Forensic Institute for Research and Education

Legends in Forensic Science Lectureship

Joe Navarro, M.A.

www.jnforensics.com

Tuesday, October 11

Tennessee Room

James Union Building

Middle TN State University



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For 25 years, Joe Navarro worked as an FBI special agent in the area of counterintelligence and behavioral assessment. Today he is one of the world's leading experts on nonverbal communications and lectures and consults with major corporations worldwide. He is an adjunct professor at Saint Leo University and frequently lectures at the Harvard Business School.

He has appeared on major U.S. and International media outlets including CNN International, CBS, NBC, NPR Radio, The Washington Post, and The Times (UK), on topics as varied as body language and management practices.

Joe is the international best-selling author of What Every Body is Saying which has been translated into 23 languages, and Louder Than Words, which The Wall Street Journal acclaimed as "One of the six best business books to read for your career in 2010.";


Dr. G.
Medical Examiner

 



April 12, 2011

7:00 p.m.
Murphy Center

Jan C. Garavaglia, M.D. (aka "Dr. G";) is the chief medical examiner for the District Nine Medical Examiner Office covering Orange and Osceola counties in Florida and has been a forensic pathologist for 20 years.

A graduate of the St. Louis University School of Medicine, Dr. Garavaglia completed her internship in internal medicine and residency in pathology at the University Hospitals in St. Louis, Missouri. She then completed a fellowship in forensic pathology at the Dade County Medical Examiner Office in Miami, Florida. She is certified by the American Board of Pathology in anatomic, clinical and forensic pathology.

Prior to joining the office in Florida, Dr. Garavaglia was a medical examiner at the Bexar County Forensic Science Center in San Antonio, Texas, for 10 years. While there she also served as a clinical assistant professor for the department of pathology at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and as a member of their Graduate Faculty Council for the Graduate School of Biomedical Science. She has also worked as a medical examiner in Jacksonville, Florida and the metropolitan Atlanta area.

Dr. Garavaglia is a member of the National Association of Medical Examiners, the Florida Association of Medical Examiners, and the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, and is on the editorial board of the American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology. She is a recipient of community service awards for her work in forensic pathology in San Antonio, Texas and Orange County Florida.

In addition, Dr. Garavaglia has given innumerable presentations and lectures at various institutions, and has been published in scientific media such as the Journal of Forensic Sciences, Journal of Trauma, and The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology. She is the subject and host of the popular TV show Dr. G. Medical Examiner on the Discovery Health channel, which in 2008 won an International Health and Medical Media award for "Best Health Series."; She has also appeared on The Larry King, Oprah, Rachel Ray, and Dr. Oz shows.

Dr. Garavaglia is married to Mark Wallace, M.D. They have three sons, Alex, Eric, and Luke.

 

Previous Speakers:


Dayle Hinman

The Devil is in the Details:
Criminal Profiling from an Investigator's Perspective


Thursday, October 7, 2010, 7:00 pm
James Union Building
Tennessee Room


Criminal profiling has been the subject of countless movies, television programs and novels. The profilers are frequently portrayed as individuals with special psychic abilities. Often this ability is rooted in victimization or some serious physical or personality flaw. In reality, profilers are investigators who draw upon their own experience, specialized training in forensic and behavioral science and empirically developed information about the characteristics of known offenders. Essentially they are the historians of crime information.

Far from a magical event, profiling is an investigative technique that was developed and refined by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is a process of systematically reviewing and analyzing crime scene information. The major personality, behavioral and demographic characteristics of the offender are suggested based upon an analysis of the crimes. People are not profiled. Rather, the offender's interactions with the victim(s) within the context of the crime scene(s) are examined in great detail.

Using specific case examples, Ms. Hinman will give the audience the opportunity to understand how these complicated cases were resolved. Attendees will gain a greater understanding of criminal profiling and better appreciate the efficacy of collaborative working relationships between the various professional disciplines involved in criminal investigation.

Dayle Hinman is a renowned and celebrated criminal profile and homicide investigator whose career spanned over 26 years as a sworn law enforcement officer in the State of Florida. Dayle was formally trained in criminal profiling at the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Behavioral Science Unit at Quantico, Virginia. She has successfully investigated hundreds of crimes perpetrated by murders, rapists and sexual offenders including serial killers Aileen Wuornos, Danny Rolling, Rory Conde, Francisco del Junco, and Ted Bundy. She is a court certified expert in Crime Scene Assessment and lectures nationally and internationally on Criminal Profiling, Crime Scene Analysis, Threat Assessment and Serial Offenders. She is a featured speaker and instructor for the National College of District Attorneys, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, U. S. Department of State, American Academy of Forensic Science, Naval Criminal Investigative Service, Illinois, Indiana and Missouri Coroners and Medical Examiners Associations, universities and numerous federal, state, and local police agencies. Dayle is a Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and the host of TruTV's Body of Evidence: From the case files of Dayle Himan.

