Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1 - White Lightnin’
Chapter 2 - The Crying Game
Chapter 3 - Thunder Snow, Aye
Chapter 4 - Divining Intervention
Chapter 5 - Mamas, Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys
Chapter 6 - CSI Frappuccino
Chapter 7 - Jersey Devil
Chapter 8 - So Let It Be Written
Chapter 9 - Back to the Future!
EPILOGUE
GLOSSARY OF FORENSIC TERMS
Acknowledgements
.PRAISE FOR Bodies We’ve Buried
“This wonderful book will take you on a fascinating and sure-footed journey through the real world of crime scene investigation and the real people in it. Bodies We’ve Buried is original, informative, and delightfully readable.”—Patricia Cornwell
“A fascinating inside look...The Academy’s rigorous, hands-on curriculum is not for the faint of heart or the queasy. The same could be said for the book’s vivid you-are-there descriptions . . . People looking for an interesting read will enjoy sharing the challenges of the CSI training course and the behind-the-scenes stories that Hallcox and Welch recount. Their enthusiastic and comfortable style welcomes all readers, viewers and nonviewers of CSI alike, into their world.”—Dr. Fred Bortz, Chicago Sun-Times
“Hallcox and Welch take readers inside the world’s top CSI training school for a spooky, but fascinating, look at what they do and how they do it.”—The Knoxville News-Sentinel
“More gruesome than anything on CSI.”—Giant
“It isn’t pretty, but exposure to such disturbing sights and smells helps detectives track down the bad guys.”—Nashville Scene
“Shares with readers the gritty reality of forensic work. The authors caution that the actual work is a lot less glamorous than it looks on TV and often involves crawling through the mud or examining putrid corpses. And nothing is as simple as it seems, from photographing crime scenes—where the details, from film speed to lighting, are crucial—to processing evidence, which is selectively sent off to a state lab to be dealt with. Students in the course also pay a visit to the infamous Body Farm, where they examine and analyze decomposing corpses. Given the popularity of CSI and its many imitators, many will find reading about the real science enlightening and engrossing.” —Booklist
Berkley titles by
Jarrett Hallcox and Amy Welch
BODIES WE’VE BURIED
BEHIND THE YELLOW TAPE
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PRINTING HISTORY
Berkley trade paperback edition / January 2009
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hallcox, Jarrett.
Behind the yellow tape : on the road with some of America’s hardest working crime scene
investigators / Jarrett Hallcox and Amy Welch ; foreword by Patricia Cornwell.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-440-65989-8
1. Criminal investigation—United States—Case studies. 2. Crime scene searches—
United States—Case studies. 3. Evidence, Criminal—United States—Case studies.
I. Welch, Amy. II. Title.
HV8073.H2228 2009
363.25092'273—dc22
2008035648
http://us.penguingroup.com
To all who have dedicated their lives
to forensic science and work tirelessly to stay
one step ahead of the criminal.
Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go.
—T. S. ELIOT
FOREWORD
BY PATRICIA CORNWELL
There’s always evidence, if you know where to look. So we realize in Behind the Yellow Tape, a collection of real cases worked by real people who aren’t likely to end up on talk shows, and probably won’t like all the fuss when the public gets its hands on this tremendously entertaining, provocative book.
Behind the Yellow Tape isn’t at all what you see on TV. It’s better. It isn’t done with magic boxes, as I refer to the television tools of CSIs, with their unlimited funding, limitless boundaries, and the ability to divine what happened and why. Jarrett Hallcox and Amy Welch trekked across America, spending countless hours with police and investigators as diverse as the sheriff’s department of Sevier County, Tennessee, and the NYPD. As forensic experts themselves, who have each earned a ticket to the inside, the authors were given access to cases that they have re-created in such colorful, extraordinary detail, I got nervous and felt compelled to call Jarrett Hallcox after I’d read the first ten pages.
“Hey,” I said uneasily, because he’d asked if I’d write a foreword to the book, and I was beginning to think I should have said no. “I’m confused. Is this fiction or nonfiction?”
“What do you mean?” he replied, baffled.
“I mean is it factual? Every word of it.”
“Yes. Every word of it, I swear.”
