During the Nemesis investigation Harry Hole tries to convince the Chief that his partner Tom Waaler is a smuggling Prince who is a kingpin. Prince has killed a lot of people and is smuggling weapons into Oslo. Since there's no evidence that Prince is being smuggled in. The Chief calls it off. Then the Chief inspector leaves for three weeks, and someone’s murdered. Harry is assigned to an investigation with Tom and Tom wants no part in it at first. Harry is already on track to getting fired from the force and forces himself to get out of his alcoholic stage. Harry starts the investigation and discovers a red five-pointed diamond under the eyelid of the victim and that a finger is missing from her left hand. Then another murder happens and this
On April 13 at approximately 10:00pm Rupert and Rupina Clodhopper returned home to find their back patio door had been broken into. The police questioned them about the $10,000 in jewelry the kept in a wall safe. They said only six of their employees, Mike, Bob, Chris, Mary, Susan, and Jessica, knew about it. The police evidence technician team found broken glass and a glove with blood on it. The glass was from the glass window pane of the patio door. Each employee was then asked about their whereabouts during the time of the robbery and to give blood samples. The purpose of this lab is to find out who broke into the Clodhoppers home by testing the blood samples from the employees and the glove. Analysis:
gunshot wound to her head. A firearm was found in the bedroom and seized by officers. Eaton was detained at the police station. He spoke with officers and said he
On Tuesday October 4th, Andy Walker (16), bleed to death in the sidewalk in an alley. His death was specified at around quarter to 12 a.m. This situation was investigate even more further, and some results came to the officers of the community. After investigating, it is resulted that one of the Royals’ member was stabbed right right below the rib cage. There are ones that witnessed that he was alive for a while after he was stabbed, and died as the time passed. It is unknown who is the criminal in this case, however it is predicted that high chances one of the members of the “other gang” (name unknown), has stabbed the young royal. Angela Samson (19) has contacted the officers for emergency, however the young royal was found to be dead, covered
The facts of the case is LTJG Burgundy and Tamland are suspected of murdering a fellow junior officer from another command while on liberty in San Diego, CA. In order from causing panic in the suspects, NCIS Special Agent Mantooth contacts their command to ask for assistance in collecting evidence, which are the suspects DNA evidence via fingerprints, to compare with those found on the murder weapon. LTJG Burgundy’s Executive Officer will call each subject into her office under false pretense. She successfully attains his fingerprints via glass of water.
Later, two hatchets and two axes were obtained but, only one seemed to connect with the case since it had blood on it (Wigmore 825). This was one of the pieces of evidence show the murder weapon that was used to kill Andrew and Abby. Another evidence, Dr. Seabury W. Bowen, the doctor who came to the crime scene on the day of the murder; therefore, he was asked by the court if he is able to see any difference in the photograph of Andrew’s death scene than what he remembers from the crime scene. Then, Dr. Bowen stated that “‘I don’t think the photograph shows the ease that is natural to a person that is asleep or lying down. I think the form has sunk down a little from what it was when I first saw it…
A failure in the justice system had taken place. Kirk Bloodsworth was the first person to be exonerated based off of DNA evidence. During the course of the investigation it was shown the detectives should not have allowed the two boys to be together during the creation of the suspects sketch. The prosecution had withheld exculpatory evidence, namely evidence of other suspects; albeit, the suspects were not involved in the murders, they could have helped sway the jury decision. Allowing witnesses to see images of Bloodsworth prior to a line-up also proved detrimental. Inept defense lawyers allowing for the absence of alibi witnesses also weakened his efforts. Detective Capal had wrongly testified about Bloodsworth’s afore knowledge of the murder
However the events that took place afterwards, played an important part in Oswalds conviction. This incident was another murder, this time of a policeman, Officer J D Tipppit, who was shot through the head at point-blank range. A witness, Mrs Helen Markham, stated that Tippit had stopped to question a man who produced a gun and shot Tippit before running off. Oswald was charged for Tippit's murder as ballistics confirmed that the spent cartridges found beside Tippit's body were of the type used in the .38 Smith and Wesson revolver found on Oswald when he was arrested. Mrs Markham also identified Oswald from an identity parade as the murderer. This incident indicated that Oswald was indeed capable of murder. There also didn't appear to be any clear motive for the murder and the police presumed that Oswald had panicked and had shot Tippit when he had stopped to question him. But why had Oswald panicked? He may have been on edge if he had just murdered the President and could have overreacted!
