#free ebook on forensic
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mostlysignssomeportents · 5 months ago
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Kitchensink callithump linkdump
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On July 14, I'm giving the closing keynote for the fifteenth HACKERS ON PLANET EARTH, in QUEENS, NY. Happy Bastille Day! On July 20, I'm appearing in CHICAGO at Exile in Bookville.
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With just days to go before my summer vacation, I find myself once again with a backlog of links that I didn't squeeze into the blog, and no hope of clearing them before I disappear into a hammock for two weeks, so it's time for my 21st linkdump – here's the other 20:
https://pluralistic.net/tag/linkdump/
I'm going to start off this week's 'dump with a little bragging, because it's my newsletter, after all. First up: a book! Yes, I write a lot of books, but what I'm talking about here is a physical book, a limited edition of ten, that I commissioned from three brilliant craftspeople.
Back in March 2023, I launched a Kickstarter to pre-sell the audiobook of Red Team Blues, the first novel in my new Martin Hench series, about a forensic accountant who specializes in unwinding tech bros' finance frauds:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865847/red-team-blues
One of the rewards for that campaign was a very special hardcover: a handmade, leather-bound edition of Red Team Blues, typeset by the typography legend John D. Berry:
https://johndberry.com/
Bound by the legendary book-artist John DeMerritt:
https://www.demerrittstudios.com/
And printed by the master printer JaVae Berry:
https://www.jgraphicssf.com/
But this wasn't a merely beautiful, well made book – it had a gimmick. You see, I had already completed the first draft of The Bezzle, the second Hench novel, by the time I launched the Kickstarter for Red Team Blues. I had John Berry lay out a tiny edition of that early draft as a quarter-sized book, and then John DeMerritt hand-bound it in card.
The reason that edition of The Bezzle had to be so small was that it was designed to slip into a hollow cavity in the hardcover, a cavity that John Berry had designed the type around, so that both books could be read and enjoyed.
I offered three of these for sale through the Kickstarter, and the three backers were very patient as the team went back and forth on the book, getting everything perfect. Last month, I took delivery of the books: three for my backers, one each for John DeMerritt and John Berry's personal archives, one for me, and a few more that I'm going to surprise some very special people with this Christmas.
Look, I had high hopes for this book. I dote on beautiful books, my house is busting with them, and I used to work at a new/used science fiction store where we had a small but heartstoppingly great rare book selection. But these books are fucking astounding. Every time I handle mine, my heart races. These are beautiful things, and I just want to show them to everyone:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/albums/72177720318331731/
As it happens, the next thing I'm going to do (after I finish this newsletter) is turn in the copyedited manuscript for the third Hench novel, Picks and Shovels, which comes out in Feb 2025 (luckily, I had enough time to review the edits myself, then turn it over to my mom, who has proofed every book I've written and always catches typos that everyone else misses, including some real howlers – thanks Mom!):
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels
Of course, the majority of people who enjoy my books do not end up with one of these beautiful hardcovers – indeed, many of you consume my work exclusively as electronic media: ebooks and (of course) audiobooks. I love audiobooks and the audio editions of my books are very good, with narrators like Amber Benson, Wil Wheaton, and Neil Gaiman.
But here's the thing: Audible refuses to carry my books, because they are DRM-free (which means that they aren't locked to Audible's approved players – you can play my audiobooks with any audiobook player). Audible has a no-exceptions, iron-clad rule that every book they sell must be permanently locked into their platform, which means that Audible customers can't ditch their Audible software without losing their libraries – all the books they purchased:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/07/25/can-you-hear-me-now/#acx-ripoff
Being excluded from Audible takes a huge bite out of my income – after all, they're a monopolist with a 90% market share. That's why I'm so grateful for indie audiobook stores that carry my books on equitable terms that Audible denies – stores like Libro.fm, Downpour and even Google Books.
This week, I discovered a new, amazing indie audiobook store called Storyfair, where the books are DRM-free and the authors get a 75% royalty on every sale:
https://storyfair.net/helpstoryfairgrow/
Storyfair is a labor of love created by a married couple who were sickened and furious by the way that Audible screws authors and listeners and decided to do something about it. Naturally, I uploaded my whole catalog to the site so they could sell it:
https://storyfair.net/search-for-audiobooks/?keyword=cory+doctorow&filter=any
These books are DRM-free, which means that no matter who you buy them from, you can play them in the same player as your other DRM-free audiobooks. You know how you can read all your books under the same lamp, sitting in the same chair, and then put them in the same bookcase when you're done with them? It's weird – outrageous even! – that tech companies think that buying a book from them means that they should have the legal right to force you to read or listen to it using their technology exclusively.
If you let your Storyfair audiobooks touch your Libro.fm audiobooks, they won't get cooties! Audible is like a toddler that won't let their broccoli touch their peas – only that toddler is also a rapacious monopolist that keeps 75% of every sale.
The fight for fair audiobooks is one of those places where the different parts of my professional life cross over: activism, digital media, art, writing the web, and breaking down complex technical subjects for a mass audience. I've just signed up to a six-year project to combine all those facets in a structured way, in collaboration with Cornell University.
Cornell just named me as their latest AD White Professor-at-Large. This is a six-year appointment that involves a series of week-long visits to Ithaca to lecture, run seminars, meet with colleagues, collaborate on research, and do community performances:
https://adwhiteprofessors.cornell.edu/
We've tentatively scheduled my first visit for early September 2025, to coincide with the Ithaca Book Festival, and we've got big plans, roping in multiple departments at Cornell, the local alternative school and local colleges, doing talks at the fair as well as at the university, and (we hope!) squeezing in a stop in NYC on the way home for a day at Cornell Tech. I'm so excited (and honored) to be working with Cornell (and getting a chance to visit Moosewood Restaurant, whose cookbooks taught me how to cook!). Watch this space.
