Kentucky law enforcement agencies are increasingly using forensic genealogy to identify crime victims and suspects.
After 33 years, Boston police have identified the victim in a 1991 homicide using investigative genetic genealogy. On Dec. 4, 1991, officers found the body of a man who had suffered a a stab wound ...
Forensic genealogy uses DNA evidence to ... Investigators waited until the suspect discarded his own DNA (by throwing away a dirty tissue) to match it back to the crime scenes.
Kentucky officials have several identified homicide victims and suspects by matching their DNA to potential relatives.
such as Ancestry.com or 23andMe, to generate their own DNA profiles and then uploaded them to GEDmatch, a public genetic-genealogy website. Jacquez was arrested Saturday in Las Vegas and booked ...
In the early 1980s, one of Rebecca's family members mistakenly identified human remains found in Little Rock as belonging to her, according to the release.
The storage, transit, and destruction of sensitive biological material should be considered by stakeholders to be an important facet of overall genetic information security and cyberbiosecurity.
"Who was Judy Doe?" That question had haunted sheriff's investigators in Lake County, Fla., since a body was discovered there in 1984. The answer, officials announced on Jan. 29, was Rebecca Sue Hill, ...
A team of experts using modern DNA and forensic science to give a name to victims of violent crime positively identified and ...
This episode of Arizona Crime Uncovered follows the story of two Jane Does who were both found dead in Mohave County decades ...
In the early 1980s, one of Rebecca's family members mistakenly identified human remains found in Little Rock as belonging to ...
More than 40 years ago, a body was discovered along the side of a dirt road near Lake Dorr in Altoona. For Detective Zachary ...