question Oswald and get any type of concrete evidence against him, a man named Jack Ruby
Did Harry Gold Make the Right Decision to Spy? In the book, BOMB, by Steve Sheinkin, Harry Gold is described as a spy who shares American secrets about the atomic bomb, with the Soviets. During WWII, rumors began to spread about America’s atomic bomb, and the Soviet Union wanted to know more. To do so, Soviet officials sent agents to America, who were told to scout scientists and engineers inside the project who were willing to share the secrets of the composition of the atomic bomb. Harry Gold, an American citizen, was scouted in America as a spy who would contact somebody inside the project and send the information back to the Soviet Union, which is highly illegal.
Stephanie Clifford’s A Shot to the Heart tells the story of Peter Forcelli, a Bronx detective that had arrested and convicted Edward Garry, an innocent man. Garry was charged with the robbery of Irene’s New Hope Grocery and the murder of retired NYPD officer Oswald Potter. When the robbery occurred, Potter attempted to stop the robbery when shouting, “I am a police officer” and knocking a suspect to the ground. Later gunshots were heard coming from the grocery store as two suspects fled the scene. Potters was found collapsed in a car with a single gunshot wound to the chest and later was pronounced dead at a hospital. Forcelli the explains that the arrival of a new system called CompStat and the murder of a police officer created an immense pressure to solve the case as quickly as possible. Basing their arrest off two unconfident eyewitnesses who picked Garry out of a line up, without any physical evidence or even a confession. Not long after Forcelli joined the A.T.F. where he soon developed his interest in pursuing wrongful convictions. His new passion had reminded him of Edward Garry’s case and the idea that a man was convicted on such little evidence made him sick. Forcelli then made it his goal to exonerate Garry, an innocent man serving a life sentence. Forcelli then notes the difficulty of freeing an innocent man from his sentence is much more difficult than convicting him in the first place.
At around 5:00am the detectives on the case arrive at O.J.’s home. The evidence found at the scene of the crime was a bloody glove and a dark grey knitted hat said to have been left by the killer, and bloody footprint in the driveway of O.J.’s estate. Immediately after O.J.’s flight lands in Chicago, Detective Ron Phillips informs him that his ex-wife is dead. O.J.’s first response: “Who killed her?”
The officers than began to search the home after finding that there was no drugs in the home and that they had the wrong home. The officers planted drugs in Kathryn basement while she is dying but stairs, after the shooting the same three officers met up at an unknown location to talk about what happen, so that they could all have one story. The paperwork from the investigations stated drugs was from in the home had been false. During the investigation the three officers admitted to lying when they submitted drugs they found in Kathryn home. The three officers was charged manslaughter and sentence to five, six, and ten years.
Detective Mark Fuhrman testified for the prosecution side that he was the first detective at the crime scene and he was the one to find the bloody glove. He testified at a preliminary hearing that he climbed the wall of O.J.'s estate and found a bloody glove on a path. Authorities stated the dark right - handed leather glove was the mate of the other glove found near the murder scene.
The homicide scene introduces Holmes's incredible reasoning processes. In a search to figure out the answer to a death, the local detectives call in Holmes. The man, who had a boarding pass for a flight that crashed the day before, appears suspiciously dead in the trunk of a car. Within thirty seconds of investigation, Holmes's observations lead him to over four conclusions. As Holmes searches through the contents found on the dead man's body, the point of view is placed directly through Sherlock's eyes. His eyes focus on intricate
Throughout the story, readers see Watson doing some investigating without much luck. However, when Holmes shows back up it is like all the little thing that Watson is looking over is starting to make since. When readers first learn of Ronald Adair’s murder, Watson notices a bullet lodged in his head, but that is about the only clues the readers get to see besides a pile of money laid upon a table. As soon as Holmes shows up though these little clues start to piece together. After the capture of Colonel Moran and his air-gun Holmes says, “…I knew of the existence of this remarkable gun, and I knew also that one of the best shots in the world would be behind it” (Doyle, 1994, p. 246). At first the clues look pointless, but Holmes shows the reader how Moran is using them in his attacks. Even though the clues did little to nothing to help the reader in solving the crime themselves, Doyle did provide clues for the reader that sparked the uncertainty of the