Angela’s Reviews > Jumped, Fell, or Pushed: How Forensics Solved 50 "Perfect" Murders > Status Update
Angela
is on page 124 of 176
They talk about a case in the gun section...where a wad (the case is from 1794) was found in the body...a suspect was matched when the rest of the paper used as the wad was found in his pocket...again we call on QD as matching two pieces of paper to confirm they match is under their world
— Sep 06, 2019 10:59AM
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Angela’s Previous Updates
Angela
is on page 117 of 176
The Grundy case is under the top section (and it was poison that was the method) but he got caught because of a Questioned Document exam...a fake will with his typewriter.
— Sep 06, 2019 10:49AM
Angela
is on page 86 of 176
I am enjoying the case studies in this book, but the sections on the science are suspect.
— Aug 23, 2019 12:22PM
Angela
is on page 86 of 176
I appreciate that the book uses “spatter” and not the often used wrong term splatter...but the phrase “That person will be carrying a stain, probably on a trouser leg or their coat” may not be something accurate for all scenes...sigh
— Aug 23, 2019 12:19PM
Angela
is on page 68 of 176
Should the phrase “technical wizardry” really ever be used in conjunction with DNA? In a book like this the answer is no, but they did it anyway.
— Aug 12, 2019 11:59AM
Angela
is on page 40 of 176
An Aurora CO connection! The case studies are much better than the overview of Forensics.
— Jul 26, 2019 12:21PM
Angela
is on page 14 of 176
“Overwhelming the forensic laboratory with too many items may result in the wrong items taking priority, or key finds getting overlooked.”
— Jul 22, 2019 11:44AM

