Warning: This episode contains details of graphic violence and sexual assault.
Using bitemarks to investigate crimes dates back centuries to the Salem Witch Trials, but it became famous in the modern era during the prosecution of Ted Bundy. Bitemarks are often touted as being as unique as a person’s fingerprint. But Keith Harward calls that claim bogus. He was wrongfully convicted of murder and rape based on bitemark evidence.
If you'd like to learn more about Charles McCrory's case, check out Liliana Segura and Jordan Smith's article in the Intercept:
https://theintercept.com/2023/03/12/bite-mark-analysis-charles-mccrory-alabama/
CSI On Trial is a co-production of iHeart Podcasts and School of Humans. It is a Curiosity Podcast based on the Curiosity Stream series CSI On Trial. You can watch all six episodes of the video series here if you sign up for Curiosity Stream.
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Explicit content warning
03/07/23 • 34 min
CSI On Trial - CSI On Trial: Ep 2-Bitemarks
Transcript
This episode contains details of graphic violence and sexual assault. Please take care where and when you listen. It's the morning of May thirty first, nineteen eighty five, in Andalusia, a southern Alabama town that's about an hour and a half away from the Gulf of Mexico. Twenty six year old Charles McCrory is at work. He calls his estranged wife, Julie. They're going through a divorce but still on good terms. Just the night before, he visited J
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