New research reveals an innovative wildlife forensics method that uses advanced genetic tools and local DNA databases to help authorities solve complex environmental crimes involving multiple species.
Ferris State University students are making progress on the 2010 cold case of Kristin Spires, offering new hope for closure.
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C (WCIV) — There will soon be a new tool to fight and solve crime across the Lowcountry, with the Tri-County Biological Science Center on Leeds Avenue building unveiled today. The ...
In 2009, Matthew von Konrat, a plant scientist at The Field Museum of Natural History received an intriguing phone call from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The officials suspected that ...
Houston company uses forensic genetic genealogy to identify victims, suspects in unsolved crimes ...
James M. Adcock has decades of experience investigating homicide and cold cases. From his home in rural Minnesota, he's ...
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Inside a laboratory in North Texas, forensic experts are working with bones and DNA, analyzing skeletal remains and trying to ...
A forensic scientist who has worked with police and presented evidence in major court cases has said she is “delighted and humbled” to be given a damehood. Professor Dame Lorna Dawson is head of the ...