the fbi. sandra: thank. you thank you very much. john: you don t know what would happened if she did not have that video. the season is winding down there at grand teton park. it might have been that nobody came along for a long time. we don t know if her body was buried or out in the open. if she didn t have that video it could be have been months or never. sandra: jen took that august 27th around 6:30 p.m. the spread creek camp ground. gave that to the fbi. the parents put it out there. this is how crime solving happens now with so many people taking digital video. they are able to help solve these crime cases. if only somebody can come forward to figure out where brian it. john: god bless her. remembering she had that and getting in touch with the
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sect and kidnapped two coothers. time will tell, but something went wrong. back to you. harris: what you said about the percentage of crime reported and solved, 1% is quite frightening no matter what s happening. william la jeunesse, thank you. you and me now, the former with the d.a. and ceo of investigative management group. is the crime solving and reporting so low, 1%, because they tend to kill the witnesses? yes, there is so much corruption, so much violence, that no one will come forward as a witness. even without government being in mexico with the fbi, the dea, and giving them assistance, it s very difficult for us to conduct these investigations because they won t cooperate with us. harris: we have a sheriff in arizona i said something pretty explosive about the drug cartels. watch this. think about what isis does, and think about what the cartels do. they terrorize. they terrorize, they killed both their own citizens and
ever again. you would never solve a crime anymore. we would never solve a crime anymore, that it was going to tie our hands behind our back and we would be unable to work with it and they were wrong. very wrong. not only did false confessions all but stop, crime solving got better. detection rates in respect to homicide in the uk are very high. they re up in the 90% mark. and along the way, said griffis, confessions of hallmark of case solving in the u.s. became much less important here in britain. we would not prosecute somebody solely on confession. if someone did make a confession, we would try to corroborate what they said. so you would have the supporting evidence as well. but isn t the confession the strongest evidence you can get? not always. what is wrong with it? what confessions tend to do is they shape confirmation bias. people look for supporting evidence just to support what is being said because the confession exists.
intriguing story, the suspected golden state killer, that man right there, accused of 12 medical records, dozens of rapes and more than 120 burglaries back in california in court today as the judge is waiting to unseal the arrest warrants. investigators found the allusive suspect joseph d angelo, former police officer, after submitting his d.n.a. to a free public genology website called ged match or ged match. it s a technique sparked ethical debate over how this technology is used with growing issues over issues of permission, privacy, trans (sismt here now the leader of the new genetic genealogy research unit with paragon and helped suspect in cold case washington state through her work. c.c. it s really good to have you with us tonight. obviously this is a cutting edge part of forensics and crime solving. how does it work? how did they get his d.n.a.
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