There's a very good reason they aren't allowed as court evidence. They've been debunked time and time again. I would not rule out anyone based on a simple polygraph result.
I don't like the implication regarding polygraphs in the first post. Polygraphs are junk science. The Green River killer passed one with flying colors.
https://antipolygraph.org/
Yeah, frankly it's not resolved in my mind until the people involved are identified. Never saw why they didn't blast them on tv... the guy in the train photo could be clearly identified if someone knew them.
I've always felt that a great investment could be made if someone developed a cheap scanner.
A low-scale model of the devices used in the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. It wouldn't need to be as sensitive or hi-tech. Something that could ID the form of a car or vehicle. There's so...
I'm sure there's more information here then what they are making public. Who the hell owned the apartment? Why were the police searching it to start with?
They aren't rare by any means, except for finding a mint pair now that they haven't been made in so long.
Back then, these shoes were mass marketed, so it's unlikely going to be a huge help.
However, it does give us some starting ground. First off, it gives us a cut-off date. The body was...
As I've said before, I'd be interested to know just how they tested that notebook and the condition it's in now. There's AMAZING things one could do with it now. Scanning it in just the right way might turn up traces of ink or written info that we couldn't pick up before.
https://www.identifyus.org/en/cases/16220
CHOCONUT Twp., Pa. (WBNG) -- Pennsylvania State Police said it appears to be the remains of an adult, white male that were found January 12.
The remains were found in a wooded area in Choconut Township.
Troopers said Monday that investigators...
I'm interested in more info on this case... namely, if a modern DNA test might be possible, if they know where the remains were buried. I'd be willing to attempt to raise funds.
Unidentified Male
Date of Discovery: April 28, 1986
Location of Discovery: Reed Township, Dauphin County...
I'm going to bump this, my representative said they'd have to look into the current system before pushing anything. Hopefully if more people raise noise in their various states things might change.
New York recently pass a bill stating that remains that have not been identified must be entered into NamUS. Currently, I have been trying to get PA to introduce similar language, but my local Senator and the Governor have not contacted me back.
Below, I will post a copy of what I have sent...
The photo is blurry... apparently, they have the body in good condition. A reconstruction drawing might help out matters here, and it would be easy to do since we have a photo to reference.
I hate it when the really distinctive ones don't get IDed.
http://articles.philly.com/2016-04-28/news/72648892_1_south-philadelphia-schuylkill-tuesday-night
The body was partially decomposed but believed to be a white male wearing a long-sleeve blue shirt, tan pants, black sneakers, and gloves.
Police earlier were searching for a missing 22-year-old...
Seems the best bet would be the notebook at this point. With all the advances, I'm surprised there isn't some form of forensic scanning that can be used to detect faded writing. I know processes similar have been used on historical documents, so maybe it's a price issue? Would help to have scans...
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