Forensics 101: Forensic Entomology

Determining time since death of a body more than a few days old can be problematic for investigators. They have a number of tools at their disposal—for example, the stage of decomposition/advance decay, or soil analysis to determine the extent of the body’s chemical breakdown—but the science of entomology can be a more precise way to determine when death occurred. Using knowledge of the life cycle of local carrion insects, scientists can accurately estimate a minimum time since death from one day to more than one month.

Flies:

  • Flies are the first responders of the forensic entomological world, including species such as blow flies (Calliphoridae), muscid flies (Muscidae), and flesh flies (Sarcophagidae).
  • Flies are capable of burrowing and colonizing bodies buried up to 30 – 50 cm deep.
  • Blow flies are usually the first to arrive, being able to detect a body at distances up to one mile. Adult flies can arrive to colonize a corpse within minutes.
  • Most adult flies oviposit (lay eggs) on the body, preferring the moist mucous membrane openings of the face. They are also attracted to any areas of trauma; in fact, this specific colonization indicates areas of damage to the medical examiner before an autopsy is started.
  • Sarcophagidae is the exception to egg laying. It deposits larvae directly onto the corpse.
  • Fly eggs hatch within 8 – 24 hours, and the resulting larvae or maggots will feed off the corpse. A heavily colonized corpse can be completely reduced to skeleton in only a matter of weeks by nothing more than extremely active maggots during warm weather.
  • When a victim is discovered colonized by maggots, investigators will collect samples. Some larvae are sacrificed for DNA which will be analyzed to determine their species. Others will be raised in the laboratory, and scientists can observe them to determine when they pupate and develop into the adult form (this will also confirm or determine species identification). Using knowledge of the species’ life cycle, scientists will then be able to work backward to determine when eggs were laid on the corpse. This is the minimum possible time since death. The maximum time since death estimate is often dependent on the condition of the victim ie. body location, or a time of year that might slow near-instantaneous insect colonization.
  • A body undergoing decomposition moves through the stages of fresh, bloated, decay and dry. Since ovipositing flies require a moist environment for egg development, most flies are no longer attracted to the corpse by mid-way through the decay stage

Beetles:

  • Beetles tend to arrive following the fresh body stage. They will feed on any young fly larvae present as well as the flesh of the corpse itself.
  • Adult beetles will lay their eggs on the corpse; when the larvae hatch, they will consume the corpse as their sole food source.
  • As the body decomposes and dehydrates, beetles remain, feeding on the dry tissue, hair, and any fungus growing on the flesh.
  • As with flies, investigators can collect beetle larvae and hand-raise them in the lab to determine both species and a minimum time since death based on knowledge of the species’ life cycle.

The absence of carrion insects is also important information for investigators. For instance, if a decomposing body lacking in larvae was found in a wooded area in a temperate climate, investigators would likely suspect that the body had only recently been placed there after being stored indoors and out of the contact with insects normally plentiful in that environment. Conversely, if a body was placed outdoors during the winter and mummified due to cold temperatures and low humidity, once insect activity resumed with warmer weather in the spring, flies would never colonize and only beetles would be attracted to the remains.

Using knowledge of the life cycle of key insect species, scientists can determine time since death on older remains. With this information, criminal investigators can begin their investigation to determine the suspect responsible for the death in question.

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons – Cynomya mortuorum and Philonthus

The First Three Chapters

I don’t have an official blog post for you this week because today’s post isn’t about forensics or the writing process; instead, it’s all about our debut forensic thriller DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT. I’m happy to announce that the first three chapters of DEAD are now live on my Books page. Please stop by for a sneak peak before the book’s full release in May.

Excerpt - DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT – Chapters One to Three

Next week we’re back to our regular content with a brand new Forensics 101 post on Forensic Entomology—how the insects found associated with the dead can tell investigators crucial information about time and method of death.

Meet the Dannas!

There’s been a lot of talk this past week about my oldest brother Mychael. Both of my brothers are film composers, but on Thursday morning, Mychael was honoured with two Oscar nominations for his work on Life of Pi– Best Original Score and Best Song. There was a lot of discussion about family talents, so I thought this week it might be a fun break to introduce you to the multitalented Danna family.

It all starts here with Edith and Frank Danna (1932-1978). Born and bred in Winnipeg, they were married in 1955 before moving to Southern Ontario in 1958 with newborn Mychael. A teacher and an accountant by trade, it was their love of the arts that set their children up for success. Both sang (Mom still does; we sing together in a choir), and Dad played the piano and had a love of performing in amateur musical theater. I think it’s fair to say that we owe everything to them—a love of reading that translated into two academics and authors, and our musical talents, enhanced by piano and voice lessons, which led to two professional musicians.

Mychael is the oldest of the Danna children. After earning his B.A. in Composition at the University of Toronto, he went on to work at the McLaughlin Planetarium, compose several New Age albums and begin a career in film composition. With five television shows, more than seventy-five film scores and multiple Genie, Gemini, and BMI Film and Television Awards to his credit, as well as a BAFTA and two Oscar nominations for next month, Mychael has a very impressive career.

