I spent the five happiest years of my life in a morgue. As a forensic scientist in the Cleveland coroner’s office I analyzed gunshot residue on hands and clothing, hairs, fibers, paint, glass, DNA, blood and many other forms of trace evidence, as well as crime scenes. Now I'm a certified latent print examiner and CSI for a police department in Florida. I also write a series of forensic suspense novels, turning the day job into fiction. My books have been translated into six languages.
For homework assignments can you please email me offline at: lisa-black@live. com and I can send you a list of answers to these types of questions.
You can say that this blood came from this person. But you have to have a DNA sample from that person to compare it to. (A swab from inside the mouth is fine, it doesn't need to be blood.) or they need to be already in the DNA database.
Sure I'll catch you when I'm back at work tomorrow.
I'm sorry, I answered this a week ago but somehow it didn't post. A pathologist will usually estimate time of death during the autopsy. It can be very simple and require the body temperature and not much more, or it can be very difficult and cover a wide range of possible time, especially if a lot of time has elapsed since death. The more time, the harder it gets.
Beauty Queen
Have you ever suspected that the judging in a pageant was rigged?
Day Care Provider
Is it ok w/your employer if you babysit one of the kids outside of daycare hours?
Hotel Employee
What was the craziest request you ever got from a guest?
We work 40 hours a week plus overtime when needed.Right now I'm on four 10's but I was on 12 hour rotating shifts, 6 am to 6 pm, and will be going back to that next year. I liked that schedule.
The average autopsy takes 1 to 4 hours.
There's only two kinds of blood, blood and menstrual blood, and as far as I know there's been no studies using menstrual blood.
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