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Cover of Silent Witnesses: The Often Gruesome but Always Fascinating History of Forensic Science

Silent Witnesses: The Often Gruesome but Always Fascinating History of Forensic Science

✍ Scribed by McCrery, Nigel


Book ID
108510391
Publisher
Chicago Review Press
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
2 MB
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781613730027

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Crime novelist and former police officer Nigel McCrery provides an account of all the major areas of forensic science from around the world over the past two centuries. The book weaves dramatic narrative and scientific principles together in a way that allows readers to figure out crimes along with the experts. Readers are introduced to such fascinating figures as Dr. Edmond Locard, the "French Sherlock Holmes"; Edward Heinrich, "Wizard of Berkeley," who is credited with having solved more than 2,000 crimes; and Alphonse Bertillon, the French scientist whose guiding principle, "no two individuals share the same characteristics," became the core of criminal identification. Landmark crime investigations examined in depth include a notorious murder involving blood evidence and defended by F. Lee Bailey, the seminal 1936 murder that demonstrated the usefulness of the microscope in examining trace evidence, the 1849 murder of a wealthy Boston businessman that demonstrated how...