CSI Skills Used To Track Animal Offenders
-------- Original Message -------- Date: Sun, 3 Oct 2010
21:01:34 +1300 From: Ian Morrison ROYAL NEW ZEALAND
SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS For
release: 3rd October 2010 SPCA Inspectors To Use CSI
Skills In Bringing Animal Offenders To Justice New Zealand
to have world's first forensically-trained nationwide animal
inspectorate Twenty-five inspectors from across New Zealand
took part in a CSI training session and crime scene grave
excavation, held this weekend in and around Taupo, under the
guidance of leading United States Forensic Entomologist and
CSI expert, Dr Jason H Byrd. Dr Byrd is Educational
Programme Inspector at the University of Florida's William R
Maples Centre for Forensic Medicine. He also teaches at the
university, which is widely recognised as America's most
prominent institution for developing and teaching animal
forensics. "Proving that a crime has taken place and
establishing the identity of the perpetrator are typically
even harder when the victim is an animal rather than a
human. However, the training and knowledge base developed
by Jason Byrd and his colleagues are making a substantial
difference to detection and conviction rates in some parts
of the United States where they've been consistently
applied," says the SPCA's National Chief Executive, Robyn
Kippenberger.
"New Zealand animal welfare inspectors have
now become part of a fortunate few outside the USA to have
benefited from such training. As a result, we're now well
on our way to having the world's first nationwide network of
animal CSI investigators," she says. Robyn Kippenberger
adds that there's normally a long waiting list for the
training sessions Dr Byrd runs, along with the American
SPCA's senior director of veterinary forensics, Melinda
Merck, who visited New Zealand in 2007 and 2008, running
veterinary forensic and animal CSI trainings for SPCA
inspectors and vets. Part of this weekend's training
involved disinterring eight dead dogs and cats, buried at a
site near Ohakune four months ago, in preparation for the
crime scene workshop. The inspectors learned how to secure
the site, check for and secure potential forensic evidence
and then dig up the bodies in a way that did not
substantially impair them or compromise their value as
evidence admissible in court. Another focus of the weekend
was the protocol of forensic investigation that inspectors
need to comply with, to ensure their findings are
comprehensive and meet the required level of proof. "SPCA
inspectors have already put their CSI skills to good use in
some recent prosecutions. As their skills and experience
grow, it should become progressively harder to mistreat
animals and get away with it," says Robyn
Kippenberger. ends
More offenders against animals can expect
to be brought to justice, thanks to an SPCA programme
aimed at making its animal inspectorate the first such
nationwide organisation anywhere to be fully trained in CSI
techniques.