A practical homicide investigation (tactics, procedures, and forensic techniques) by Lt. Cmdr. (Ret.) Vernon J. Geberth of the New York City Police Department. This textbook is part of a series entitled, "Practical Aspects of Criminal and Forensic Investigation". The series is designed to provide contemporary, comprehensive, and pragmatic information to the practitioner involved in criminal and forensic investigations by authors who are nationally recognized experts in their respective fields.
I read the the third edition of this book for fun before I even decided to go back for my Criminal Justice/Biology degree. I kept it so long that I thought the EMU Library was going to send someone to break my legs.
The fourth edition is much improved, with mostly color photos,and updated science and psychology.
Especially interesting is the chapter on homosexual homicide. The purpose of the chapter is to educate the straight, uninformed police officer about gay culture, so that he or she can tell when something is amiss. This brings to mind the horrible misunderstanding that lead to the one of Jeffrey Dahmer's victims. The officers who were called to the scene were unfamiliar and uncomfortable dealing with a gay "lover's spat," and therefore just let Dahmer take his "drunk" "lover" back to his apartment, where he was murdered minutes later.
You should read this book if you want to know how real detective work is done.
Trigger warning, which is not something I usually do: I strongly recommend that if you have *any* suicidal ideation that you avoid this book. This book contains hundreds of graphic images of actual deaths, and lots that I won't forget in a hurry.
A thorough training manual for real-life homicide police detectives, from crime scene to management techniques, over a thousand pages (in the latest edition) of the crushing weight of investigating one homicide after another. I'm reading it for research as a writer; I have not found any other resource that goes into this much depth or provides such a roadmap for further research.
Again, please be careful before picking this up. I am carefully not describing how bad this gets. But I do recommend for wrters who feel safe doing the research.
Every detective should read this book, regardless if you are investigating homicides or thefts. This book causes investigators to think through the logical steps of an investigation so much that the practical principles become routine in the investigator's life.
This book is well written, it gives you great insight on how investigations work. Also the fact that the author input his personal experience made it a great book.
Not for the faint of heart. If you're wondering what happens to a fella's head after shooting himself through the mouth with a rifle, here's the book for you. The wealth of descriptions of procedures and techniques are great for crime/mystery/thriller writers, and the multitude of full-color photos will help with descriptions of victims.
Most books are rated related to their usefulness and contributions to my research. Overall, a good book for the researcher and enthusiast. Read for personal research - found this book's contents helpful and inspiring - number rating relates to the book's contribution to my needs.
Great resource for Criminal Justice/Forensic Science students. Very thorough. Actual case histories (with explicit photographs) for real-life, practical, death scene investigation.
This is the BIBLE of homicide investiagations. This manual is a must for any cop, patrol traffic or detective it doesn't matter. Nothing compares with this manual for clear cut no nonsense cop speak.
An incredible collection of knowledge, and a meditation on order combating chaos. Not for the faint of heart. But it has a literary value to its technique and philosophy.