Kassel GmbH (MVZ) has positioned itself as an industry leader in the development of rapid, sensitive means of testing for drugs of abuse using capillary ...
Cape Town has consistently been one of the metropolitan regions in South Africa with the highest murder rates. It has more ...
BENGALURU: The Special Investigation Team (SIT) began the investigation into the sensational rape case involving former Hassan JDS MP Prajwal Revanna May last year with a leaked video of his sexual ...
In 2003, Donald Kennedy, then editor in chief of the journal Science, wrote an editorial called, “Forensic Science: Oxymoron?” He answered this question, in effect, “yes.” Unfortunately, the answer ...