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FORENSIC MEDICINE & TOXICOLOGY Resource Materials for Medical Students

Created by: A Junior Resident of INDIRA GANDHI INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES ,SHEIKHPURA PATNA (BIHAR) INDIA

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Month: March 2023

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Hernia Repair Workshop at IGIMS Patna on 18 March 2023

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International Textbook of Forensic Medicine Vol-1: Introduction to Forensic Medicine
Amazon.com: International Textbook of Forensic Medicine Vol-1: Introduction to Forensic Medicine eBook : Desai, Dr Sanjeev Ranjan: Kindle Store
Time Since Death: A Comprehensive Guide for Medical Students
Amazon.com: Time Since Death: A Comprehensive Guide for Medical Students eBook : Desai, Dr Sanjeev Ranjan , Yadav, Prof(Dr. Bishwa Nath : Kindle Store

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  • Firearms Evidence: From Crime Scene to Courtroom
  • The Role of Expert Opinion in Judicial Proceedings
  • Forensic Science E-Magazine (Vol 22)
  • South Malaka Prayagraj Murder Case: How Forensic Evidence Helped Police Solve a Family Mass Murder
  • From English to Hindi: How e-AHCR Is Transforming Access to Court Judgments

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  • Practice MCQ Set Forensic Medicine for MBBS Pre University & University Examination
  • Punishments in Rape: Recent Changes
  • 19.Head Injury
  • 18.Firearm Injuries
  • 17.Sharp Force Injuries: Stab Wounds

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  1. Beau Girardi on Optical Fibre Communication System (OFCS)
  2. crusading on Radiation Detection
  3. ‏turbotax settlement on Are you a Forensic Genius! If So Attempt and score 100% to prove it!
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  5. Sandy Gremillion on Photo Imaging Evidence

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  • Nov 12, All About Forensic Science
  • Sep 5, The Role of Forensic Evidence in Criminal Defense Cases
  • Aug 6, The Evolving Role of Medical Science in Forensic Investigations
  • Jul 30, Common Misconceptions About Canadian Criminal Law
  • Jul 24, The Role of the Enneagram Test in Forensic Science
  • The Importance of Recognizing Gender Identity in Death
  • Death in the Bathtub: A Classic Forensic Scenario
  • Death in Custody
  • Bearing Witness
  • Changing the Way We Talk about Domestic Violence
  • Pedro Hernandez: New York. Major (Unwelcome) Development: The US Supreme Court has restored his conviction in the infamous murder of Etan Patz (reversing a lower court decision that likely would have required a new trial, CNN (Reporter John Fritz) reports, noting that: " Patz disappeared on the morning of May 25, 1979, the first time his parents allowed him to walk by himself to his bus stop about a block away from his home in SoHo. The disappearance sparked a highly publicized search for the boy, and brought national attention to cases of missing children across the country after authorities put his image on thousands of milk cartons. His body was never found. The investigation into his disappearance stalled until 2012 when police learned that Pedro Hernandez, who had worked at a bodega near the bus stop, told his ex-wife and others that he had strangled a boy years earlier. He repeated the confessions to law enforcement and was later convicted of felony murder and kidnaping. He was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. Hernandez’s lawyers said his confession was false and caused by mental illness."
  • June 23: Ervin Harris: Jefferson County; Alabama: From our 'Enough to make one weep' department: Enough to make one weep: Yes, his conviction for rape in 1975 has been overturned - along with his 99 year sentence - but only after he had served 42 years in prison - following a recent hearing, which had been focused on modern scientific research regarding human memory and eyewitness misidentification, science that did not exist during Harris' original trial - and during that hearing, eyewitness identification expert Nancy Franklin raised major concerns about the identification process used in the case. Reported by Multimedia Reporter Zoe Blair. (WVTM 13)...During that hearing, eyewitness identification expert Nancy Franklin raised major concerns about the identification process used in the case. The video below talks about Harris' efforts to get his conviction overturned. "I concluded that the eyewitness identifications of Mr. Harris by the victim, as done, were highly unreliable," Franklin testified. "She described a very different person than she identified."
  • June 22: Deborah Nicholls: Colorado: Suppression of scientific evidence: Question of the day: On May 5, a court ruled that prosecutors had suppressed scientific evidence contradicting its theory of arson in Deborah Nicholl's murder trial in the deaths of three children, trial, as KKTV reported (Link Below): So, why is she remaining in prison for now?...Following the hearing, Nicholls’ other defense attorney, Janene McCabe, offered a statement: “Deb didn’t get a fair trial, but now rather than moving forward she is stuck due to procedure and technicalities,” McCabe said. “We believe in Deb and we will not give up fighting for her and getting her home where she belongs.” Nicholls is due back in court in mid July. The judge said he could issue an order addressing the legal questions before that next hearing.":
  • Source: Hiromu Sakahara; Japan: Major (Welcome) Development: Prosecutors say they will offer no evidence of guilt in the recently ordered posthumous retrial on his conviction of robbing and murdering a woman in 1984, paving the way for his acquittal, in the first such retrial in postwar Japan involving a finalized death or life sentence, The Mainichi reports..."Sakahara died of illness aged 75 in 2011 while serving a life term for the alleged killing of 69-year-old liquor store manager Hatsu Ikemoto in Hino, a city in the same prefecture, and stealing her cash box. A regular customer at the store, Sakahara was indicted after making a confession during voluntary questioning. He later maintained his innocence at trial, arguing that investigators had pressured him into confessing. Sakahara's family and lawyers had been calling for the retrial to begin promptly. The district court approved reopening the trial in July 2018 after newly disclosed photo negatives showing him leading investigators to the site where the victim's body was found raised doubts about the reliability of his confession."
  • June 21: Iwao Hakamada: Japan: Hiroaki Murayama, a judge who ordered his 'retrial' has called for reform of his country's highly restrictive "retrial' system - citing the Iwao Hakamata case, which he says 'changed his view of life as a judge' - as has Iwao Hakamata's sister Hideko Hakamata, 93, who has also called for reform, and never gave up in her long fight to save her younger brother, Iwao Hakamata, and also gave her opinion at the committee. “I do not think only Iwao should be saved. Please ensure there are no loopholes in this bill,” she said."

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  • 65. Nocturnal Eneuresis
  • 64.Rett syndrome
  • 63. Conduct Disorder
  • 62. Oppositional Defiant Disorder
  • 61. Dyslexia
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