No one has hours to scour the papers to keep up with the latest news, so we’ve curated the top news stories in the field of Forensic Science for this week. Here’s what you need to know to get out the door!
They Called Her ‘Baby Angel.’ Now, Forensic Genealogy Might Finally ID Infant Found in Mississippi River (INFORUM – 5/5/2022)
More than 10 years after a days-old infant girl was found in the Winona waters of the Mississippi River, forensic genealogy is leading investigators closer to the child’s identity.
Concealed in a white tote bag, the baby was retrieved from the river by a family of boaters on Sept 5, 2011. While they believed they were picking up trash from the river, what they discovered was something infinitely more precious.
A 7-pound baby, seemingly untouched by the circumstances, was concealed in the tote. She was found inside two plastic bags, swaddled under a green t-shirt. Inside the bag, four porcelain angels and a seeing eye bracelet, a symbol of protection, were discovered.
Body Found in a Barrel at Lake Mead is the Tip of the Iceberg. Forensic Anthropologists are Now Recovering Human Remains Following Droughts, Sea-Level Rise, and Wildfires. (INSIDER – 5/5/2022)
- A changing climate is revealing decades-old items once submerged in lakes or buried in glaciers, including human remains. For forensic anthropologists, who are tasked with retrieving them, a warming world may mean more discoveries unveiled by receding water and ice. It also means recovering victims of climate change.
On Sunday afternoon, boaters made a grim discovery along the shoreline of Nevada’s Lake Mead: human remains inside a rusty barrel. More bodies could turn up, given that water levels have receded to historic lows amid a climate change-fueled drought, according to Jennifer Byrnes, a forensic anthropologist that consults with the Clark County coroner’s office. “I would expect human remains of missing persons will probably be revealed over time, as the water level continues to recede,” Byrnes told Insider.
Philanthropists to Fund DNA Testing of Body Found at Lake Mead (Las Vegas Review-Journal – 5/5/2022)
- A group of local philanthropists who helped helped solve several homicide cases through DNA last year has offered to help the Metropolitan Police Department identify the man found stuffed in a barrel at Lake Mead National Recreational Area.
Las Vegas resident and philanthropist Justin Woo said the Las Vegas Justice League has donated $5,000, which Othram Inc. will use to test the remains.
Public’s Help Needed to Solve 2009 Kenora Cold Case (DNA Doe Project – 5/6/2022)
She was found in 2009 by a hiker walking near the Trans-Canada Highway, a small woman in a one-person tent, dressed and equipped for rugged hiking. She had died of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning a day or two before she was found, and investigators found no identification among her things. Her autopsy revealed she had had substantial facial reconstructive surgery 20-30 years prior to her death.
Ten years after the discovery of her body, investigators brought the case to the DNA Doe Project for investigative genetic genealogy to try to discover the identity of the woman nicknamed “Millie”.
“We have been diligently working on this case for over two years,” said DNA Doe Project volunteer Bryan Worters. “Due to the lack of close matches in the ancestral trees of her DNA cousins and complications related to tracing the migration of persons from Denmark to Canada, we still haven’t identified her immediate family.”
OSAC’s Human Forensic Biology Subcommittee Develops DNA Analysis Process Map (Forensic – 5/6/2022)
- The Organization of Scientific Area Committees (OSAC) for Forensic Science’s Human Forensic Biology Subcommittee, with contributions from the Scientific Working Group on DNA Analysis Methods (SWGDAM), has developed a Human Forensic DNA Analysis Process Map that captures details about the various procedures, methods and decision points most frequently encountered in human forensic biology/DNA analysis.
Forensic science service providers make many decisions that can impact the quality and accuracy of results. Process mapping is the visual representation of critical steps and decision points of a process and is a useful tool that can help forensic science disciplines provide insight into their specific activities. The Human Forensic DNA Analysis Process Map can benefit the discipline by providing a behind-the-scenes perspective into the various components and decision points in the human forensic biology/DNA analysis process.
Two Penn State Health Hospitals Launch Partnership to Support Sexual Assault Victims (Forensic – 5/6/2022)
Two Penn State Health hospitals are announcing a partnership to elevate their commitment to delivering expert care for survivors of sexual assault. Penn State Health Hampden Medical Center and Penn State Health Holy Spirit Medical Center are partnering with Penn State’s Ross and Carol Nese College of Nursing to enhance support for these patients through secure telehealth technology. Registered nurses in the emergency departments at both hospitals who have completed Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) training are joining with the College’s Sexual Assault Forensic Examination Telehealth (SAFE-T) Systems.
SAFE-T Systems, which is part of the Nese College of Nursing’s SAFE-T Center, serves rural and underserved areas through telehealth and facilitates the development of locally-based sexual assault treatment teams. SANEs are specially trained in medical forensic examination to provide a high level of care and support for victims seeking a treatment after a sexual assault. These nurses have completed a training course and are on-call for the Hampden Medical Center and Holy Spirit Medical Center emergency departments 24/7. SANEs provide comprehensive, trauma-informed, person-centered sexual assault forensic examination care.
Parabon Finding Persons of Interest (Fairfax County Times – 5/6/2022)
New York Court Halts Family DNA Searches for Crime Suspects (The Washington Post – 5/6/2022)
A panel of judges on a mid-level appeals court ruled Thursday that regulations for the technique were invalid because a state committee implemented them without consent from the Legislature.
