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After many years of interest in forensic science, I now take more interest in it as a retired teacher.-Ron Price, Tasmania
______________________ FORENSIC SCIENCE GETS GOING While the Baha’i temple in Sydney was in its final months of construction before its official opening in September 1961, Stephen Bradley was convicted of the murder of an eight year old boy, Graham Thorne, in the first trial in which modern, complex forensic science--and particularly forensic botany--played a dominant role in securing a conviction. Thorne had just won Australia’s first big lottery to finance the building of the Opera House.–Ron Price with thanks to WIN TV, 9:35-11:15 p.m., “Kid For Ransom,” Crime Investigation Unit, 27 November 2007. Forensic sciences has an interesting history going back to the Roman physician Galen who performed the first autopsies in the 2nd century BC. But in the 19th century the history of forensic science developed exponentially. In 1844 the first forensic medicine was taught in London. A method for the identification of bloodstains was discovered in 1863. In 1892 Galton wrote a book on the classification of fingerprints. the story had just begun.-Ron Price with thanks to Jim Fisher, “Forensic Science Timeline,” Internet Site, 28 November 2007. They were very big years with Yuri Gagarin going around the earth and with TV sets going to two million from 1958 to 19611 Downunder. I joined Baha’i, a movement that had just got going back then with, say, three hundred members in that far-off isolated continent where they had started building that temple back then in Sydney finishing it in ’61 just after the greatest manhunt in Australian history, the trial of Stephen Bradley and the use of forensic botanical science for the first time in a major criminal investigation. 1 Noel Sanders, “Crimes of Passion: TV, Popular Literature and the Graeme Thorne Kidnapping,” The Australian Journal of Cultural Studies, Volume 1 No.1 May 1983. Ron Price 28 November 2007 married for 41 years, a teacher for 35 and a Baha'i for 48 |
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