Authorship has always been a political act, but never moreso than today, with waves of book-bans sweeping the country. One of the heroes of those bans is Maggie Tokuda-Hall, who made headlines when she publicly excoriated Scholastic for demanding that she remove references to racism from her kids' books in order to make them more palatable to reactionaries:
https://www.npr.org/2023/04/15/1169848627/scholastic-childrens-book-racism
Tokuda-Hall has stepped up the fight, co-founding Authors Against Book Bans, an org that provides training and support for author/activists so they can fight back against book bans at library board and city council meetings:
https://www.authorsagainstbookbans.com/
Authors Against Book bans is looking for members! I signed up last week, within seconds of having Tokuda-Hall give me the pitch when we ran into each other in Oakland at the Locus Awards. Are you an author? Sign up too! They're especially interested in branching out beyond YA and kids' authors (though they want those kinds of writers, too!).
Book bans affect us all. Even if you personally are never stymied when you visit your library and discover the book that you want to read has been removed by a swivel-eyed loon with terminal groomer-panic. The bans sweeping our country mean that our neighbors and loved ones are being denied literature by these cranks. There are people in your life who are losing out on the possibility of a life-changing literary adventure (which is why the far right hates these books – they want to be sure no one encounters the ideas between their covers).
The realization that you have to live in a society with people who are harmed by injustice, even if you personally escape that justice? It's the whole basis for solidarity.
Americans are living through a multigenerational project of stamping out solidarity and insisting that we only ever view ourselves as individuals, with no stake in the plights of our neighbors. That's how the US got the most expensive, least effective health care system in the world. And even if you are in the vanishingly tiny minority of Americans who are happy with their health care, you live amongst people who are being killed by the system around you.
The health system is a perfect example of how monopolization drives more monopolization, and how that comes to harm the public and workers. Health consolidation began with pharma mergers, that led to pharma companies gouging hospitals. Hospitals, in turn, engaged in a nonstop orgy of mergers, which created regional monopolies that could resist the pricing power of monopoly pharma – and screw insurers. That kicked off consolidation in insurance, which is why most Americans have a "choice" of between one and three private insurers – and why health workers' monopoly employers have eroded their wages and working conditions.
A new study in American Economic Review: Insights puts some quantitative spine in this tale, tracking the relationship between hospital mergers and skyrocketed health-care prices:
https://harris.uchicago.edu/news-events/news/consolidation-hospital-sector-leading-higher-health-care-costs-study-finds?itid=lk_inline_enhanced-template
The researchers investigated 1,164 acute-care hospital mergers, finding that while the FTC only challenged 1% of these, they could – and should – have challenged 20% of them, based on the agency's own criteria for merger scrutiny. The researchers blame the rising costs of hospital care directly on these mergers, and point out that Congress has historically starved the FTC of the budget it needed to investigate these mergers. The annual additional costs to the American people from these mergers exceed the entire annual budget of the FTC.
It's not just hospitals: the entire investor class is hell-bent on spending their way to monopoly. Nowhere is that more true than in AI, where hundreds of billions are being poured into bids to attain permanent dominance through scale. Writing for their excellent AI Snake Oil newsletter, Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor inject some realism into the AI scale hype:
https://www.aisnakeoil.com/p/ai-scaling-myths
Narayanan and Kapoor challenge the idea that throwing more data at large language models will make the better: "With LLMs, we may have a couple of orders of magnitude of scaling left, or we may already be done." They are skeptical that this can be fixed with synthetic data (whose use is limited to "fixing specific gaps and making domain-specific improvements"). They also point out that if returns from data slow, then returns from adding more compute or making bigger models might also be throttled.
They reserve their most skeptical take for "AGI" – the idea that LLMs are going to achieve consciousness. This is a fundamentally unserious idea, one that they unpack in detail in their forthcoming book:
https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691249131/ai-snake-oil
One thing I'm hoping for from the book is some analysis of the material usefulness of AI hype – what purpose does the hype serve? I mean, obviously, hype is useful if you're looking to suck up investor capital, or flip an investment to a greater fool. But there's a specific character to AI hype: namely, the claim that AI will displace labor, which is really a claim that a bet on AI is a bet on the increasing wealth of capital at labor's expense.
In other words, AI is a bet on oligarchy. In America, that's a pretty safe bet, and the odds just got even better, thanks to a string of brutal Supreme Court decisions that legalized bribery, banned most regulatory enforcement, and made being alive and unhoused into a crime (Poor Laws 2.0):
https://prospect.org/justice/2024-06-29-whos-gonna-check-supreme-court-chevron-separation-powers/
But amidst all those gimmes to the rich and powerful, there was one notable exception: the SCOTUS ruling on the Purdue Pharma bankruptcy. Purdue was the family business of the Sacklers, a multigenerational dope-peddling dynasty that went from super-rich to stratospherically rich by kickstarting the opioid epidemic with their blockbuster drug Oxycontin.
The Sacklers sold mountains of Oxy the old fashioned way: by lying. The lied about its efficacy and they lied about its safety, and they helped kill hundreds of thousands of Americans. Eventually, this caught up with them, and Purdue lost a bunch of court cases and was forced into bankruptcy.