And then, of course, there’s his win from two nights ago, when he took home the Golden Globe for Best Original Score for Life of Pi:

Elizabeth is the family languages expert and scholar with a Ph.D. in New Testament Studies from Durham University. She is an active member of the Crossroads Center ministry, and, as part of her academic writing and speaking career, she wrote ‘From Gethsemane to Penetecost: A Passion Study’. She has also assisted Mychael in lyric translations for use in some of his soundtracks.

Brother Jeff is also a composer, and scores a mix of film and live action and animated television. He has eight TV series, over forty movies and several Gemini awards to his credit. His current TV series, Continuum, starts airing on SyFy on January 16th and season two will air in Canada starting in May.

Mychael and Jeff have worked together on many projects, from the TV series Camelot, to their Celtic CDs (Billboard’s Top Ten A Celtic Tale and A Celtic Romance), to several television and feature films.

And then there’s me. As you can see, in a family full of arts majors, I was the odd man out with my science/math degree. But even in the scientist, the artistic spirit was apparently never far from the surface.

The future Danna generation is not without talent as well—a skilled photographer, a stage actor, a biologist (finally someone following in mom’s science geek shoes!), a couple of hockey stars, and a burgeoning piano virtuoso. Look out world, here come the Dannas!

And now it’s time to announce our winner from last week’s Rafflecopter draw of the very first ARC of DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT. I’m pleased to announce that our winner (picked via random.org) was entry #68—Sherri Mitchen—for her entry on January 12 at 6:47pm! Congrats, Sherri, and enjoy!

Photo credit: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

The Call Blog Hop: After ‘The Call’

This is Part Three of the Seymour Agency blog blitz on ‘The Call’, following Part One on life before ‘The Call’, and Part Two on ‘The Call’ itself.

What happened after the day/night of the call?

It’s not very exciting, but Ann and I went right back to work. By that point we had comments back from our crit team and we set a new deadline to get the finished revision back to Nic by mid-January. We then did a second heavy edit with her following her detailed review of our first revision, and, by March, we were out on submission.

Did you have to give other agents a heads up?

I had four or five other agents reading and I let them know that I had received an offer of representation. It was a courtesy at that point, because as far as I was concerned, I’d found the agent I wanted.

How long before you signed papers?

My contract is dated January 3, 2011.

How long have you had your current agent?

Two years and one week.

Has your agent sold your work?

Nic sold DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT to Five Star Publishing (an imprint of Gale/Cengage) in a two book deal. DEAD will release as a forensic thriller in May 2013, and the sequel, A FLAME IN THE WIND OF DEATH, is tentatively scheduled for March 2014. Ann and I are also planning to release a bridging novella in the fall of 2013.

Do you have words for aspiring writers or readers of your category and genre?

I’m going to take this from a blog post I recently wrote for Jenny Sulpizio’s Write On, Mom blog, because I think it really sums up how I feel about the writing, querying and submission process: Persistence is key. There are going to be a lot of people who are going to try to shoot you down, and others who will resent the time you spend writing or who will dismiss your efforts as unimportant. Rejections from professionals will come fast and furious in both the query and submission stages. But if this is your dream, you have to draw your line in the sand and make the decision to go for it with everything you’ve got. And often that means picking up your bruised ego, dusting it off, gritting your teeth, and trying again. I always looked at our writing as ‘go big or go home’. I didn’t want it to be something I looked back on 10 years from now only to regret not taking the leap. Failure was definitely preferable to apathy.

And now, an exciting announcement from Ann and I. We received an extra special Christmas Eve surprise when a box of Advanced Reading Copies (ARCs) arrived at my door.

So we’re doing our first giveaway for a copy of DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT, which won’t officially release until this May. If you live in North America, be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway below for your chance to win. You have until 11:59p.m. on Sunday, January 13th, 2013 to enter and then we’ll announce the winner in our regularly scheduled blog post on Tuesday, January 15th. Good luck!

(Helpful hint - to enter the draw by tweeting about it, simply select that option. Click the 'Tweet' button, and then click 'I tweeted!' to enter. Also, for some entry options, you can enter daily.)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

The Call Blog Hop: ‘The Call’

This is Part Two of the Seymour Agency blog blitz on ‘The Call’. If you missed Part One on life before ‘The Call’, you can find it here; today’s post is all about ‘The Call’ itself from Nicole Resciniti.

Do you remember the date you got the call from your agent?

Our official call was December 29, 2010.

What did you do to prepare for the call?

Nic asked to see the first few chapters of the revision she’d requested earlier in the month to see how it was going. It was a very reasonable request in my opinion, since she was going to be offering without seeing the entire revision because there simply wasn’t time for us to complete it. She felt the manuscript still needed some work (and it did! I know that in spades now…), but needed to see that we had not only writing skills, but revision skills as well.

If you didn't get the stereotypical call then how did your agent offer representation? What was your reaction while on the phone?

