Police in Massachusetts have issued a warning about heroin cut with a synthetic cannabinoid—intended only for research purposes—that may not respond to Narcan.
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While recognizing that improvements have been made, Gillian Tully has called for gaps in quality to be resolved to prevent unreliable evidence being used in court.
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The average age at which teens and young adults start using drugs has been rising, according to a study published in JAMA Pediatrics.
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Based on more than 100,000 college degree programs and the starting salary data of over 5 million graduates, GradReports has ranked 2020’s best colleges by major, including criminology and criminal justice.
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The FBI’s Artifact of the Month is a rare first edition of Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone with the Wind” used to conceal a .32-caliber pistol.
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A growing number of law enforcement agencies want to use Purdue University technology to help them track down cybercriminals with a toolkit that also can help companies stop insider threats and technology-facilitated abuse.
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Event attendees listened to talks about forensic dentistry and crime gun intelligence, toured DNA and cadaver labs, spoke with the Phoenix Police Department’s Special Assignments Unit, analyzed blood spatter patterns and more.
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The implementation of California Senate Bill 54– which limits, but does not prohibit, state and local police cooperation with federal immigration authorities– did not cause an increase in crime.
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Are our hands as unique as our fingerprints? If so, can that be proven beyond a reasonable doubt? A new program led by forensic anthropologist Dame Sue Black is asking 5,000 citizen scientists to help answer that question by uploading photos of their hands.
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To thwart increasingly dangerous cyber criminals, law enforcement agents are working to “burn down their infrastructure” and take out the tools that allow them to carry out their devastating attacks, FBI Director Christopher Wray said.
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