That's where things get gnarly: the Sacklers took the already-sleazy world of elite bankruptcy to a whole new level, with a set of breathtakingly sleazy maneuvers that ensured that their case would be heard by the one judge in America who would let them off the hook:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/11/justice-delayed/#justice-redeemed
That judge was Robert Drain and the Sacklers were the blow-off to a long and shameful career in public "service." The Sacklers incorporated a subsidiary in White Plains, NY (in Drain's turf) precisely 181 days before filing for bankruptcy, then claimed that this empty small-town office had been the company HQ for more than six months. Then they hid machine-readable metadata in their filing that tricked the court's database into assigning the case to Drain:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/07/hr-4193/#shoppers-choice
The reason the Sacklers were so horny for Drain? He was a notoriously generous source of "nonconsensual third-party releases." These would allow the Sacklers to permanently end every lawsuit against them without having to declare bankruptcy. Instead, they could take their (ruined, hollow) company through bankruptcy, throw a small fraction of their personal fortunes into the pot, representing fractional pennies on the dollar of what they owed to their victims, and walk away with tens of billions and eternal protection from any future suits.
In other words, they could stiff their creditors and keep the loot. Which is exactly what Robert Drain gave them – before retiring from the bench to get a two-orders-of-magnitude pay raise at a white-shoe firm that specializes in representing corporate mass-murderers like the Sacklers.
That's where it would have ended, but for a surprising ruling from the Supreme Court, which threw out the nonconsensual third-party release deal and put the Sacklers back on the hook to pay the victims of their many, many crimes.
As ever, the best source of analysis and explanation for elite bankruptcy shenanigans is Adam Levitin of the Credit Slips blog:
https://www.creditslips.org/creditslips/2024/06/purdue-pharma-decision-a-big-win-for-mass-tort-victims.html
Levitin has a prediction for what's going to happen next. He rejects the predictions of Sackler apologists, who say that this is going to add years or decades to the already too-long wait for compensation that the Sacklers' victims have endured. Instead, Levitin says that the Sacklers will almost certainly transfer billions more from their personal fortunes to the settlement pot and beg for consensual releases from their victims. In other words, they'll go from dictating terms to asking for them.
So the settlement will stand, but it will be larger, and victims who don't want to take it won't have to – they'll be able to sue. In other words, this ruling "does not prevent deals in bankruptcy. It just changes the terms of what those deals."
This has implications for other mass-murderers and corporate criminals, like Johnson and Johnson (who tricked women into dusting their vulvas with asbestos):
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/01/j-and-j-jk/#risible-gambit
And the Boy Scouts of America, who let pedophiles abuse children for decades:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/05/third-party-nonconsensual-releases/#au-recherche-du-pedos-perdue
Both J&J and BSA carved out nonconsensual third-party releases in the mold of the Sacklers' deal, and both briefed the Supreme Court, warning that if the Sacklers were forced to pay what they owed, J&J and BSA's victims would also be entitled to far larger sums. Go ahead and threaten us with a good time, why doncha?
The Sackler decision is a real bright spot at a dark time for corporate impunity. It's always nice to see big corporate bullies getting a bit of a comeuppance. Another one of those comeuppances was just delivered thanks to a classic fatfinger error.
A Microsoft engineer accidentally released the sourcecode to Playready, the company's flagship DRM product:
https://borncity.com/win/2024/06/26/microsoft-employee-accidentally-publishes-playready-code/
Microsoft's DRM doesn't do anything to protect the interests of creative workers or even the companies that employ them. As a Microsoft rep admitted on stage at a presentation in 2006, the purpose of Microsoft DRM is to prevent small startups from entering the market, ensuring that Microsoft and its "rivals" can safely divide up the world without worrying about disruptive competitors:
https://memex.craphound.com/2006/01/30/msft-our-drm-licensing-is-there-to-eliminate-hobbyists-and-little-guys/
I was there that day and reported on the remarks, prompting both Microsoft and its rep to furiously deny that they'd ever said this, despite multiple witnesses who heard it. This was just a couple years after I gave a viral talk at Microsoft about why the company shouldn't use DRM:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/18/greetings-fellow-pirates/#arrrrrrrrrr
By 2006, it was clear that the company was all in on DRM, and today, DRM is the centerpiece of Microsoft's anticompetitive strategy, and Playready is the centerpiece of Microsoft's DRM. The source-code leak is doubtless going to give rise to lots of grey-market tools for stripping DRM from all kinds of media:
https://security-explorations.com/microsoft-playready.html
You love to see it! Now I'm doubly looking forward to this summer's security conferences, including Defcon, where, for the first time, I'll be emceeing the charity poker tournament to benefit EFF:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/06/betting-your-digital-rights-eff-benefit-poker-tournament-def-con-32
This should be very fun – and funny – especially given how little I know about poker (I have been specifically selected on that basis, for the comedy value). Every player gets a custom EFF poker-deck, and the winner gets a treasure chest filled by EFF board member Tarah Wheeler, including "emeralds, black pearls, amethysts, diamonds, and more."
I like to close these linkdumps with something fun and uplifting, and I'd planned to end things with the poker-tournament, but then my pal Raph Koster announced that his game studio Playable Worlds had dropped its first announcement of Stars Reach, an open-world MMO like no other:
https://www.raphkoster.com/2024/06/28/announcing-stars-reach/
Raph is a legend in MMO design circles, whose credits include Ultima Online and Star Wars Galaxies. He wrote the definitive text on how games work, A Theory of Fun, that's does for games what Understanding Comics did for comics:
https://www.theoryoffun.com/
Stars Reach is stupidly ambitious. It consists of truly open worlds, modeled to an absurd degree of fidelity:
We know the temperature, the humidity, the materials, for every cubic meter of every planet. Our water actually flows downhill and puddles. It freezes overnight or during the winter. It evaporates and turns to steam when heated up. And not just our water — everything does this. Catch a tree on fire with a stray blaster bolt. Melt your way through a glacier to find a hidden alien laboratory embedded in the ice. Stomp too hard on a rock bridge, and watch out, it might collapse under your feet. Dam up a river to irrigate your farm. Or float in space above an asteroid, and mine crystals from its depths.
