Across
- 1. Neurologist who authored some of the first textbooks categorizing mental illnesses and sexual deviances and specifically wrote them to not become too popular.
- 3. The Skip who analyzed and identified the paint samples that would be used for a guilty plea out of the Green River Killer.
- 4. Considered by many to be the top academic criminologist today.
- 6. The heater of all heater cases in Chicago.
- 7. ____scopy is the scientific study of fingerprint patterns, which has since come to an end to be replaced by the use of fingerprints for criminal investigations.
- 9. The colonial administrator in India who pioneered the use of fingerprinting in enforcing contracts and against pension fraud.
- 13. The investigator who ‘solved’ the Dobkin/Dobson case by being able to identify the victim and that she had died from strangulation.
- 15. The famous scopolamine poisoning that involved an international chase by boat and sparked the fascination with wireless communications in combating crime.
- 16. First person to commit a murder on the railways (and not the person who was murdered).
- 19. His textbooks would further solidify the links between public analysts and forensics as discussed in our Chapter 4 lecture.
- 26. This type of criminal was one of the three themes that can provide a micro-contextual development vantage point of middle class concerns over ‘regulating one’s passions and planning one’s life’ as well as the links those attitudes have with the epistemological development of scientific criminology.
- 27. The short name for Hall-Caine’s bill to target criminals’ use of automobiles. Much of its language included subtle references to gender and class. Hint: The name is another word for criminality.
- 28. This individual brought together Rush’s observations of the disease of the moral faculty and the previous concept of mania without delirium.
- 29. The concept put forward by Lombroso to link criminal groups to physical degeneracy and evolutionary theory.
- 33. The professor who became a cop and expert witness whose testimony was excluded from the John Pharr lawsuit.
- 35. The case of identity theft to fraudulently inherent an estate in the mid to late 1800s.
- 37. Is credited with creating the term scientist in our course textbook.
- 38. The Scottish missionary in Japan who explored the use of fingerprinting in criminal investigations.
- 39. Key member of one of the chemical dynasties among public analysts discussed in lecture. He worked William Ramsay and influenced the “next generation of public analysts and independent analytical expert witnesses” such as Charles Ainsworth Mitchell and Julius Grant.
- 40. Author of the book discussed in class that is a great source of information on witnessboxmanship.
- 42. The Marshall who famously wrote the opinion recognizing Ake’s right to an expert witness.
- 44. Famously worked alongside Bernard Spilsbury in several cases, often handling the ballistics analyses.
- 45. A statistician with a very famous “r” and who assisted Goring with his English Convict Study.
- 46. The female serial murderer who both faked her own death and tried to frame someone else for it and whose case was reviewed by Cesare Lombroso.
Down
- 2. Galton’s system that has since become the basis for most subsequent classification schemes that first divides all fingerprints into arches, loops, or whorls.
- 4. First name of the coiner of the term, mania without delirium.
- 5. The anarchist terrorist whose identification via Anthropometry brought great notoriety to the criminal identification system.
- 8. Often used as a pesticide, this was also famously used by Dr. William Palmer.
- 10. To describe all the variety of humans, Bertillon attempted to develop a ‘precise “scientific” language’ called the ____ological vocabulary.
- 11. The textbook author’s nickname for the tendency for academics to refuse to go beyond their paradigmatic bubbles (areas of expertise).
- 12. The 1883 milk case that illustrated the early battles, between the government laboratory and public analysts, that would shape the future of chemistry.
- 14. Father of the Classical School of Criminology and the first naturalistic explanation of crime.
- 17. The type of blow fly examined by Firth, a chemist, to determine the post mortem interval in our Chapter 4 lecture.
- 18. Revolver Harry aka the Swedish Indiana Jones
- 20. The part of the brain associated with speech production.
- 21. The Lord behind the famous and influential ruling in Folkes v Chadd that led to the creation of the modern adversarial system and it use of expert witnesses.
- 22. In West Virginia, the former head serologist of the state police crime laboratory, Trooper Fred ____, falsified results in as many as 134 cases from 1979 to 1989.
- 23. From our book, this individual summarized the epistemological debate on knowledge with two positions for knowledge making pathways.
- 24. Middle name of the man who conducted a handwriting analysis on the alleged will of Abdul Baha.
- 25. Isolated and identified that which known as DNA today.
- 30. The famous artist whose paintings highlighted the inequality and poverty faced by Catalonian Roma (gypsies) or Gitana earned him unfavorable comparisons to Lombroso.
- 31. In the textbook, this individual provided a description of scientific revolutions and paradigms.
- 32. Philosopher who believed that the growth of the disciplinary society and disciplinary careers was caused by the need for docile, disciplined bodies for the industrial age.
- 34. The verb for taking any physical object or material and transforming it into a chart, graph, or figure for interpretation by a working professional.
- 35. Author of the first systematic treatise on forensic medicine in any civilization (in this case, China). The title likens justice to washing away the sins of crime. Also, the spelling I use here is from our course textbook.
- 36. Another word for adipocere.
- 41. The colonial government committee tasked with evaluating the use of Henry’s fingerprint classification system in India.
- 43. This individual was featured in the case study that involved a Pakistani man being placed in a cell with a violent racist who would eventually be his (the Pakistani man’s) murderer.
- 44. Who was found to have NOT killed Sarah Stout?
