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May 1, 2025
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Forensics History Timeline
Category:
História
Atualizado:
5 meses atrás
Forensics, Section B
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Giavanna
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Eventos
July 1st, 1923: The first ever American crime lab is opened in Los Angeles by August Vollmer, an L.A. police chief. Rex Welsh is appointed as the department's first ever criminalist.
November 24th, 1932: The Federal Bureau of Investigation establishes its own crime lab, as directed by J. Edgar Hoover. It grows largely over the years, preceeding its L.A counterpart.
≈1920: Edmond Locard, who established a French crime lab predating the first American one, describes his Principle of Exchange.
June 28th, 1993: Daubert vs. Merrel Dow Pharmaceuticals is closed, and the Daubert Standard is created.
September 10th, 1984: British geneticist Sir Alec Jeffreys discovers techniques to profile humans based on their DNA.
≈1930: Dr. Karl Landsteiner is awarded a Nobel Prize for his contribution to the classification of blood types.
≈1903: Fingerprint lifting and powdering becomes popularized in the U.S, and is used by not only the police but also the U.S Marines, Army, and Navy.
≈1989: One of the first police sketches is created to help aid a Michigan kidnapping investigation. After this point, they see a rise in use in U.S forensics.
≈1950: Spectrometry, the gold standard of chemical detection, is improved largely by John Beynon and Fred McLafferty. The use of spectrometers skyrockets in U.S forensics.
≈1918: Dr. Alexander Gettler opens the first American toxicology laboratory in New York.
≈1986: The first ever criminal case to involve DNA recognition begins, and ends years later with a correct conviction.
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