Medicolegal Death Investigation Considerations for Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs
Medical examiners/coroners (ME/C) have identified prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) as valuable data sources that can aid in carrying out their roles. An increasing number of ME/Cs use decedents’ PDMP data to assist in determining whether, and to what extent, prescription drugs caused or contributed to an individual’s death. The experience of ME/Cs with PDMPs indicates that PDMP data can assist in many phases of forensic investigations, both in the laboratory and in the field.
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DART-MS Data Interpretation Tool and Other Resources for Seized Drug Analysis
With the increased prevalence of DART-MS in forensic laboratories comes an increased need for tools and resources. This webinar will highlight the new NIST/NIJ DART-MS Data Interpretation Tool (DIT), a freely available software tool that allows users to interpret DART-MS data resulting in improved presumptive screening of seized drug evidence. Other resources to assist with adoption and implementation of the DART-MS DIT will also be discussed.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on October 21, 2021.
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Mapping Technologies for Crime Scenes
Low-cost computing power and capture devices, as well as advances in machine learning tools, allow for rapid and affordable photogrammetry tools. These tools dramatically improve crime scene documentation by producing highly accurate, three-dimensional representations of crime scenes in high resolution.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on October 14, 2021.
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Overdose Fatality Investigation Techniques: Lessons Learned from Project ECHO
The Association of State and Territorial Health Agencies (ASTHO) will provide an overview of the Project ECHO model and how the model has been adapted to create a supportive learning community of coroners and medical examiners dedicated to improving the investigation and certification of overdose deaths.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on October 7, 2021.
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Footwear Evidence Conclusions: A Discussion of Standards, Recommendations, and Structure
This webinar will provide an opportunity to discuss some of the post-SWGTREAD considerations for articulating findings (interpretations, limitations, opinions, and results) as well as a platform to exchange thoughts, consider suggested conclusion structures, and observe examples related to articulating footwear evidence conclusions.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on September 30, 2021.
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Sam Quinones - The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth
Sam Quinones is a Los Angeles-based freelance journalist and an international award-winning author of four books of narrative nonfiction. Quinones’ latest book, The Least of Us: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth, will be featured in this FTCoE webinar celebrating National Forensic Science Week.
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Introduction to the Forensic Anthropology Database for Assessing Methods Accuracy
Data availability is the cornerstone of progression of any scientific inquiry. For forensic anthropologists, the data sources are limited, as they must be contextually appropriate (temporal, geographical, etc.) for study and application in forensic research on human variation. In this webinar, the presenters will discuss The Forensic Anthropology Database for Assessing Methods Accuracy (FADAMA), a database that offers access to unique, innovative, and nuanced data. The webinar will cover the database’s goals, ethical considerations, research potential, data accessibility, and more.
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Best Practices for Forensic Digital Image Processing
When processing a digital image for scientific analysis and comparison, there are proper procedures that must be followed. This is to ensure the processed image’s admissibility in court and to provide the highest level of clarity and detail possible. Adobe Photoshop provides many tools for processing digital images; however, there are some tools that should not be used in forensic digital image processing.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on August 5, 2021.
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Image Quality and Clarity: The Keys to Forensic Digital Image Processing
Analyzing, comparing, and evaluating forensic digital images relies on understanding two essential elements: image quality and image clarity. Resolution provides image quality, while bit depth provides clarity between the details in an image. It is important to understand how image quality and clarity can affect the probative value of a forensic digital image as well as an examiner’s ability to accurately analyze those images.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on August 3, 2021.
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Multiple Perspectives on Overdose Fatality Reviews
This webinar will provide an overview of overdose fatality reviews (OFRs) with a specific focus on engaging partnerships with coroners, medical examiners, and medicolegal death investigators. The presenters will highlight OFRs that have been implemented by engaging the medicolegal death investigation system and will discuss challenges and recommendations associated with implementing an OFR. The webinar will consist of three presentations on OFRs highlighting a county-level, a rural community, and a state-wide approach.
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Novel Psychoactive Substance Naming Conventions & Challenges
Over the last ten years, numerous novel psychoactive substances (NPS) have emerged in the recreational drug supply. Upon synthesis or discovery, each of these drugs has been given a name other than its IUPAC chemical name, primarily for ease of communication. This has resulted in various naming convention for NPS, sometimes multiple within a given subclass. This webinar is aimed at tackling the naming conventions for NPS and the associated challenges encountered along the way.
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Developing an Unbiased Laboratory Culture, 2021 ASCLD Train the Director Webinar Series
This webinar will facilitate a discussion about bias in a crime laboratory including what is bias in forensics, how it can impact your operations, why it is important, and considerations when building this culture. The webinar will include important aspects of an unbiased culture, symptoms that your culture is biased, and examples from the Phoenix Police Department, the Virginia Department of Forensic Sciences, and ICITAP’s.
This webinar was hosted by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence in July 2021.
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Best Practices for Engaging Participants in Video Conferences, 2021 ASCLD Train the Director Webinar Series
In this webinar, attendees will learn a variety of strategies to keep participants engaged in an online meeting environment. In addition to reviewing these strategies, attendees will also be provided with factors to keep in mind when creating and selecting strategies for engagement. Attendees will also learn about features available in Zoom. T
his webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on July 7, 2021.
