To purchase a ticket for this special event, click here.<\/a> <\/strong><\/em>If you’d like to be contacted when another crime lab tour and lecture are scheduled, subscribe<\/a> to LAVA’s occasional Crime Lab Newsletter.<\/em><\/p>\n
Presentation One:<\/em><\/p>\n
Presentation Two:<\/em><\/p>\n
ABOUT<\/span> THE<\/span> CASES<\/span>:
Featured cases are the Marion Parker<\/a> kidnap slaying (1927), the Wineville chicken coop murders<\/a> (1928) and the Black Dahlia<\/a> murder (1947). Fingerprints played an important role in both the Marion Parker and Black Dahlia cases. LAPD<\/span> Captain H.L. Barlow, the forensic investigator on the Parker case, was so famous that he later sold his namesake fingerprint kit through ads in the back of detective magazines. The story of how LAPD<\/span> homicide detectives Harry Hansen and Finis Brown accessed cutting edge telephony to rush the fingerprints of the unidentified Black Dahlia victim to the FBI<\/span> for identification is as riveting today as it was when it made headlines. The death penalty case against Gordon Stewart Northcott, the Wineville boy killer, was based entirely on trace evidence: hair and fiber gathered at his murder ranch.<\/p>\n