Coroners
Strengthening the Medicolegal-Death-Investigation System: Improving Data Systems
Reliability and Validity of Radiographic Comparisons for Positive Identification
Improving Age-at-Death Estimates from Human Skeletal Remains Through Spatial Analysis of Intracortical Remodeling Using Geographic Information Systems Software
Implementing NAGPRA Connecting Medical Examiner and Coroner Offices to Tribal Partners
This project is designed to connect tribal partners to ME/C offices to facilitate successful disposition protocols for non-forensically significant Native American remains that are compliant with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 (NAGPRA).
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Implementing NAGPRA: Connecting Medical Examiner and Coroner Offices to Tribal Partners
Using postmortem formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissues for molecular testing of sudden cardiac death: A cautionary tale of utility and limitations
FIU - Forensic Technology Center of Excellence
A Mechanism-Based Forensic Investigation into the Postmortem Redistribution of Morphine.
Death Certification by the Medical Examiner/Coroner in Drug-Related Deaths
Census of Medical Examiner and Coroner (ME/C) Offices (Bureau of Justice Statistics)
Provides data on the personnel, budgets, and workload of medical examiner and coroner offices by type of office and size of jurisdiction. The census gathers information on the number of unidentified human decedents handled by these offices, record-keeping practices, and use of national databases for unidentified remains.
Enhancing Molecular Autopsies through Function Assays and Family Studies of Cardiac Arrhythmogenic Variants in Sudden Unexplained Deaths
Advancing Molecular Diagnostics in Sudden Unexplained Deaths
Application for Funding to Support the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
Expanding Research to Examine the Impacts of Forensic Science on the Criminal Justice System
In 2004, the National Institute of Justice created the social science research on forensic sciences (SSRFS) research program to explore the impact of forensic sciences on the criminal justice system and the administration of justice. Much of the early research from the SSRFS program focused on DNA processing and the use of DNA in investigations and prosecutions.
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