Saturday and Sunday are the best part of the week.
Mark Twain used fingerprintts to solve murders in Life on the mississippi and Puddin'head Wilson; these were popular books.
One of my friends, who won a contest by playing a variety of
So after Ms. Sullivan’s death, she becomes the 11th victim of Albert DeSalvo, also known as the Boston Strangler, and the case goes cold for years. The crazy thing is that the DNA sample taken was from DeSalvo’s nephew! Yes, you read that right! The beauty of DNA which I have to say, can cost a lot of money and requires expertise. I mean, some cases need exhumations, like in this case, so those type of testings have to be pricey! The National Institute of Justice has a funding program which helps in the examination of “cold cases” all around the states, this program is called: Solving Cold Cases with DNA Program.…
The case of Lizzie Borden, who allegedly took a hatchet to her step-mother and father, took place in 1892 and to this day has yet to be solved. To solve a case like this one there has to be a substantial amount of physical evidence that leads to the suspect. In the late 1800’s there were not many forensic tools available to police and investigators. Fingerprinting, lie detection, and hair testing were among many of these tools that were not available. This being said there were different tactics used by police, some of which were helpful and others which were not.…
3. Edward Foster studied fingerprint analysis in the US and introduced it to Canada. In 1911, Foster testified as a fingerprint expert in the Jennings case. Fingerprints in the wet paint next to Mr. Hiller, the murder victim, were the only clue.…
3.Edward Foster was a pioneer in fingerprint analysis. He was an expert witness in the Jennings Case, in which he showed the courts that the fingerprints in the wet paint were that of the murderer, Thomas Jennings.…
When I was dusting my apartment for prints I found about 5 different prints and 2 partial prints. I found one partial print on the glass on my coffee table in the living room and one partial print on the night stand in my room. I found 2 prints on the glass on the sliding door to my patio and 1 print on the mirror in the master bathroom, 1 print on the back of a CD found on the end table in the living room and 1 print on the dining room table in the. I went to JoAnn Fabrics to get a Slinky Science fingerprint science kit so I could use the powder and the feather from the box. The powder came in a bottle so it made it really hard to get prints and I actually had my boyfriend put prints on the things I listed so I could use the powder and the powder was also white and made it hard to see. When I used the feather it would smudge the print and I would have to try and use it a different direction. If I were to side to side with the feather it would smudge the print but if I would go up and down it would push the powder away so I was able to see the print better but not clearly. I did not find any prints in my apartment due to my boyfriend cleaning everything. This is why I only find the prints I did because I asked him to put the prints there. Yes I could tell the difference between the prints if I were to put my print right next to it. My finger print has loops and my boyfriend’s prints have tent arches on them. Some of the surfaces that I would think I would find prints on are door knobs, TV, the handle on a microwave, the keys to the car, the thermostat and light switches, books, cell phones and you could also get prints off of duct tape and the door handles of a car that has metal handles and you can get prints off of garbage bags also and DVD cases. When I was doing this assignment I found that trying to get a print from surfaces…
In 1892, Francisca Rojas was found with intense neck injuries while her two sons were found with their throats cut open and dead. Francisca Rojas fanatically accused her neighbor who, under extreme interrogation, would not confess of committing murder and injuring Rojas’s neck. Inspector Alvarez, the head of the case, went to the crime scene and found a bloody fingerprint next to where the boys laid. After comparing the fingerprint to those of the neighbor, mother, sons, and other suspects, Alvarez deduced that it matched the mother’s right thumbprint. She then confessed to the murdering of her sons. The discovery of the print saved an innocent neighbor from harsh punishment. Fingerprints help solve crimes and save people's lives everyday. For that reason, it is important for people to understand fingerprints significance.…
How are fingerprints discovered at crime scenes? usually it is easy to be seen on items like plastic prints, however scientist are using a reflected ultraviolet imaging system to aim uv light where fingerprints might be, and if there a fingerprint will reflect the light back.…
1. What are some of the challenges with fingerprint evidence? What is science doing to make fingerprint analysis better?…
Think of Germany as a heads and tails coin. The book Thief is about a girl named Liesel who lives with her foster parents Hans and Rosa Hubberman. Liesel has a friend named Rudy. They both go around stealing food, but Liesel not only stole food, she stole books. Death (Narrator) was soon fond of Liesel and he then gave her the nick name The Book Thief. This novel is great to understand the other side of Germany. Unlike other stories that talk about Jews, concentration camps, Nazi’s, this novel talks about how a family were not influeced by Nazi propaganda. In addition your see that Germany has two sides to it; one that obeys Hitler, and one that goes against him.…
expert in the Jennings case. The fingerprints left in the wet paint next to the body and…
A muckraker is someone who exposes the unpleasant truths that society likes to pretend don’t exist. Mark Twain was a muckraker. In Twain’s book, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, all the grime, racism, and vulgarity of the South in the mid 1800s, is depicted accurately and vividly. The story is set in St. Petersburg, Missouri, and follows a 13 year old boy, Huck, as he struggles against society internally to hold on to who he truly is, and externally to sneak a family slave up the Mississippi River and to the North. In this great American novel, Mark Twain utilizes his trademark sense of humor, and clever satirical writing style to pull readers in and show them the world from his realist point of view.…
These days, fingerprinting people seems pretty cunning. With a DNA database, fingerprints seem like a reliable source. For example, if a homicide were to occur and investigators found five peoples difference fingerprints close to the scene, unskilled jurors may think the prints are associated with the crime, and accuse all five people guilty. The jurors would need more evidence to actually, by law, accuse a person, or people guilty of a crime, rather than just finger prints.…
Many believe certain things about Twain's "Great American novel," makes it a racist book, like the overuse of the word, "nigger," and the given depiction of the black slave, Jim. However, there is a substantial amount of evidence that this book was not written out of hate, but in hope that Twain could change the ideals of skin color of the white people around him.…
Twain started out writing light humorous stories, then added rich humor, strong narratives, and social criticism, but he evolved into a chronicler of the vanities, war, tranvestism, Satan, hypocrisies, political, ethics, and stupidity and murderous acts of mankind. Twain had been known to use his real life experience to help him writes, so that was why he changed his issues and theme over time. Twain’s writing style changed according what happened during each period of his life. Twain’s writing perspective changed from romanticism (Tom Sawyer) 1876, to realism (Life on the Mississippi) 1883, then to naturalism (The Mysterious Stranger) 1909. Twain used theme such as: conflict between history and the modern world in The Innocent Abroad, race, religion, dreams, supernatural in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, travel in A Tramp Abroad, inequality and unfairness in The Prince and the Pauper, growth of America in Life on the Mississippi, morals and ethics, friendships, and family in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, chivalry, justice, and education in a Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, and racial inequalities in Pudd'nhead Wilson. These are changes in theme made when changes occurred during his life. Mark Twain had written essays, verses, plays, novels, poems, newspaper article, short stories, speeches, letters, and tall tales. Twain was most famous for his novels and short stories.…
In the biography Mark Twain: The Divided Mind of America's Best-Loved Writer by David W. Levy it was made clear that Mark Twain was very involved with all the society changes in his time period. Many of his novels have a theme circulating around the different changes and problems in society including slavery and racism. Mark Twain has been through the years preceding the Civil War, the Gilded Age and industrialization, this book explores his attitude and actions during the time period. This book is very good with explaining and going into detail about what happened in Mark Twain’s life in the 18th and 19th century.…