A QUESTION OF
EVIDENCE
I stole the title from Colin Evans. He wrote a book for Wiley Press by that
title. It’s a fascinating look at
fifteen milestone cases of probable/possible crimes that depend for their
resolution on controversial forensic evidence.
He calls the question of the authenticity of the Turin Shroud a perfect
crime of its type, a fraud committed several hundred years ago that persists to
this day. Of course, it is largely a
benign fraud.
Those of us who are interested in the questions of evidence,
as they relate to our stories of crimes and criminals, would find the book,
published in 2001, a useful book for the library. Among the crimes he dissects are some high
profile cases, including those of
Napoleon, William Lancaster, Samuel Sheppard, and O. J. Simpson. Did you know that experienced entomologists
can predict very closely the time of death of a human being by examining the
state of the insects found in and around that body?
Why would you ever care that the weight of a cubic foot of
common red brick was 120 pounds? Well,
you might if your villain wanted to build a device to drop the brick on the
head of a target, yes? Let’s say you
wanted to kill an adversary while you were miles away, so you rig a device that
drops the brick on your target when he, or she, opens a certain door.
When I wrote “Devils
Island,” I did some
research to back up my experience with bodies in motion in water and the flight
paths of emergency flare pistols. When I
wrote “Hard Cheese” I inquired as to whether a hollowed out round of cheese
might hold enough drugs to make the subterfuge worthwhile.
Bolts that hold various engine parts together are chosen, in
part, based on their resistance to stress.
Suppose you wanted to kill or injure someone by substituting different
bolts in an engine that would give way under certain levels of stress. Would that work? What if you did that and then had to ride in
the altered car with the intended victim?
Wouldn’t that be a harrowing experience?
Meanderings of a writer’s mind. Evidence to be detected. Policemen will often tell you that forensic
science rarely helps catch criminals, but it does help to convict them, once a
viable suspect is identified and brought to trial.
INTERESTING GEOGRAPHIC FACTS
More
than half of the coastline of the entire United
States is in Alaska
The
Amazon rainforest produces more than 20% the world's oxygen supply. The Amazon
River pushes so much water into the Atlantic Ocean that, more than one hundred
miles at sea off the mouth of the river, one can dip fresh water out of the
ocean
The
volume of water in the Amazon river is greater than the next eight largest
rivers in the world combined and three times the flow of all rivers in the United States.
Antarctica is the only land on our planet that is not owned by any
country. Ninety percent of the world's ice covers Antarctica
. This ice also represents seventy percent of all the fresh water in the world.
As strange as it sounds, however, Antarctica
is essentially a desert. The average yearly total
precipitation
is about two inches. Although covered with ice (all but 0.4% of it), Antarctica
is the driest place on the planet, with an absolute humidity lower than the
Gobi desert.
Brazil got its name from the nut, not the other
way around.
Canada has more lakes than the rest of the world
combined. Canada
is an Indian word meaning " Big
Next
to Warsaw, Chicago
has the largest Polish population in the world
Woodward
Avenue in Detroit, Michigan, carries an official designation M-1, so identified
because it was the first paved road anywhere.
Damascus,
Syria, was flourishing a couple of thousand years before Rome was founded in
753 BC, making it the oldest continuously inhabited city in existence. Current
events make one wonder if this may be its last year on this earth.
SCONE ISLAND: A REVIEW
Scone Island
By Frederick Ramsey
ISBN: 978-1-4642-0053-3
2012 from Poisoned Pen Press
253 pages
I’m a fan of Ike Schwartz. To my mind, he’s the model of a
good county sheriff, even if he is in love with the beautiful president of a
local college. Worse, to my faculty mind, she’s in love with him. This
author as this excellent main character
cold. He’s intelligent, sarcastic, smart, flip and loving in all the right
moments. He’s also honest and really believes he can cope with an array of
weird and sometimes flawed deputies and county officials.
Sheriff Schwartz has a dark background although in previous
novels we are led to believe he worked on the side of the angels. President
Ruth Harris is recovering from severe physical; trauma. (for details, read the
series) and she and Ike decide almost on the spur of the moment, to leave their
rural Virginia homes for a vacation, a vacation away from phones, mail and
drop-in problems. The couple is after some serious down time. Schwartz knows
how to disappear off the grid. A small rustic cabin on a small island off the
coast of Maine seems ideal. No electricity, no telephones, almost no contact
with the mainland. Problem is, an ex CIA operative, named Harmon Staley thought
so too. And then, somebody from the ex-CIA operative’s past figures it out and
the shadow from the past has an urgent need for Staley to go away. Permanently.
And then the tentacles of this very complicated story become even more
entangled.
The author is a fine storyteller and if the dialogue between
Ruth and Ike becomes more and arch and even a little juvenile at times, and
even if there’s a small sense of convenience in the rousing climax, the sense
of tension and menace that builds steadily from the very beginning overcomes
those minor annoyances. Highly recommended.
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