Three of the panel’s five members voted to suspend the searches, which were challenged by a group of Black men who worried they could be targeted for investigation because their biological brothers were convicted of crimes and had genetic information stored in the state’s DNA databank.
CFSL Starts Building Repository of DNA Evidence, Wants to Save Samples for 75 Years (The Indian Express – 5/7/2022)
Officials said that DNA samples of repeat offenders, who are at times found to be involved in multiple sexual assault cases, will also be stored in the dedicated repository which is being made under the supervision of director, CFSL, Sector 36, Dr Ikramul Haque — a leading DNA expert.
Smithsonian Acquires First U.S. Rape Kit Designed by Martha Goddard (Forensic – 5/9/2022)
The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History and Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum mark the ending of Sexual Assault Awareness Month this April by announcing the joint acquisition for the Smithsonian’s permanent collections of the “Vitullo Evidence Collection Kit for Sexual Assault Examination,” the innovation that helped accelerate successful investigation and prosecution of sexual assault in the United States and whose influence continues to this day.
Martha “Marty” Goddard (1941–2015) generated the idea for the kit between 1972 and 1978 when she worked as a women’s rights advocate and founded the Citizens Committee for Victim Assistance in Chicago. Goddard understood the pain and stigma surrounding rape and realized that thousands of sexual assault cases had low prosecution rates because there was no standardized procedure for collecting and preserving evidence. Along with colleagues, she undertook a research and development process that involved interviewing policymakers, law enforcement agents, attorneys and hospital workers in a quest to understand how survivors were treated and how evidence was collected. Her goal was to design a new system to increase the probability of suspects and criminals being identified and prosecuted.
Red Wing Woman Arrested for 2003 Death of Baby Found in Lake Pepin (Minnesota Department of Public Safety – 5/9/2022)
The Goodhue County Sheriff’s Office and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) today announced an arrest in the 2003 death of a newborn baby boy discovered deceased in Lake Pepin in 2003.
The woman, Jennifer Lynn Matter, 50, of Belvidere Township, was recently identified through DNA as the child’s mother.
Goodhue County deputies and BCA agents took Matter into custody at 6:38 a.m. Monday at her Belvidere Township home without incident. She has been charged via complaint with Second Degree Murder – With Intent – Not Premeditated and Second Degree Murder – Without Intent. Matter is currently in the Goodhue County Jail. Matter is scheduled to appear in Goodhue County District Court on Tuesday. Additional information about the charges is available in the criminal complaint. Her booking photo is provided here on behalf of the Goodhue County Sheriff’s Office.
The baby boy was discovered deceased on December 7, 2003, in Lake Pepin at the Methodist Campus Beach in Frontenac. A second child, a newborn baby girl found deceased on November 4, 1999, in the Lower Boat Harbor of the Mississippi River near Red Wing, was also determined through DNA to be Matter’s child.
Forensic Genealogists Closing Cold Cases Through Your Family Tree (FOX29 – 5/9/2022)
Cold Cases sitting in filing cabinets for years waiting for authorities to find the final piece of the puzzle. Fox San Antonio’s Yami Virgin investigates new technology and a new kind of detective is using DNA and family trees to help solve cases – many thought were unsolvable.
The Skeleton in the Chimney (Madison Magazine – 5/10/2022)
The DNA Detective: How to Solve Family Mysteries with Ancestry Testing (Science Focus – 5/11/2022)
GOP Call for Albany Dems to Let Police use ‘Familial DNA’ on Cold Cases (New York Post – 5/11/2022)
Dixie County Sheriff’s Office Partners with Othram to Identify a 1990 Baby Doe (DNASolves – 5/12/2022)
2022’s DNA Hit of the Year Program Reflects on Database Loopholes (Forensic – 5/13/2022)
Ancient DNA Gives New Insights into ‘Lost’ Indigenous People of Uruguay (Forensic – 5/13/2022)
DNA Recovery Attempt Begins on Last American Slave Ship (National Geographic – 5/13/2022)
‘He Was Gone’: 32 Years After Teen Vanished, St. Louis Police Tap Genetic Forensics to Solve Case (St. Louis Post-Dispatch – 5/16/2022)
ASCLD Recognizes Top Performing Forensic Laboratories (Forensic – 5/16/2022)
The Power of DNA Databases to Solve Rapes, Missing Persons (Forensic – 5/16/2022)
Kentucky State Police Utilizes DNA Technology to Solve Missing Person Case (Kentucky State Police – 5/16/2022)
Startup White Plains Company Uses Genetic Genealogy to Solve Cold Cases (Westchester & Fairfield County Business Journals – 5/16/2022)
Tooth of an Ancient Girl Fills Gap in Human Family Tree (The New York Times – 5/16/2022)
DNA from Fingernail Scrappings Taken at 1988 Crime Scene Finally Hit to Convicted Sex Offender (Forensic – 5/18/2022)
DA’s Untested Rape Kit Initiative Results in First Indictment (Forensic – 5/18/2022)
NY Teen Found Dead after 13 Years, Sex Offender Charged (Forensic – 5/18/2022)
Cold Case: After 23 Years, Body Found in Campbell County Identified as Missing Ohio Woman (WATE – 5/18/2022)
Yuma County First Rural County in Arizona to Launch Rapid DNA Law Enforcement Program (KNWC – 5/18/2022)
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