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Cold cases are typically cases which have gone unsolved for more than one year. The term is used to differentiate between unsolved cases which do not have cold hits as yet. A jurisdiction may have hundreds of unsolved cases in which evidence was never submitted for DNA typing. Some jurisdictions have developed protocols to prioritize their resources, based on established criteria which may include:
- A suspect lead
- Whether there is physical evidence which may yield DNA evidence
- Whether the victim and/or witnesses are still available
Ideally, cases which meet these criteria should be reviewed by a multidisciplinary team composed of prosecutors, case investigators and lab analysts to determine what evidence should be submitted for DNA typing and to develop an investigative strategy.
Additional Online Courses
- What Every First Responding Officer Should Know About DNA Evidence
- Collecting DNA Evidence at Property Crime Scenes
- DNA – A Prosecutor’s Practice Notebook
- Crime Scene and DNA Basics
- Laboratory Safety Programs
- DNA Amplification
- Population Genetics and Statistics
- Non-STR DNA Markers: SNPs, Y-STRs, LCN and mtDNA
- Firearms Examiner Training
- Forensic DNA Education for Law Enforcement Decisionmakers
- What Every Investigator and Evidence Technician Should Know About DNA Evidence
- Principles of Forensic DNA for Officers of the Court
- Law 101: Legal Guide for the Forensic Expert
- Laboratory Orientation and Testing of Body Fluids and Tissues
- DNA Extraction and Quantitation
- STR Data Analysis and Interpretation
- Communication Skills, Report Writing, and Courtroom Testimony
- Español for Law Enforcement
- Amplified DNA Product Separation for Forensic Analysts