The game is fundamentally a climate story, whose lore has humanity seeded around the galaxy by a powerful alien race called the Old Ones, only to have humans bust through the planetary limits of every world they were given. Now the Old Ones are giving humans another chance to try smarter ways of sustaining ourselves on new worlds, with the aid of powerful robots call "Servitors."
Because this is a Raph Koster game, it's got a bunch of extremely satisfying play dynamics:
A classless skill tree advancement system, where peaceful play matters just as much as combat
An intricate player-driven economy where players can craft their way to fame and fortune
An accessible yet deep combat system, where you can choose whether to play using action aiming or more forgiving homing shots or lock-on targeting
In-world player housing that lets you build and customize your home and form towns… and enough room for everyone to have a house
A single shardless galaxy, with both space and ground gameplay… in fact, you can build that house on an asteroid, if you want
The ability for a group to govern a planet, and define its laws, whether you want a peaceful home or a PvP free for all
Stars Reach is not playable yet, but the company's looking for gamers to give them feedback and steer the development:
https://starsreach.com/
OK, that wraps up the week's links. I'm gonna get one more edition out on Monday, god willin' and the crick don't rise, and then I'll be off for a couple weeks. Enjoy your summer!
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Support me this summer on the Clarion Write-A-Thon and help raise money for the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers' Workshop!
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/29/pasticcio/#professor-at-large
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Image: James St John https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/40894047123
CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en
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ixhika-jsx · 3 months ago
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Resources and study tips to get you in cyber forensics
Master post • Part1 • part2
let's get you prepped to be a cyber sleuth without spending any cash. Here’s the ultimate tips and resources.
Ps: you can't become one while doing these pointers but you can experience the vibe so you can finally find your career interest
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### 1. **Digital Scavenger Hunts**
- **CTF Challenges (Capture The Flag)**: Dive into platforms like [CTFtime](https://ctftime.org/) where you can participate in cyber security challenges. It's like playing *Among Us* but with hackers—find the imposter in the code!
- **Hunt A Killer (Digitally)**: Create your own digital crime scenes. Ask friends to send you files (like images, PDFs) with hidden clues. Your job? Find the Easter eggs and solve the case.
### 2. **YouTube University**
- **Cyber Sleuth Tutorials**: Channels like *HackerSploit* and *The Cyber Mentor* have playlists covering digital forensics, cybersecurity, and more. Binge-watch them like your fave Netflix series, but here you're learning skills to catch bad guys.
- **Live Streams & Q&A**: Jump into live streams on platforms like Twitch where cybersecurity experts solve cases in real-time. Ask questions, get answers, and interact with the pros.
### 3. **Public Libraries & eBook Treasure Hunts**
- **Library eBooks**: Most libraries have eBooks or online resources on digital forensics. Check out titles like *"Hacking Exposed"* or *"Digital Forensics for Dummies"*. You might have to dig through the catalog, but think of it as your first case.
- **LinkedIn Learning via Library**: Some libraries offer free access to LinkedIn Learning. If you can snag that, you've got a goldmine of courses on cybersecurity and forensics.
### 4. **Virtual Study Groups**
- **Discord Servers**: Join cybersecurity and hacking communities on Discord. They often have study groups, challenges, and mentors ready to help out. It's like joining a digital Hogwarts for hackers.
- **Reddit Threads**: Subreddits like r/cybersecurity and r/hacking are packed with resources, advice, and study buddies. Post your questions, and you’ll get a whole thread of answers.
### 5. **DIY Labs at Home**
- **Build Your Own Lab**: Got an old PC or laptop? Turn it into a practice lab. Install virtual machines (VMware, VirtualBox) and play around with different operating systems and security tools. It’s like Minecraft but for hacking.
- **Log Your Own Activity**: Turn on logging on your own devices and then try to trace your own steps later. You’re basically spying on yourself—no NSA required.
### 6. **Community College & University Open Courses**
- **Free Audit Courses**: Many universities offer free auditing of cybersecurity courses through platforms like Coursera, edX, and even YouTube. No grades, no stress, just pure learning.
- **MOOCs**: Massive Open Online Courses often have free tiers. Try courses like "Introduction to Cyber Security" on platforms like FutureLearn or edX.
### 7. **Scour GitHub**
- **Open-Source Tools**: GitHub is full of open-source forensic tools and scripts. Clone some repositories and start tinkering with them. You’re basically getting your hands on the tools real investigators use.
- **Follow the Code**: Find projects related to digital forensics, follow the code, and see how they work. Contribute if you can—bonus points for boosting your resume.
### 8. **Local Meetups & Online Conferences**
- **Free Virtual Conferences**: Many cybersecurity conferences are virtual and some offer free access. DEF CON has a lot of free content, and you can find tons of talks on YouTube.
- **Hackathons**: Look for free entry hackathons—often universities or tech companies sponsor them. Compete, learn, and maybe even win some gear.
### 9. **DIY Challenges**
- **Create Your Own Scenarios**: Get a friend to simulate a hack or data breach. You try to solve it using whatever tools and resources you have. It's like escape rooms, but digital.
- **Pen & Paper Simulation**: Before diving into digital, try solving forensic puzzles on paper. Map out scenarios and solutions to get your brain wired like a detective.
### 10. **Stay Updated**
- **Podcasts & Blogs**: Tune into cybersecurity podcasts like *Darknet Diaries* or follow blogs like *Krebs on Security*. It’s like getting the tea on what’s happening in the cyber world.
### 11. **Free Software & Tools**
- **Autopsy**: Free digital forensics software that helps you analyze hard drives and mobile devices. Think of it as your magnifying glass for digital clues.
- **Wireshark**: A free tool to see what's happening on your network. Catch all the data packets like you're a digital fisherman.
### 12. **Online Forensics Communities**
- **Free Webinars & Workshops**: Join communities like the *SANS Institute* for free webinars. It's like attending a masterclass but from the comfort of your gaming chair.