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Microhaplotypes: A Comprehensive Forensic DNA Marker
Microhaplotypes (microhaps) are biomarkers fewer than 300 nucleotides long that display multiple allelic combinations. The main advantages of microhaps over conventional short tandem repeats (STRs) include the 1) absence of stutter, 2) same-size alleles within each locus, 3) lower mutation rate, and 4) ancestry informative alleles. These forensically relevant loci can yield a power of discrimination similar to STRs while enhancing human identification (HID), mixture deconvolution, and biogeographic ancestry prediction.
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The Utility of Microbes in Forensic Science
The webinar will cover microbial research in nontraditional forensics such as environmental contamination, foodborne illness, plant pathogens, and antibiotic resistance source tracking. The webinar will conclude with needs that must be met for chains of custody and current limitations to forensic microbiology.
This webinar was hosted by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on June 21, 2021.
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Successful Onboarding in Crime Laboratories
In this webinar, the presenter will cover key components of successful onboarding in a crime lab, including setting employee expectations and making the employee feel like part of the team. The presenter will go over an onboarding checklist so you can devise one that suits your agency’s needs. Lastly, the presenter will discuss how successful onboarding can get the new employee “fired up” and increase employee engagement overall.
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A Comprehensive Look at LatentSleuth
LatentSleuth is a novel software tool set designed for (and with direct feedback from) latent print examiners. The toolset includes a small-scale automated fingerprint identification system (AFIS) matcher that leverages a novel matching algorithm that calculates a warp between a latent print image and a given reference print image. This webinar will demonstrate a comprehensive quantification of a latent images entire structure and how that quantification is exploited in a commercially available workstation for latent print examination.
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Firearms 3D Technology: Advantages & Value for Implementing 3D Technologies
This webinar will provide an overview of the validation, implementation of 3D technology at the FBI Laboratory’s Firearms/Toolmarks Unit. This presentation will highlight the process, including Standard Operating Procedures, laboratory workflow, selection of casework, blind verification, reexamination of casework using light microscopy and Daubert preparation.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on June 2, 2021, as part of the 2021 ASCLD Train the Director Series.
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Post-mortem Computed Tomography Potpourri of Unnatural Deaths
In the sixth and final webinar, participants will be introduced to the use of PMCT in the investigation of a variety of unnatural deaths not discussed in previous webinars. Topics include overdose deaths, select asphyxial mechanisms of death, and sharp force injury.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on May 18, 2021.
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Post-mortem Computed Tomography of Natural Death
In the fifth webinar, participants will be introduced to the use of PMCT in the investigation of natural deaths. At the New Mexico OMI, a PMCT scan may be used to rule out trauma in apparently natural deaths, or to confirm a natural cause of death. Depending on investigative details (circumstances, age, and medical history), and the PMCT findings, pathologists may choose to perform an external exam or a full autopsy.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on May 11, 2021.
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Post-mortem Computed Tomography of Blunt Force Injury
This webinar will introduce participants to the use of PMCT in the diagnosis of blunt force trauma. PMCT scan may be used to diagnose fatal trauma in certain situations, allowing an external examination with postmortem CT to supplant an autopsy, which may better honor religious and cultural requests of grieving family members. Non-suspicious, traumatic deaths, such as motor vehicle collisions, are such an example. Additionally, PMCT often provides additional documentation of internal injuries where fatal injuries are obvious on external examination.
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Post-mortem Computed Tomography of Gunshot Wounds
In the third webinar, participants will be introduced to the use of PMCT for examining decedents with gunshot wounds, both homicidal and self-inflicted. At the New Mexico OMI, a PMCT scan is performed in virtually all gunshot wound (GSW) related deaths. In cases of suspected homicide or suspicious suicides, autopsy is also performed. However, in non-suspicious cases involving self-inflicted GSW, PMCT is combined with an external examination, and sometimes a partial autopsy to retrieve a retained projectile, replacing the full autopsy.
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Overview of Post-mortem Computed Tomography for Pathologist Triage
In the second webinar of the Post-mortem Computed Tomography Series, participants will be introduced to the use of PMCT as a triage tool in a busy forensic pathology practice. Participants will first learn about the history of the use of PMCT at the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) and the existing research and literature on the efficacy of PMCT in the medical examiner setting.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on April 20, 2021.
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Lessons Learned from Proficiency Test Results in Bloodstain Pattern Analysis
This webinar will evaluate the submitted responses for bloodstain pattern analysis proficiency tests over the past several years with the purpose of gaining insight into trends within the science. The focus will be on erroneous conclusions and how an evaluation of the most problematic patterns can assist in moving the discipline forward.
This webinar was presented by the NIJ Forensic Technology Center of Excellence on April 15, 2021.
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Post-mortem Computed Tomography Basics - Facility & Technical Aspects
In the first webinar, participants will be introduced to x-ray computed tomography (CT) and some key differences between CT and traditional x-ray. The basic specifications of a CT scanner (such as bore diameter, maximum image size, and table specifications) will be introduced, with reference to their impact on whole body post-mortem scanning in particular. Basic considerations for deploying a CT scanner in a medical examiner setting (cost, personnel, space, safety) will also be discussed.
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