“Because I can’t put my name on it and then find out later you made it up. What they call nonfiction-fiction or whatever,” I said. “That’s what it reads like. How the hell did you get all this detail, right down to what was said at the scene or what was going on inside someone’s psyche?”
Painstaking research is the simple answer. Spending inordinate amounts of time talking to th
e cops who worked the cases, and going over every word of every record and interview. What comes to mind is an old saying I hear all the time from people who work in the world of crime: “You really can’t make stuff like this up.”
Of course, the big bonus is that Hallcox and Welch go to great lengths accurately describing the minutiae of forensics that no one can seem to get enough of these days. What you’ll see is the very necessary demythologizing of crime scene investigation—what was and wasn’t done in cases that shed blood and took lives.
INTRODUCTION
On the Road
What exactly is a crime scene investigator? Not the high-heeled, leather-clad version that Hollywood crams down our throats on a nightly basis, but the real crime scene investigator: the real CSI. Though there are no strict definitions, a crime scene investigator is simply a member of the police force who works a crime scene. Contrary to their name, they don’t actually investigate crime—though some do have the dual responsibility of crime scene work and investigation. And they are not scientists either, unlike the character on CSI, Gil Grissom, who is shown toiling hours and hours in a laboratory. Simply put, CSIs are the people who collect evidence, do minimal analysis of that evidence, and prepare the rest to be sent to the lab. That’s it. They don’t use scanning electron microscopes, and they don’t chase down murderers in long, dark alleyways. Hollywood purposefully gets it wrong, because sometimes being a CSI is boring. Crawling on your hands and knees, decked out in blaring white Tyvek suits, looking for one spent shell casing in the grass, or better still, sorting through a Dumpster behind an old Chinese restaurant, looking for a hair in day-old moo goo gai pan just doesn’t make for a good prime-time broadcast.
Yet Hollywood’s version has created a forensic fervor of epidemic proportions. The CSI craze has taken off, run amok, and left an indelible mark on pop culture. Hollywood’s contribution to making crime scene investigation fashionable and “hot” cannot be denied. Just go to any college campus with a forensic science program and you will see it packed to the gills. The study of forensics is at its zenith, and Hollywood can be thanked for that. But unfortunately it has also had a negative impact as well. Shows such as CSI and Cold Case have caused some of the general public to have unreasonable expectations regarding crime scene investigation, due in large part to the sensational portrayal of crime scene investigators and their crime scene practices. And all of this has caused a new illness to develop, afflicting many, many Americans. It is called the CSI Effect.
The CSI Effect is a clear indicator of just how pervasive the forensic craze is. Smart, intelligent people are watching these forensic shows on television and thinking that they are true representations of crime and crime scene investigation. Some of these same people, armed with this silicone-enhanced knowledge of forensic science, end up as jurors who make their decisions based on what they have seen on TV and render verdicts based on what they think they know. “I saw it on television” has become an all-too-familiar response in courtrooms across America. It doesn’t matter the size of the city or the type of crime; the CSI Effect does not discriminate. If you don’t think the CSI Effect is a problem, just ask any forensic investigator who has testified at a hearing. We guarantee he or she will have a story to tell.
Why does any of this matter? Who cares, right? Wrong. It matters because the crime scene investigator is the first line in seeking justice. In most criminal cases, the burden of proof comes down to the evidence—no more, no less. If the CSI does not find the evidence, collect it, and package it properly, then a trial won’t even happen. There may not even be an arrest. The fate of a criminal begins and ends with the crime scene investigator and his or her ability to work a crime scene.
That’s where we come in. We have spent the last six years of our lives working with and training crime scene investigators at the National Forensic Academy (NFA) in Knoxville, Tennessee. Here, men and women from all walks of life and all types of law enforcement agencies come together to hone their CSI skills in an intense, hands-on training program unlike any other in the country. Three times a year and for ten weeks at a time, these CSIs train in the field via re-created crime scene scenarios. Cars are blown up, bodies are buried, and human blood is spattered in an effort to teach CSIs the best methods for working crime scenes. It is from here that benchmarks in the art of crime scene investigation are set, and it is from here that we, former administrators of this renowned academy, learned the real world of crime scene investigation and the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of the crime scene investigator.
