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In the News
Detroit City Shuts Down Error Plagued Lab "Criminal justice officials are struggling to calculate the impact of an audit released Thursday that exposed rampant problems in the Detroit Police firearms laboratory and resulted in the shutdown of the department's entire crime lab."
New York Post Clueless Crime Labs "The analysis of fingerprints, tire tracks and bite marks isn't nearly as reliable as researchers once believed, crime-scene specialists told the panel. Some even called it junk science."
Maryland Target gives city $300000 "Target, the big-box retailer....announced a $300,000 donation to the Baltimore Police Department yesterday that will help police and the store's security officials coordinate crime-fighting efforts in West Baltimore."
Arizona Tucson police lab faulted for procedural problems "The Tucson Police Department’s crime lab is working to fix a number of problems identified earlier this year in an inspection by a national accreditation board."
Editorial Cut funding strategically "Government has a responsibility to provide basic services. Public safety, health and welfare, education and infrastructure are the underpinnings. Other services are important, but they are not in that top tier."
Mississippi Potentially Flawed Science Deciding Many Cases A Mississippi judge recently has taken the unusual step of allocating several thousand dollars in county funds so a defendant, accused of murdering a Jackson State University co-ed last November, can hire a forensic expert to examine the evidence in the case, scheduled for trial in September.
Upcoming Meetings and Conferences Please send us an email if you'd like us to announce an upcoming event. We will post meeting announcements for major events only.
(SWAFS) Southwestern Association of Forensic Scientists September 22-26, 2008 Little Rock, Arkansas
(MAFS) Midwestern Association of Forensic Scientists September 28 - October 3, 2008 Des Moines, Iowa
(NEAFS) N'eastern Association of Forensic Scientists October 1 - 4, 2008 White Plains, New York
(AFQAM) Assoc. of Forensic Quality Assurance Mgrs. October 7-10, 2008 Virginia Beach, VA
(NAFS) Northwest Association of Forensic Scientists November 3-7, 2008 Boise, Idaho
(AAFS) American Academy of Forensic Sciences February 16-21, 2009 Denver, CO
(MAAFS) Mid Atlantic Association of Forensic Scientists May 4-8, 2009 Hunt Valley, MD
(AFTE) Association of Firearm & Toolmark Examiners May 31 - June 5, 2009 Miami Beach, FL
(Special Joint Meeting) MAAFS, MAFS, SAFS, SWAFS October 18-23, 2009 Orlando, FL
(IAI) International Association for Identification 2009 Date and location to be announced
(NAME) National Association of Medial Examiners September 11-16, 2009 San Francisco, CA
(ASCLD) American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors 2009 Date and location to be announced
(SAFS) Southern Association of Forensic Scientists 2009 Date and location to be announced
(IAFS) International Association of Forensic Sciences 2011 Date and location to be announced |
Salary Study is Underway!
Attention Crime Lab Directors! Our 2008 Salary & Stability Survey is now active. We are urging you to ask your scientists, managers, and technicians to subscribe to Crime Lab Report and complete the survey. It takes only 5 to 10 minutes to complete. Data will be published next spring.
Complete the survey
About the survey
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Announcements
DNA Trends and Issues: A High Impact Summit for Law Enforcement. October 20-21 in Knoxville, TN
Please click here to view brochure.
Vacancy Announcement - Director of Forensic Services New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services
Click here to view posting
Lori Chamberlain Associate Personnel Administrator Division of Criminal Justice Services 4 Tower Place, Albany, NY 12203 (518) 485-7696
Forensic Library for Sale - A massive collection of books related to forensic science and firearm & toolmarks is for sale. Please contact Bobby Blackburn for more information.
Bobby D. Blackburn P.O. Box 860 Ingram, TX 78025 (830) 367-3536 Home (210) 274-7666 Cell bblkburn@...
A Hot Topic - Licensing
At the 2008 ASCLD Symposium an exciting and thought-provoking panel discussion took place about the necessity or futility of governmental oversight and/or licensing for forensic scientists.
While the argument in favor of licensing may seem compelling at first glance, many forensic science leaders argue that laboratory accreditation augmented by a national peer-based certification program is the best course of action. The following links will direct you to some very interesting reading that looks critically at licensing and its ability to achieve what it is designed to do.
Occupational Licensing "Licensing laws have exerted a negative influence in many professions by inhibiting innovations in practice, training, education, and organization of services. The most prominent examples in recent years are the efforts of the organized medical profession to inhibit prepaid health plans and of lawyers to ban low-cost legal clinics."
Book Review: Licensing Occupations: Ensuring Quality or Restricting Competition? "Morris Kleiner, an economist who teaches at the University of Minnesota and is a visiting scholar in the economics department of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, takes a careful look at the issue in Licensing Occupations and comes to the conclusion that occupational licensing statutes do little or nothing to protect consumers, but do tend to raise the price of services."
Licensing Occupations: Ensuring Quality or Restricting Competition (Google Books Online) "This book examines the impact of occupational licensing on who gets to work in the licensed occupation. It focuses on the question of whether this labor market institution results in consumers receiving higher-quality services, as well as if there are enhanced earnings for practitioners and higher prices for consumers." |
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