Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I'm sort of stuck in a novel I'm writing at the moment. I can't find the name of the solution used to remove flesh from bullets. Is it just water, or a specialized solution?
Forgive me if this has been asked before,but is there any way to tell whether a wound or laceration was inflicted before or after death?
This is not a scientific answer but just a guess:
I would have thought yes because of the fact that blood wont be flowing around the body after death.
That works if the body is found at the crime scene, but what if it's moved? I was hoping for something regarding the damage to the bone or tissue.
Thanks for responding,though.
This is really a question that a medical doctor or pathologist should answer (and I'm not); but in general, if you get bruising around a wound, its because the heart was actively pumping blood into damaged capillaries/tissues ... whereas you wouldn't see bruising if a cut was made on a dead body.Forgive me if this has been asked before,but is there any way to tell whether a wound or laceration was inflicted before or after death?
Forgive me if this has been asked before,but is there any way to tell whether a wound or laceration was inflicted before or after death?
Yes, I'm the Ken Goddard who wrote 3 books for Tor/Forge. Typical author activity: we cheerfully migrate to whichever publishing company is willing to publish our next book ... and always hope that there will be a next one.Ken, are you the same Ken Goddard who writes for Forge Books? Good to hear from you. I confess that I haven't had a chance to read your CSI novel yet, but I'm looking forward to it.
I looked at the link so graciously provided by MiaCaro, and a few others I found on my own, but none talked about whether or not the mouth is actually, physically washed prior to autopsy. To me, it makes no sense to do so. I mean, that might compromise other evidence.
I remember when the one body was stolen from the lab, beer had been poured down the throat of the dead body. So, it would seem to me that if one cleaned the mouth with water as one washes the rest of the body, that might compromise stomach contents, etc.
Does anyone know, maybe, a forensic text I might find that could offer help? Thanks!