- **LinkedIn Groups**: Join groups like *Digital Forensics & Incident Response (DFIR)*. Network with pros, get job tips, and stay in the loop with the latest trends.
### 13. **Practice Cases & Mock Trials**
- **Set Up Mock Trials**: Role-play with friends where one is the hacker, another the victim, and you’re the investigator. Recreate cases from famous cybercrimes to see how you'd solve them.
- **Case Studies**: Research and recreate famous digital forensic cases. What steps did the investigators take? How would you handle it differently?
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There you have it—your roadmap to becoming a cyber sleuth without dropping a dime. You don't have time find your interest after paying pennies to different ppl and colleges. You can explore multiple things from comfort of your home only if you want to.
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hcovopdf · 2 years ago
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The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology - Quentin Rossy
EPUB & PDF Ebook The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD
by Quentin Rossy.
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Download Link : DOWNLOAD The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology
Read More : READ The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology
Ebook PDF The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Intelligence and Criminology 2020 PDF Download in English by Quentin Rossy (Author).
 Description Book: 
Despite a shared focus on crime and its 'extended family', forensic scientists and criminologists tend to work in isolation rather than sharing the data, methods and knowledge that will broaden the understanding of the criminal phenomenon and its related subjects.Bringing together perspectives from international experts, this book explores the intersection between criminology and forensic science and considers how knowledge from both fields can contribute to a better understanding of crime and offer new directions in theory and methodology.This handbook is divided into three parts:Part I explores the epistemological and historical components of criminology and forensic science, focusing on their scientific and social origins.Part II considers how collaboration between these disciplines can bring about a better understanding of the organizations and institutions that react to crime, including the court, intelligence, prevention, crime scene investigation and policing.Part III
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eqxrzbook · 2 years ago
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Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science - Richard Saferstein
EPUB & PDF Ebook Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD
by Richard Saferstein.
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Download Link : DOWNLOAD Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science
Read More : READ Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science
Ebook PDF Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science 2020 PDF Download in English by Richard Saferstein (Author).
 Description Book: 
For introductory courses in Forensic Science and Crime Scene Investigation A clear introduction to the technology of the modern crime laboratory for non-scientists Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science, Twelfth Edition, uses clear writing, case stories, and modern technology to capture the pulse and fervor of forensic science investigations. Written for readers with no scientific background, only the most relevant scientific and technological concepts are presented. The nature of physical evidence is defined, and the limitations that technology and current knowledge impose on its individualization and characterization are examined. A major portion of the text centers on discussions of the common items of physical evidence encountered at crime scenes. Particular attention is paid to the meaning and role of probability in interpreting the evidential significance of scientifically evaluated evidence. Updated throughout, the Twelfth Edition includes a new chapter on
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lmncyok · 2 years ago
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Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation - Richard M. Fleming
EPUB & PDF Ebook Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD
by Richard M. Fleming.
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Download Link : DOWNLOAD Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation
Read More : READ Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation
Ebook PDF Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic Investigation 2020 PDF Download in English by Richard M. Fleming (Author).
 Description Book: 
What is the true origin of COVID-19? President Joe Biden has ordered US intelligence agencies to further investigate the origins of COVID-19. Clearly, the US government isn't decided on what really happened at the start of the pandemic. Was it truly a animal to human transmission to be blamed on a bat in a Wuhan, China wet market? Or was a much more sinister plan at work? In 2020, Dr. Richard M. Fleming began investigating SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19. Using both his "Inflammation" Theory and Patent (FMTVDM; the first method capable of measuring regional blood flow and metabolic changes occurring inside the body, which makes it possible to accurately determine what is happening inside the body as well as whether treatments prescribed for patients are working or not), he investigated COVID treatments. Simultaneously he began investigating the origins of COVID-19. This book details much of what he has found.? What he discovered will shock you. By 1999, US Federal Agencies began funding
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forensicfield · 4 years ago
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FORENSIC SCIENCE E-BOOK ON UNIT-X OF SYLLABUS OF NET/JRF
FORENSIC SCIENCE E-BOOK ON UNIT-X OF SYLLABUS OF NET/JRF
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c-onnorrk800 · 4 years ago
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uploading data … ⟳ 𝙲𝙾𝙼𝙿𝙻𝙴𝚃𝙴 ! welcome , CONNOR. a long way from detroit: become human , huh ? hm … a twenty eight year old detective who looks like BRYAN DECHART — could be worse. i heard you were at ROUSSEAU’S when we un - glitched , & you ( immediately tried to find lieutenant hank anderson ]. still the impulsive & deadpan type , that’s why [ the rich scent of bourbon, a long run through a busy street & bright blue drinks ]’s totally your vibe. the memory of BECOMING DEVIANT AND BREAKING INTO CYBERLIFE is hazy , but maybe the ( old quarter coin & RK800 jacket ) waiting for you at the pawn shop’ll bring clarity. + android , cismale [ he/him ] , demisexual.
Connor’s Past
RK800 Connor model released August 2038.
Connor was an advanced prototype android designed to assist law enforcement, specifically with cases involving deviants.
His mission was to find the source of the deviancy and eliminate it.
His partner was Lt. Hank Anderson, who he came to view as a close friend and father-figure.
Throughout his time on the case, Connor had to deal with conflicting orders, instability in his programming and the alarming realisation that he may have became a deviant himself.
He managed to track down Jericho- the place where androids go to be free- but the humans followed him. This lead to them sending androids to camps to be destroyed and left Jericho to start an uprising to free their people.
Life in the Cloud
Connor was a 28 year old human working as a detective for the 99th Precinct.
He was the son of Hank Anderson.
He was a very charming young man, becoming friends with most people he met. Always smiling and telling jokes, even if he was a little deadpan, and was incredibly dedicated to his work.
