Colin Evans is the author of Killer Doctors and was a major contributor to Great American Trials. He divides
his time between Florida and London.
Summary
A fascinating history of infamous crimes and the scientific sleuths who solved them
Colin Evans's book describes 100 heinous crimes were solved through the application of medical evidence. Cases
range from the work of Sir Bernard Spilsbury, the 19th-century doctor who took pathology out of the morgue and
splashed it across the headlines of newspapers around the globe, to the conviction of serial killer Ted Bundy based
on the teeth marks he left on his victims. Each case is a gripping true-crime story, whether the experts use hypnosis,
handwriting analysis, psychological profiling, ballistics, or DNA testing to convict a criminal or free the innocent.
Colin Evans (Middlesex, England) recently published Killer Doctors in Britain. He is a contributor to
Great American Trials and writes regularly on crime-related subjects for the Orlando Sun-Sentinel.
Profiling the trailblazing titans of medical crimefighting.
"Pithy, concise, and remarkably accurate."--Science Books & Films.
Among the exciting cases in this popular forensic medicine reference are the uncanny identification of a person
with only about one one-thousandth of her body remaining (a few hairs, nails and tooth fragments); the creepy psychological
profile that helped track down a cannibal; and the clever forensic detective who finally caught Ted Bundy by identifying
his teeth marks on victims.
Covers the 100 most absorbing, groundbreaking cases in forensic history. Features fascinating coverage of Alec
Jeffreys' discovery of the DNA "fingerprint."
Colin Evans (Middlesex, England) is a professional writer who was a major contributor to Gale Research's Great
American Trials.