It definitely wasn’t the stereotypical out-of-the-blue call because just before Christmas, I’d received an email from another agent who I’d queried and who had requested the full manuscript before I ever found Nic. She requested a phone call, so we booked that call for December 28th, and she offered representation at that time. I really liked her and she seemed very good, but I just wasn’t getting the same vibe from her that I was getting from Nic. I asked this agent for a week to make up my mind (because I wasn’t sure how quickly I could contact Nic during the holidays) and immediately sent Nic an email letting her know what was going on. I heard back from her in less than twenty minutes and we set a time the next morning to make our call. She said in her email that she still wanted to represent our manuscript, so when she offered officially the next day, I was already prepared for the good news. 

What was your reaction/thoughts when you got off the phone? 

I knew we’d found the right agent. I was taking lead on finding us an agent, but Ann was in the loop every step of the way, even from 1,600 miles away. I called her after talking to the first agent, and I called her again after talking to Nic, and she commented that I sounded much more excited about Nic. And I was. I knew it was the right fit for us and that Nic’s science background could only help (on her very first read through, Nic corrected us on an aspect of marine science, one of her specialties. To me, this was a very good sign). I had the Seymour Agency contract in my inbox shortly after noon that day and we’ve never looked back.

On Friday, we’ll look at life after ‘The Call’…

And now, an exciting announcement from Ann and I. We received an extra special Christmas Eve surprise when a box of Advanced Reading Copies (ARCs) arrived at my door.

So we’re doing our first giveaway for a copy of DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT, which won’t officially release until this May. If you live in North America, be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway below for your chance to win. You have until 11:59p.m. on Sunday, January 13th, 2013 to enter and then we’ll announce the winner in our regularly scheduled blog post on Tuesday, January 15th. Good luck!

(Helpful hint - to enter the draw by tweeting about it, simply select that option. Click the 'Tweet' button, and then click 'I tweeted!' to enter. Also, for some entry options, you can enter daily.)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Photo credit: The Seymour Agency

The Call Blog Hop: Before ‘The Call’

Surprise! I’m back a day earlier than previously promised for a special series of blog posts. Clients of the Seymour Agency are all getting together this week to highlight their experiences with ‘The Call’—where our agents called to offer representation. This series of posts on Monday, Wednesday and Friday will cover The Call itself, as well as our lives before and afterwards.

We also have a special and exciting giveaway that Ann and I are highlighting all week, so stick around to the end of the post and make sure you enter!

Now, on to life before ‘The Call’…

What category and genre do you write?

Forensic mysteries/thrillers with an angle towards science and forensic anthropology in particular.

What do you do other than write?

I’m a research scientist by trade, specializing in infectious diseases. I spent twenty years in HIV research before switching labs; I now work with Dengue fever and influenza. It was my background in science and my position at the university allowed me access to all the scientific materials I needed to learn the field of forensic anthropology that became the backbone of our novels.

How did you end up in contact with your agent from the Seymour Agency (cold query, conference, etc.)?

I found Nicole Resciniti through the AAR—The Association of Author Representatives. I’d been querying for about 5 months at that time, and had lists of agents I was working my way through. A few months earlier, we had an offer of representation that we’d turned down because we weren’t comfortable with the agent, so it was back to the drawing board at that point. But when I found Nic’s posting on the AAR website, it was like a light bulb going off over my head. She not only listed herself as a ‘consummate science geek’ but she has degrees in biology, psychology, and behavioral neuroscience. We had a novel with a very strong science bent. Needless to say, I badly wanted to query this agent. At the time, the Seymour Agency requirement was that they wanted exclusive access to the full manuscript. I knew that multiple agents already had the full, but I took my chances and queried anyway. A few days later, Nic requested the full manuscript, regardless of the fact that others had it.

Did you communicate with your agent before you got "the call" from them (did you talk at a conference, email, do a Revise & Resubmit)?

We got our first comments from Nic when she was only partway through the manuscript. She loved it but had some very fair comments for improvement. Would we be willing to work with her on an edit? We were over the moon and were more than willing to do the work. When she finished the manuscript, she sent more comments, and Ann and I started into a full edit for her. Even though it was only 2 weeks before Christmas, our fantastic crit team—Margaret, Sharon, Jenny and Lisa, plus my eldest daughter, Jess—jumped into the fray with us and we all started to rip the manuscript apart with an eye to Nic’s comments.

But we’d only been working on the edit for two weeks when another agent stepped into the picture and turned the whole situation on its ear. More on that on Wednesday when we talk about ‘The Call’…

And now, an exciting announcement from Ann and I. We received an extra special Christmas Eve surprise when a box of Advanced Reading Copies (ARCs) arrived at my door.

So we’re doing our first giveaway for a copy of DEAD, WITHOUT A STONE TO TELL IT, which won’t officially release until this May. If you live in North America, be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway below for your chance to win. You have until 11:59p.m. on Sunday, January 13th, 2013 to enter and then we’ll announce the winner in our regularly scheduled blog post on Tuesday, January 15th. Good luck!

(Helpful hint - to enter the draw by tweeting about it, simply select that option. Click the 'Tweet' button, and then click 'I tweeted!' to enter. Also, for some entry options, you can enter daily.)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Photo credit: bethcoll