Forensic Scientist

Forensic Scientist

LIsa Black

Cape Coral, FL

Female, 49

I spent the five happiest years of my life in a morgue. As a forensic scientist in the Cleveland coroner’s office I analyzed gunshot residue on hands and clothing, hairs, fibers, paint, glass, DNA, blood and many other forms of trace evidence, as well as crime scenes. Now I'm a certified latent print examiner and CSI for a police department in Florida. I also write a series of forensic suspense novels, turning the day job into fiction. My books have been translated into six languages.

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Last Answer on July 21, 2022

Best Rated

Any advice for someone trying to go into forensics? I believe I want to be in a lab analyzing evidence.

Asked by Renee about 10 years ago

Take all the science courses you can and any kind of forensic-oriented laboratory courses.

What skills and abilities do you believe are needed for a forensics career?

Asked by Renee about 10 years ago

As I said above, patience, attention to detail, a tolerance for the more tedious parts of the job, and an affinity for science. A strong stomach helps but I knew guys who were homicide detectives for twenty years and still got queasy at the smell of a dead body, so don't let that stop you.

Do you use helminthic parasites as a way of proving sexual crimes if the crime took place a long time ago?

Asked by Jenifer about 10 years ago

I'm sorry, I haven't had any experience with that.

do you have any advice for someone who's interesting in forensic science field?

Asked by Soph about 9 years ago

Yes, take all the science classes you can and try to visit local labs to see what the job is really like.

How has the evolution of forensic science affected the amount of cases being solved and how they are solved?

Asked by Danielle over 9 years ago

That's hard to say because I only know what goes on at my particular agency, and cases are solved in all different ways--by fingerprints, by pawning stolen goods, by eyewitness testimony, through the criminal's use of electronic devices. I think more cases are solved today because there have been advances in all areas, because the world has gotten a little smaller and because the general public is more aware of criminal activity.

Do you ever read about forensics investigations in the news and think they're doing something improperly, or drawing unfounded conclusions?

Asked by singher over 10 years ago

No, because simply from a news article you have no idea of everything that is going on. The officers might not be (should not be) telling reporters everything they know, in order to weed out truthful and untruthful witnesses. They're also not going to tell reporters (and if they did the reporters wouldn't write it) every last little boring tedious detail of everything they do. And information often gets garbled in translation, from crime scene to cops, from cops to the information officer, from the info officer to the press release, from the press release to the news article, from the neighbor looking over their fence and then talking to the reporter. That's just human.

Lots of time the story I get from Dispatch when they first call me turns out to be a totally different thing when I get there.

Exactly how does lumimol work?

Asked by Jailah about 10 years ago

I couldn't tell you the exact chemistry, but it reacts with the iron present in hemoglobin to indicate blood. However it also reacts with other oxidizing agents such as copper and horseradish. Unlike what you see on TV, we don't spray luminol and then use a UV light or some such thing. We make the room as dark as possible, spending a lot of time taping material over windows and door cracks and 'ready' lights, then spray the luminol.or Bluestar. It will glow on its own without any additional equipment, and won't last long. It can be photographed but that's a bit of work. It won't stain or harm anything.