Presented by the Forensic Institute for Research and Education, College of Liberal Arts, College of Basic and Applied Sciences, Sociology & Anthropology, Psychology, Biology, Chemistry, Political Science, and Criminal Justice

Dr. Kathy Reichs

April 14, 2010 - Murphy Center at 7:00 p.m.

Kathy Reichs's first novel Déjà Dead catapulted her to fame when it became a New York Times bestseller and won the 1997 Ellis Award for Best First Novel. Her other Temperance Brennan novels include Death du Jour, Deadly Décisions, Fatal Voyage, Grave Secrets, Bare Bones, Monday Mourning, Cross Bones, Break No Bones, Bones to Ashes, Devil Bones, and 206 Bones, Spider Bones (August, 2010). Dr. Reichs is a producer of the hit Fox TV series, Bones, which is based on her work and her novels.

From teaching FBI agents how to detect and recover human remains, to separating and identifying commingled body parts in her Montreal lab, as a forensic anthropologist Kathy Reichs has brought her own dramatic work experience to her mesmerizing forensic thrillers. For years she consulted to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in North Carolina, and continues to do so for the Laboratoire de Sciences Judiciaires et de Médecine Légale for the province of Québec. Dr. Reichs has travelled to Rwanda to testify at the UN Tribunal on Genocide, and helped exhume a mass grave in Guatemala. As part of her work at JPAC (Formerly CILHI) she aided in the identification of war dead from World War II, Korea, and Southeast Asia. Dr. Reichs also assisted with identifying remains found at ground zero of the World Trade Center following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Dr. Reichs is one of only eighty-two forensic anthropologists ever certified by the American Board of Forensic Anthropology. She served on the Board of Directors and as Vice President of both the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and the American Board of Forensic Anthropology, and is currently a member of the National Police Services Advisory Council in Canada. She is a Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte.

Dr. Reichs is a native of Chicago, where she received her Ph.D. at Northwestern. She now divides her time between Charlotte, NC and Montreal, Québec.

Presented to you by the Forensic Institute for Research and Education, Distinguished Lecturer's Fund, College of Liberal Arts, Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies, and Phillips Bookstore.


Dr. Lowell Levine

October 15, 2009 - State Farm Room at 7:00 p.m.

Lowell J. Levine is a forensic scientist and co-director of operations for the New York State Police Forensic Sciences Unit. After receiving a doctor of dental surgery degree from New York University, he served two years of active duty as a dental officer in the U.S. Navy and recently retired from U.S. Naval Reserve as a captain.

A former president of the American Academy of Forensic Odontology, Dr. Levine has testified as an expert witness in celebrated cases nationwide, including that of serial murderer Theodore Bundy, as well as in federal courts, courts martial, and committees of the Congress of the United States. He has established an international reputation for his participation in the identification of Nazi war criminal Joseph Mengele, the investigation by the "Commission on the Disappeared"; of Argentina, and most recently as a member of a team of experts that traveled to Ekaterinburg, Russia to examine the remains of Tsar Nicholas II and his family.

Dr. Levine also has served as a consultant to the Philadelphia Special Investigation Commission investigating the MOVE conflagration and the U.S. Army's Central Identification Laboratory identifying MIAs of Vietnam. He participated in the medical-legal investigation of the sailors killed on the USS Stark, as well as the Select Committee on Assassinations of the US House of Representatives, which investigated the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. In addition to training scientists in Indonesia, Panama, Costa Rica, Ecuador and other countries for various governments and agencies, Dr. Levine has published numerous scientific papers and lectures throughout the United States and internationally.

A distinguished alumnus of Hobart College, he is a recipient of the college's Medal of Excellence.





Roy Hazelwood

April 14, 2009 - State Farm Room at 7:00 p.m.

