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April 22nd, 2011

Familial DNA


This year New York joined Colorado and California as states that now use familial DNA to try to solve cold cases.

From Wikipedia:

“Familial DNA database searching (sometimes referred to as “Familial DNA” or “Familial Searching”) is the practice of creating new investigative leads in cases where DNA evidence found at the scene of a crime (forensic profile) strongly resembles that of an existing DNA profile (offender profile) in a state DNA database but there is not an exact match.”

The picture is of Lonnie D. Franklin Jr., 57, who was arrested in California last year and charged with 10 counts of murder and one of attempted murder. The state DNA lab linked Franklin’s son’s DNA (who had been convicted of a felony weapons charge) to evidence from crimes scenes of serial killer known as the Grim Sleeper.

From NY1: “According to the New York Post, starting April 1st, the city medical examiner’s office will begin notifying police and prosecutors if partial DNA collected from 25 cold case crime scenes matches DNA profiles of any convicted felons in the state’s databank.”

The ACLU and others are critical of the practice, saying it is an invasion of privacy. I would like to hear more specifics about what the dangers of this practice might be.

The picture is by AP photographer Nick Ut.

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March 27th, 2011

Rhode Island Crime Lab Article

“Two days after Thanksgiving, a grandmother was brutally murdered inside the Pawtucket home where she’d lived for most of her life. The next month, a Providence man was found in a puddle of blood inside his house, where the bars on the windows and spike-topped fence had failed to keep his killer away.

In both cases, detectives combed the crime scenes, searching for clues in blood stains, hairs, skin cells and other substances the killers may have left behind.

But the forensics lab at the Health Department is so backlogged that it takes from six months to more than a year to analyze DNA in most violent-crime cases. Lesser crimes can take longer.”

That is beginning of a very well researched article written by Amanda Milkovits for The Providence Journal. The full article is here.

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January 30th, 2011

Rodney Alcala Coming to NYC

Hello! Is that Detective Wendell Stradford in the back there? I wasn’t aware when I first wrote that NYPD detectives were investigating serial killer Rodney Alcala that I knew one of the investigators. The ABC news story about the case can be viewed here.

Alcala will be extradited to New York to stand trial for the 1971 murder of 23-year-old Cornelia Crilley and the 1977 murder of 23-year-old Ellen Hover. Good work Det. Stradford and Det. Steve Braccini (and many others who were working with you, I’m sure). I believe they’ve been working on this case for seven years.

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January 19th, 2011

Museum of the City of New York Online Resource

The Museum of the City of New York recently made a collection of digitized images available online. The New York Public Library has had a searchable database of images for years, but it’s exciting to have a new resource of new images.

The MCNY is still getting the kinks out, but I did a search on the word “murder” and these images came up. The pictures were taken by Jacob A. Riis in 1895.

The caption for this one reads: Bottle Alley Mulberry Bend in its worst days, picture used as evidence in murder case—cross on stairs shows where murderer stood and did shooting.

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The caption for the one below reads: Bottle Alley Mulberry Bend, X shows where the victim stood when shot. It’s hard to see the X, but it’s on the bottom of the staircase to the right.

There was also a few words handwritten along the top one: Headquarters of the Wbyo Gang.

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