Rousseau’s was where he would spend a lot of his free time, even grabbing a few drinks there with his dad on occasion.
His Memories
When Connor’s memories started coming back they were fragmented- most not even making sense. It took him a while to piece together that he was an android and when that happened, his emotional responses numbed.
His feelings... they were just a glitch in his programming. Was he deviant? Had he become what he was designed to hunt? He could remember switching sides, but he could also remember taking down the leader of Jericho, Markus... or was it North?
Had he died? Was he replaced? Did he break androids out of CyberLife or was he the leader of Jericho? Did he find the deviants or was there insufficient evidence? Did he succeed or fail his mission?
Connor’s memories are all happening at the same time, to the point where he isn’t sure who he really is. If his real memories weren’t bad enough, the new memories from here in the cloud are tangled within his messy timeline.
He’s not sure if Hank is his partner, his friend, his enemy or his father. He doesn’t know if his feelings are real or a coding error. Are Markus and North and the rest of Jericho on his side, or is he still supposed to stop them? Can he choose who he is or does he have to wait for his instructions?
His software is unstable.
He might self-destruct.
Extras
He likes dogs, heavy metal and jazz music, and basketball - all because of Hank.
While living in the cloud, he has developed a love of food and drinks, though he’s not sure how this it possible due to him not needing either to function.
His skills include scanning environments, reconstructing crime scenes, voice immitation, martial arts, forensics, psychology, negotiation and interrogation.
Physical books are better than ebooks. - more life lessons from Hank.
Knows so much and yet so little.
An actual cinnamon roll... but could kill you.
Wanted Connections
Partner - In his real memories, Hank is his partner, but he needs a police partner for his cloud memories.
High school relationship - More fake cloud memories, but I want him to have dated someone when they were in high school.
Friends - New friends, old friends. From work, from around town, from Rousseau’s.
Cases - People he has met working on cases, ie. suspects, criminals, victims, witnesses.
Neighbours - Lives in a nice house on a nice street so anyone could live on that street with him and they could know each other from the cloud memories or meet each other for the first time now. Could do classic fun neighbour things.
Real history - If your character can fit into the plot of Detroit: Become Human in some way, even if it was something as silly as Connor having chased someone and ran into you, that could be fun. Or if your character is also from an android show or game, etc...
“I heard a scream and thought you were being killed, but it was just a spider.”
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mattbegins · 5 years ago
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Heey! I'm gonna be nosy, so 2, 11, 31 & 43? 😊
Be as nosy as you like! That’s what this is here for lol
2. What are you obsessed with right now?
The Cold War and Julius Wellhausen’s Documentary Hypothesis, if I’m being honest. I know that sounds strange but let me explain! I had to do some research into the Cold War for a fic I’m currently working on and I’m shocked at how little I was taught about it in school, and now that I’m in university and my field of study doesn’t lean anywhere near that I’ve been trying to learn a lot about it with all this free time. As for the Documentary Hypothesis, I’m currently taking an elective course on the literary history of the Bible (from a non-religious stance) and Wellhausen constructed a hypothesis which illustrates a web of different historical, near ancient sources he believed aided in the construction of the Torah/Pentateuch. It’s So fascinating
11. If you could teleport anywhere in the world right now, where would you go?
I’ve been missing London and Amsterdam a lot recently, but I think I would just go see my boyfriend. I miss him and I would die for a hug. There you go: the gayest answer possible. Success.
31. Do you like paper books or ebooks better?
Depends on what I’m using it for! paper books are the best to read for fun, but ebooks are so useful when it comes to academic/research work because of this little feature called ctrl+f. Does wonders for writing papers
43. What’s your guilty pleasure?
Pointing out factual errors in forensics/crime shows. I’ve caught several instances where someone decided to be lazy and used a prop skull with characteristics that doesn’t match that of the victim described (ie a male skull for a female victim, etc). Or someone will say “the body is in X state of decay” and I’m like? okay?? show me? The victim’s eyes are open and have been for hours! Where’s my tache noire?
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rathertoofondofbooks · 5 years ago
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Nonfiction November 2019 runs from 28th October to 30th November 2019.  This year’s hosts are Katie of DoingDewey, Rennie of What’s Nonfiction, Julz of JulzReads, Sarah of Sarah’s Bookshelves and Leann of Shelf Aware.
They’ll be posting a discussion question and link-up on the Monday of each week.  Check out this post for the schedule and prompts.
  I love joining in with Non-Fiction November each year. I do read a reasonable amount of non-fiction throughout the year anyway but it’s great to have a month where I focus on reading more non-fiction than fiction. I’ve really struggled to pick my TBR this year as I have so many books on my TBR that I want to read so I’ve tried to pick a wide range and hope that I’m in the right mood to read most of them during the month! Ultimately I’ll just be happy to read more non-fiction than fiction throughout November.
  So without further ado here is my TBR!
  Firstly I have a few non-fiction books that I’ve been sent for review so I’m putting those on my list:
  Bowie’s Bookshelf: The Hundred Books that Changed David Bowie’s Life by John O’Connell
I was thrilled to get approved to read this book from NetGalley as I’ve been a huge David Bowie fan since I was a young child and think learning more about his favourite books will be so interesting.
Constellations by Sinead Gleason
I’ve wanted to read this book ever since I read a very moving article in the newspaper about Sinead and one of the stories in her book. I’ve had this book on my NetGalley for a little while now and really do want to make it a priority in November.
The Undying: A Meditation on Modern Illness by Anne Boyer
I got this book on Read Now on NetGalley a few weeks ago. It might be a book that is too much for me to read but this is a subject that I generally want to read more about so I’m hoping I can read this one.