Mr. Robert R. Hazelwood is one of a kind. He is a retired FBI agent who pioneered the profiling of sexual predators and much of the investigative approaches used today are routed in his research involving sex crimes including pedophiles, sexual sadists, autoerotic asphyxiation and serial killers. He is credited with developing the distinction between "organized" and "disorganized" murders, which continues to e used by law enforcement in the apprehension of serial power assertive, anger retaliatory and anger excitation. He also theorizes that pedophiles and sexual sadists are not subject to change. Mr. Hazelwood has and continues to provide forensic consultation in these areas to law enforcement agencies internationally and expert testimony to the courts. He has testified to committees of the U.S. House and Senate and before a Presidential committee. Mr. Hazelwood is a member of the Academy Group, an organization of former FBI and law enforcement officers, and continues to assist the FBI and other law enforcement agencies in cases involving sexually oriented murders. His work has focused on the Dennis Rader, better known as the B.T.K. Killer. He has co-authored two books, "The Evil that Men Do and Dark Dreams". He is a walking, talking, history making, one of a kind in his field.

Dr. William M. Bass

March 27, 2007 - State Farm Room at 7:00 p.m. "Interesting Forensic Cases from the Past"

William M. Bass is a U.S. forensic anthropologist, renowned for his research on human osteology and human decomposition. He has also assisted federal, local, and non-US authorities in the identification of human remains. He taught at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, and though currently retired from teaching, still plays an active research role at the Forensic Anthropology Research Facility, which he founded. The Facility is more popularly known as the "Body Farm", a name used by crime author Patricia Cornwell in a novel of the same name, which drew inspiration from Dr. Bass and his work. Bass has also described the body farm as "Death's Acre" - the title of the bestselling book on his life and career, cowritten with journalist Jon Jefferson.

Dr. Douglas W. Owsley

October 4, 2007 - State Farm Room at 7:00 p.m. "Written in Bone: Forensic Files of the 17th Century Chesapeake"

Dr. Douglas W. Owsley is the Division Head for Physical Anthropology at the National Museum of Natural History in the Smithsonian Institution. Within forensics Dr. Owsley identified Jeffrey Dahmer's first victim, and assisted in the Branch Davidian disaster in Waco, Texas where he identified the remains of David Koresh. He participated in the identification of the dead from the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, and the recovery and identification of civilian victims of war in Croatia. He was called upon to identify sailors on the Confederate submarine the CSS H.L. Hunley. Dr. Owsley was a member of the scientific team assembled to study the Kennewick Man skeletal remains. Dr. Owsley also studied skull fragments found in a 400-year-old trash pit in Jamestown and discovered evidence that hints at skull drilling and autopsy in 1600s.

Dr. Clyde Snow

March 26, 2008 - State Farm Room at 6:00 p.m. "Human Rights"

Some of his better known skeletal confirmations are: John F. Kennedy, the men who fought in General Custer's "last stand", Dr. Josef Mengele, the famous Nazi war criminal who fled to Brazil the many victims of serial killer, John Wayne Gacey, Egyptian boy King Tutankhamun and the victims of the Oklahoma bombing. In the 1980's he went to Argentina to exhume mass graves filled with innocent civilians who had been killed by government death squads during the war. He has worked in Argentina, Guatemala, Ethiopia, Philippines, Croatia and others. So far his work has led to the conviction of five officers in Argentina.

Dr. Thomas D. Holland

October 15, 2008 - State Farm Room in the Business and Aerospace Building at 7:00 p.m.

"The Recovery of US War Dead"

Dr. Holland received his BA, MA, and PhD from the University of Missouri, Columbia (MU). From 1980 - 1988, he served as an osteological consultant for the Iowa Office of Historic Preservation and Missouri Department of Natural Resources as well as an archaeologist, research assistant, and instructor at UM. From 1988 - 1992, he served as Assistant and Associate Curator for the Museum of Anthropology at UM. He has published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, American Antiquity, the Journal of Forensic Sciences, Current Anthropology, Studies in Archaeological Method and Theory, Quaternary Research, Missouri Archaeologist, and Plains Anthropologist, among other forums. He has presented papers or co-authored presentations at meetings of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, the Society for American Archaeology, the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, and at the Fourth Indo-Pacific Congress on Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences.

Since 1992, Dr. Holland has worked at the CILHI in the positions of anthropologist, Senior Anthropologist, and Scientific Director. He has supervised excavations of crash and burial sites in China, Korea, Southeast Asia and Iraq and has conducted numerous skeletal analyses. Dr. Holland is a certified Diplomate of the American Board of Forensic Anthropology (no. 51). He is a member of the American Anthropological Association, the Society for American Archaeology, the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, and the American Academy of Forensic Sciences.


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