So we decided to tell their stories; to walk a mile in their shoes; and hopefully, just maybe, to debunk some of the Hollywood myths surrounding the CSI. Not to mention, we wanted to give CSIs everywhere their due because, contrary to how they are portrayed on television, their jobs are not glamorous, high paying, or even particularly rewarding at times. They don’t have the corner offices or the high-tech labs—and you can rest assured none of them drive Hummers. Sometimes television has a way of blurring the lines between what is real and what is make-believe. But we know what’s real. It is these men and women, from border to border and coast to coast, who get up and go to work, laboring every single day to put bad people away, to make the rest of our lives better and safer. These are the stories of the men and women who dedicate their lives to working behind the yellow tape.
1
White Lightnin’
SEVIER COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE, TENNESSEE
Sevier County, Tennessee, sits in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains. Founded in 1794, Sevier County was inhabited for more than fifteen thousand years by the Cherokee. The county was named after Tennessee’s first governor, John Sevier. The county seat is Sevierville, one of the oldest cities in the entire state, though it’s also home to other well-known cities—Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge. Once dependent solely on farming, Sevier County is now home to major tourist attractions, including Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Dollywood, that keep the economy (and potential for crime) thriving. The Sevier County Sheriff’s Office has eighty-nine employees. Seven of those are crime scene investigators.
Tucked into the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains lies Sevier County, Tennessee, home to Dolly Parton, black bears, and a whole host of “good ol’ boys” still making and runnin’ shine—for medicinal purposes only, of course. Sevier County, in many ways, is a throwback to another era—a sort of crossroads between the twenty-first century and the antebellum South. It’s not a major metropolitan area by any stretch of the imagination. There is no Watts or Bronx, in terms of dangerous urban neighborhoods, but that does not mean it is without crime or less-than-wholesome areas. Take, for instance, a place referred to as Frog Alley. Up until the late 1980s, cops could not patrol the area without being routinely trapped by local delinquents, armed to the gills with slingshots and buckets of ball bearings, lying in wait high up in the treetops for the cops to drive by. Flaming tires would be hurled at police cars as other tree-dwelling Frog Alleyans flung steel balls through windshields and car doors. Sometimes an officer’s only defense was to jump out of the car with a shotgun and fire buckshot wildly into the treetops, just to be able to leave the area relatively unharmed. God only knows how many Frog Alleyans may have been hurt during those shootouts; in Frog Alley, they take care of their own.
But aside from the Frog Alley days, major disturbances are, for the most part, not a common thing in Sevier County. It is, above all else, a tourist area where people come by the tens of thousands in hopes of clean mountain air, funnel cakes, and sweet sorghum (it’s like molasses—and sold on just about every roadside in the South). They have their fair share of shoot-’em-ups, meth labs, and the occasional “you-stole-my-woman” bar fights, mind you, but all in all, nothing too terribly violent tends to happen in this county. Rarely, if ever, are there any cases involving murderers who plan their kill and then bury the body. As a matter of fact, in the last twenty-five years, the Sevier County Sheriff’s Office had never
had a case involving a buried body. Then, on April 23, 2005, that streak came to an abrupt end.
Beautiful mountain vistas and clear valley streams surround the area known as English Mountain, Tennessee. English Mountain is an extraordinary sort of place. Back in the early 1970s it was intended to be a mountain getaway, where a wonderful community was being planned by some Ohioans with, as rumor has it, money made from selling cocaine. Trees were uprooted and a few crude roads were cut into the side of the mountain for this soon-to-be rural resort. But it was not to be. Money got tight. Deeds were sold over and over and over again. They switched hands so many times that to this day, people are still in litigation over who actually owns some of the land. Since the 1970s, a few attempts have been made to revive this incredibly scenic (yet backward) place, but none have been successful. The “foreigners”—that is, anyone not born in Sevier County—were all run off by a local cavalcade of heathens known as the “Cosby Raiders.” These boys, decked out in camouflage, waving the rebel flag, and driving their four-wheel-drive pickup trucks, would terrorize anyone who set foot on the mountain. As a result, no real residential settlement has ever developed. All that’s left are approximately sixty mobile homes of varying upkeep spread throughout the mountainside, a small country grocery store, and a makeshift fire department.
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