midnight in an alley. It was believable to find out that the gender of the body was a girl. She flashed her flashlight on the face and the murder seemed to have tortured her; it was hard recognizing the identity. We better get her to the lab so the forensics can tell the cause of the death. Once the ambulance entered the morgue and parked at the back ramp. The techs removed the gurney and wheeled the body into the morgue receiving area. After filling out the necessary paperwork for the
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Hypnosis is used in both Clinical and Forensic psychology. Hypnosis has been approved as a valid clinical tool. It helps to open suppressed knowledge to be recalled. Often times this knowledge would not be available in the conscious mind. The hypnotist will place the patient/ client in a hypnotic state and then proceed to ask a series of questions that may trigger memory. There are few problems with hypnosis in clinical psychology, but poses some in forensic psychology. My paper will be asking
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Organic versus Inorganic Jeremy Merritt CRJ 311 Forensics Instructor Janice Bella March 4, 2013 Organic versus Inorganic Growing up as a kid I was forced to watch the television shows my parents enjoyed. During that era murder mysteries were extremely popular. Shows like Jake and the Fatman, Colombo, Matlock, and Murder She Wrote just to name a few. None of those shows relied heavily on science per say, moreover, those shows were written with the most insignificant clue becoming the one
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show the weaknesses in the U.S. justice system. This paper will touch on the causes that lead to wrongful convictions and discuss possible solutions. The main factors of wrongful convictions are eyewitness misidentification, misleading/unreliable forensics, false confessions (coerced/intimidated), witness perjury, prosecutorial misconduct, insufficient lawyering, racism and implicit bias. Since the first DNA exoneration conviction in the United States case that
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work. Police agencies benefit tremendously from computers in accessing criminal and fingerprint databases, reporting offenses electronically, using GPS systems to track calls and speeding up forensics work. 1. Police Databases o Police use two main types of databases. Fingerprint databases allow forensics teams to run fingerprints found at a crime scene against prints in the system. These prints may be on file because of a person's criminal history or because of that person's job or licensing requirements
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A Medical Examiner is also known as a Forensic Pathologist. A Medical Examiner is a subspecialist in Pathology who has expertise in examining people who die in various ways. The examiner will examine sudden deaths, violent deaths, unexpected deaths, and any other deaths that are possible. They are experts in determining the cause of death and the reason for death. Also, they are responsible for performing an autopsy to help determine the reason for death (Office of the Medical Investigator, n.d.)
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CRIMINAL JUSTICE What can I do with this degree? AREAS SOCIAL SERVICES Corrections Counseling Juvenile Justice Casework Administration Probations & Parole Victim Advocacy EMPLOYERS State and federal correction facilities County jails Precinct station houses Prison camps Youth correction facilities Medium-security correction facilities Voluntary correction facilities Halfway houses and pre-release programs Reintegration programs Alternative schools Juvenile detention centers Juvenile group
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sexually assaulted his cousin, Lillian Shurson, provided information that Madelyn may also be a victim of Justin’s. A forensic interview of Madelyn was already performed and through that process a disclosure was made. Justin is now filing the police report based off of those disclosures. Madelyn was interviewed at Kids’ Space Child Advocacy Center on October 24, 2016
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human is not a recorder and as such, it is a reliable source of information. It is because eyewitnesses cannot remember everything exactly the way it happened. Similarly, Junk science is another cause of wrongful convictions. There has been numerous forensic methods for testing but have brought no or little scientific justification and with
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Submit a 3 page paper that 1) explains the difference between litigating an embezzlement case in civil court and criminal court, and 2) discuss the role of an expert witness/fraud examiner in each proceeding. There are two major factions of the United States court system: civil cases and criminal cases. Both take place in courtrooms all across the country, but there are several differences that separate the two as well as the role of fraud examiner in each proceeding. The major difference of the
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