  Chase the Rainbow by Poorna Bell
I’ve shamefully had this book on my review pile for over a year so I really want to make it a priority this month. The subject matter is around mental health and suicide so it won’t be an easy read but I think it’s an important book.
How to be Human: The Manual by Ruby Wax
This is another book that I’ve had on my review pile for a while now and I’m still really interested to read it.
  Then I went through my non-fiction audio books and spotted a handful that I’m really keen to listen to:
  Becoming by Michelle Obama
I got this book on audio as Michelle Obama reads it herself and I’ve been wanting to listen to it ever since it was first published. I think this will be a fab listen so I’m really looking forward to this one.
The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold
I’ve heard so many great things about this book so it’s high on my priority list for the month ahead. I think it really focuses on the women and their lives rather than how they died so I’m fascinated to listen to this one.
    Three Women by Lisa Taddeo
This is another book that I’ve been so keen to get to and I keep hearing such good things about it so I really hope I can get to this one this month.
The Death of a President: November 1963 by William Manchester
I’ve wanted to read this book for a long time but it’s really hard to find second-hand at a reasonable price. I think it was out of print when I looked for it so when I spotted it on Audible I immediately spent my credit for that month. It’s a really long book so I’m not sure I’ll get to listen to all of this in November along with all my other reading but I hope to at least start it.
  Next there are the non-fiction ebooks that I’d like to get to:
  Deceit and Self-Deception:  Fooling Yourself the Better to Fool Others by Robert Trivers
This book has been on my TBR for around three years and my interest in it has never waned. I do feel intimidated by it for some reason so I keep putting off reading it. I really want to make this a priority this month to at least get a chunk of it read as it does sound so fascinating.
A Mind of Its Own: How Your Brain Distorts and Deceives by Cordelia Fine
Ever since I’ve had my medical condition I’ve been fascinated by how the brain works and how it can distort things, and also how we can over-ride this. So this book caught my eye in a kindle sale recently and I’ve been so keen to read it.
The Dark Side of the Mind: True Stories from My Life as a Forensic Psychologist by Kerry Daynes
I couldn’t resist buying this book when it was recommended to me as I’m fascinated by psychology and this looks like my kind of book! I’m really keen to read this one so it might even be the book I pick up first for Non-Fiction November!
Selfie: How We Became So Self-Obsessed and What It’s Doing to Us by Will Storr
I’ve had this book on my TBR since it was first published and I’m still really intrigued to read it so hopefully I’ll finally get to read it this month!
Feel Free: Essays by Zadie Smith
I’ve added this book to my TBR as I think it will be good to have a book os essays to dip in and out of throughout the month. I love Zadie Smith’s fiction but have never read any of her non-fiction so I’m really keen to read this one.
Brainstorm: Detective Stories From the World of Neurology by Suzanne O’Sullivan
I really enjoyed Suzanne O’Sullivan’s previous book It’s All In Your Head (which I read while in hospital recovering from neurosurgery!) so when I spotted she had a new book out I had to buy it. As I said about Cordelia Fine’s book earlier in this post I’m fascinated by the mind and what it can do so I think I’m going to love this book too.
Misogynies by Joan Smith
I bought this book on a whim very recently and am really looking forward to reading it. I think it’s a slightly older book on this subject but it still sounds so fascinating and I’m keen to get to this one.
Turning the Tide on Plastic: How Humanity (And You) Can Make Our Globe Clean Again by Lucy Siegle
This is a book that I really want to read soon as I’m working really hard on reducing my plastic in my home but I feel like I now need more guidance on how to reduce it further. There are some things that feel impossible to change but I know there will be ideas out there. I’m hoping this book is the one I need.
Lost Connections: Uncovering the Real Causes of Depression – and the Unexpected Solutions by Johann Hari
I read another of Johann Hari’s other books a year or two ago and found it really interesting so this one really stood out to me. I think there has been some controversy over this book but also some good reviews so I’m keen to see what I think.
How Music Got Free: The End of an Industry, the Turn of the Century, and the Patient Zero of Piracy by Stephen Witt
I recently watched a documentary and the author of this book was on it and I thought that I’d look the book up. When I went to buy it it turned out I already owned it! So I decided that was a sign that I should read it soon!
  And finally the print books:
Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business by Neil Postman
This is a book that I’m desperate to read but haven’t managed to purely because the type is so small I haven’t managed it. I’ve got yet more new glasses for reading recently so am hoping I can finally read it this month. I want to read this one because I LOVE Roger Waters’ album Amused to Death and this book apparently inspired the title and some of the themes on that album.
Mansfield and Me: A Graphic Memoir by Sarah Laing
I bought this book a year or so ago and am so keen to read it. It seems perfect to put on this TBR as it will be a different format of non-fiction for this month.
Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour by Kate Fox
This is another book that I’ve been so looking forward to and it looks like it might be both interesting and fun. It’s a bit of a doorstop though so I might struggle to read all of it this month but I will do my best to get to it.
    Are you taking part in Non-Fiction November this time? What’s on your TBR for the month? Have you got any good non-fiction recommendations for me based on my TBR?
  Non-Fiction November 2019 TBR Books! Nonfiction November 2019 runs from 28th October to 30th November 2019.  This year’s hosts are Katie of 
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kalilinux4u · 6 years ago
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Network Forensics → Intensively hands-on training for real-world network forensics https://t.co/5yRuBetyoM Get your free eBook now https://t.co/51gZ2Mhggc (via Twitter http://twitter.com/TheHackersNews/status/1072393575827210242)
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in0dtp · 2 years ago
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PDF Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods BY Lyndsie Bourgon
EPUB & PDF Ebook Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD
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Ebook PDF Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America's Woods 2020 PDF Download in English by Lyndsie Bourgon (Author).
