The Madera County Sheriff’s Office is seeking the public’s help in identifying a female victim from an unsolved 1989 homicide, as well as a male John Doe.
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The Life Sciences Pre-Medical Illustration program combines art and science, preparing students to create accurate visuals for medicine, research, forensic science, and similar fields.
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A new study finds that worrying about police brutality and harassment is associated with physical markers of cardiovascular health risk in Black women in the United States.
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This case illustrates a pivotal moment in modern forensic science: when the ability to detect manipulation becomes as crucial as the ability to analyze speech itself.
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Additional evidence from the original investigation, including fingerprints recovered from a Coca-Cola can found at the scene, placed Charley Sneed at the crime scene.
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On Aug.3, 1981, detectives with the U.S. Park Police recovered the remains of a young African-American man wrapped in a blanket alongside a Baltimore-Washington Parkway guardrail.
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Critical breakthroughs were made possible by advances in forensic science and DNA analysis, which provided investigative opportunities unavailable at the time of the murders.
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After 35 years, a man whose partial remains were discovered in a wooded area by a dog in Antioch, Tennessee has been identified as Phillip Sydnor, born in 1950.
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Tarrant County District Attorney Phil Sorrells is rolling out a new initiative dedicated to addressing unsolved homicides and other serious violent crimes.
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In 1994, police in Seabrook, New Hampshire seized a human skull from a local business. The business owner claimed he had purchased the skull in New York, but investigators were unable to determine where it originated.
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