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The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is investigating George Mason University's DEI policies.
There have been significant improvements in DNA technology that has helped solve active and cold cases. Could those techniques finally provide the evidence to get an indictment and conviction in this ...
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First-of-its-Kind Genome Sequence Reveals More About the Mysterious Identity of Ancient EgyptiansFirst-of-its-Kind Genome Sequence Reveals More About the Mysterious Identity of Ancient Egyptians The first-of-its-kind ...
A British man found dead in the United States more than a decade ago has finally been identified thanks to advancements in ...
On July 20, 1990, members of the Madison County Highway Department crew discovered the partially decomposed body of a 30-year ...
More than 4,000 years ago, Egypt and Mesopotamia stood as two of the most complex societies on the planet. But the new DNA sequencing reveals how these two populations also intermingled.
Texas company was crucial to linking Bryan Kohberger to Idaho student stabbings ahead of guilty plea
Idaho State Police contracted with Woodlands-based Othram to perform a genealogical analysis of a knife sheath found at the ...
The Fresno Police Department announced the arrest of 55-year-old Cesar Flores, who Police Chief Mindy Casto said was wanted ...
Cesar Flores, a 55-year-old serial rapist, was arrested after DNA evidence from genealogy tests linked him to five cold cases ...
This next-gen forensic science, called investigating genetic genealogy, or IGG, helps track down criminal suspects through their own DNA.
Students at Ramapo College’s Investigative Genetic Genealogy Center are gaining a reputation for solving cold cases. Most recently, they solved the case of a woman reported missing in 2014. When ...
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