Description
A gripping account of the billion-dollar timber black market -- and how it intersects with environmentalism, class, and culture.In Tree Thieves, Lyndsie Bourgon takes us deep into the underbelly of the illegal timber market. As she traces three timber poaching cases, she introduces us to tree poachers, law enforcement, forensic wood specialists, the enigmatic residents of former logging communities, environmental activists, international timber cartels, and indigenous communities along the way.Old-growth trees are invaluable and irreplaceable for both humans and wildlife, and are the oldest living things on earth. But the morality of tree poaching is not as simple as we might think: stealing trees is a form of deeply rooted protest, and a side effect of environmental preservation and protection that doesn’t include communities that have been uprooted or marginalized when park boundaries are drawn. As Bourgon discovers, failing to include working class and rural communities in the
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hcovopdf · 2 years ago
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The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South - Radley Balko
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Ebook PDF The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South 2020 PDF Download in English by Radley Balko (Author).
 Description Book: 
A shocking and deeply reported account of the persistent plague of institutional racism and junk forensic science in our criminal justice system, and its devastating effect on innocent lives After two three-year-old girls were raped and murdered in rural Mississippi, law enforcement pursued and convicted two innocent men: Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks. Together they spent a combined thirty years in prison before finally being exonerated in 2008. Meanwhile, the real killer remained free.The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist recounts the story of how the criminal justice system allowed this to happen, and of how two men, Dr. Steven Hayne and Dr. Michael West, built successful careers on the back of that structure. For nearly two decades, Hayne, a medical examiner, performed the vast majority of Mississippi's autopsies, while his friend Dr. West, a local dentist, pitched himself as a forensic jack-of-all-trades. Together they became the go-to experts for prosecutors and helped put
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eqxrzbook · 2 years ago
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Cell Phone Investigations: Search Warrants, Cell Sites and Evidence Recovery - Aaron Edens
EPUB & PDF Ebook Cell Phone Investigations: Search Warrants, Cell Sites and Evidence Recovery | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD
by Aaron Edens.
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Ebook PDF Cell Phone Investigations: Search Warrants, Cell Sites and Evidence Recovery | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook Cell Phone Investigations: Search Warrants, Cell Sites and Evidence Recovery EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook Cell Phone Investigations: Search Warrants, Cell Sites and Evidence Recovery 2020 PDF Download in English by Aaron Edens (Author).
 Description Book: 
As the first of its kind, Cell Phone Investigations is the most comprehensive book written on cell phones, cell sites, and cell related data. This book also features sample search warrant templates and updated material regarding the 2014 Supreme Court ruling. Cell Phone Investigations demonstrates how to examine mobile devices and sift through data without expensive equipment or years of specialized training. Features: -Includes a vast selection of search warrant templates -Demonstrates how to acquire phone records and how they are useful -Explains how cell towers and cell cites work and how they can apply to investigations -Explores digital evidence and its application in cell phone forensics -Illustrates how to handle locked devices
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jiyyxm · 2 years ago
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Read PDF Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic investigation -- Richard M. Fleming
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by Richard M. Fleming.
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Ebook PDF Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic investigation | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic investigation EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook Is COVID-19 a Bioweapon?: A Scientific and Forensic investigation 2020 PDF Download in English by Richard M. Fleming (Author).
Description
What is the true origin of COVID-19? President Joe Biden has ordered US intelligence agencies to further investigate the origins of COVID-19. Clearly, the US government isn't decided on what really happened at the start of the pandemic. Was it truly a animal to human transmission to be blamed on a bat in a Wuhan, China wet market? Or was a much more sinister plan at work? In 2020, Dr. Richard M. Fleming began investigating SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19. Using both his "Inflammation" Theory and Patent (FMTVDM; the first method capable of measuring regional blood flow and metabolic changes occurring inside the body, which makes it possible to accurately determine what is happening inside the body as well as whether treatments prescribed for patients are working or not), he investigated COVID treatments. Simultaneously he began investigating the origins of COVID-19. This book details much of what he has found.  What he discovered will shock you. By 1999, US Federal Agencies began funding
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forensicfield · 4 years ago
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FORENSIC SCIENCE E-BOOK ON UNIT-III OF SYLLABUS OF NET/JRF
FORENSIC SCIENCE E-BOOK ON UNIT-III OF SYLLABUS OF NET/JRF -- #forensicserology #forensicscience #forensicnetjrfpreparation #forensicebook #forensicsciencenetpreparation #forensicunitwisenotes #forensicsciencemcq #forensicfield #forensicstudy #knowledge
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pxyiyk · 2 years ago
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[PDF] Download The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South PDF BY Radley Balko
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by Radley Balko.
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Ebook PDF The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South | EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD Hello Book lovers, If you want to download free Ebook, you are in the right place to download Ebook. Ebook The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South EBOOK ONLINE DOWNLOAD in English is available for free here, Click on the download LINK below to download Ebook The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist: A True Story of Injustice in the American South 2020 PDF Download in English by Radley Balko (Author).
Description
A shocking and deeply reported account of the persistent plague of institutional racism and junk forensic science in our criminal justice system, and its devastating effect on innocent lives After two three-year-old girls were raped and murdered in rural Mississippi, law enforcement pursued and convicted two innocent men: Kennedy Brewer and Levon Brooks. Together they spent a combined thirty years in prison before finally being exonerated in 2008. Meanwhile, the real killer remained free.The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist recounts the story of how the criminal justice system allowed this to happen, and of how two men, Dr. Steven Hayne and Dr. Michael West, built successful careers on the back of that structure. For nearly two decades, Hayne, a medical examiner, performed the vast majority of Mississippi's autopsies, while his friend Dr. West, a local dentist, pitched himself as a forensic jack-of-all-trades. Together they became the go-to experts for prosecutors and helped put
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