Real
Life Crimes And How They Were Solved
*****
Volume One - Issue 1 - 15
Volume Two - Issue 16 - 30
Volume Three - Issue 31 - 45
Volume Four - Issue 46 - 60
Volume Five - Issue 61 - 75
Volume Six - Issue 76 - 90
Volume Seven - Issue 91 - 105
Volume Eight - Issue 106 - 120
Volume Nine - Issue 121 - 135
Published By Eaglemoss Publications Limited - A weekly Issue building
into a nine volume set containing 135 separate magazines. It is split
into sections as follows:-
1 Crime Case Study
Crime Case Study - Follow in the footsteps of a man/woman of evil.
What kind of person were they, why did they do it. Discover the pattern
of their deadly actions, how they chose their victims, what trademarks
did they leave behind and what finally trapped them.
2 The Investigators
Get behind the scenes of criminal investigation, from post mortem to facial
reconstruction and establishing time of death by examining maggots.
See how pathologists investigate a corpse, psychologists predict behaviour
and forensic scientists test for poison. Straight from the professional
investigators themselves with explicit photographs and diagrams.
3 Forensic Mysteries
The use of scientific techniques to solve criminal cases. A multidisciplinary
field embracing chemistry, physics, botany, zoology, and medicine, forensic
science includes the identification of human bodies or traces.
Traditional Methods such as fingerprinting (see fingerprint ) are still
used, assisted by computers; in addition, blood analysis, forensic dentistry,
voice and speech spectograms, and genetic fingerprinting are increasingly
applied.
Ballistics (the study of projectiles, such as bullets), another traditional
forensic field, today makes use of tools such as the comparison microscope
and the electron microscope.
Chemicals, such as poisons and drugs, are analysed by chromatography
.
The first forensic laboratory was founded in France in 1910 by Edmond
Locard, and the science developed as a systematic discipline in the 1930s.
In 1932 the US Federal Bureau of Investigation established a forensic
science laboratory in Washington DC, and in the UK the first such laboratory
was founded in London in 1935.
4 Incriminating Evidence
In law the testimony of witnesses and production of documents and
other material in court proceedings, in order to prove or disprove facts
at Issue in the case. Witnesses must swear or affirm that their evidence
is true. in english law, giving false evidence is the crime of perjury.
Documentary evidence has a wide scope including maps, soundtracks and
films, in addition to documents in writing. objects such as weapons
used in crimes May serve as evidence. Evidence obtained illegaly, such
as a confession under duress, May be excluded from the court.
5 Mind of Evil
Henry Lee Lucas admitted killing 157 victims. What drove him
to it. What terrible childhood experiences turned him into Americas
most depraved killer. Why did he repeat his savage acts so frequently.
Look into the minds of Lucas and the worlds most wicked criminals to discover
a world of black madness. See more
For more information contact:
Gregg Manning