Author Archives: Garry Rodgers

About Garry Rodgers

After three decades as a Royal Canadian Mounted Police homicide detective and British Columbia coroner, International Best Selling author and blogger Garry Rodgers has an expertise in death and the craft of writing on it. Now retired, he wants to provoke your thoughts about death and help authors give life to their words.

CASE ACADEMY – NEW EDUCATIONAL SITE FROM FORENSIC OUTREACH

Case2Forensic Outreach is one of the coolest sites on the internet for crime writers and forensic junkies. It’s an educational organization that specializes in public engagement on forensic, crime, and security science disciplines.

On February 17, 2015, Forensic Outreach is launching a remarkable new project on Kickstarter called CASE Academy.

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Alongside an already incredible virtual faculty and by combining powerful learning tools, CASE Academy is an interactive online school that provides resources — lectures, games, and simulations — for students, educators, and anyone who is fascinated by these subjects. For those that don’t know, Kickstarter is a prominent crowdfunding platform that will assist CASE Academy to build direct relationships with future students from the beginning.

Case6Forensic Outreach has been a dynamic and active part of the science curriculum in classrooms throughout the United Kingdom and Europe since 2001, although it was re-launched on the web last year to broadly deliver CSI workshops.

Their events and outreach programs are facilitated by instructors, trainees, interns, volunteers, and law students from UCL, King’s College, Birmingham, and Newcastle.

Conceived to introduce forensics as an integrative and cross-disciplinary approach to science education, Forensic Outreach has worked with over one hundred academic institutions and charities. Now, as part of their online public engagement activities, they’re assembling a team of talented writers, regular contributors and podcasters to record and deploy our broadcasts.

Case7Forensic Outreach has developed partnerships with local police forces across the UK, the JDI Centre for the Forensic Sciences at University College London, the Barts Museum of Pathology, and the Center for Forensic Science Research and Education in the USA. They’ve delivered events for a number of high-profile institutions, including the Museum of London.

The JDI Centre is a multi-disciplinary initiative that aims to contribute significantly to the development of the forensic sciences, in part through collaborative projects with Forensic Outreach. They’ve also worked alongside local community groups to deliver masterclasses to adults learners and led one-off presentations for interested individuals for science-themed meet-up gatherings.

Case4I first connected with the folks at Forensic Outreach via Twitter and instantly became a leading fan and supporter as I was so impressed by the depth and variety of their quality content.

Here’s some examples of the great entertaining and educational information that you’ll find in Forensic Outreach:

A collage of the top fifty crime/security/science articles for 2014. There’s fascinating stuff in here like The Grisly History of Forensics, Stranger than Crime Fiction, and The CSI Effect – Are Juries Being Blinded by Science?

http://forensicoutreach.com/bookmark-these-top-50-articles-on-crime-security-and-science/

CASE15Three real-life forensic tools straight out of science-fiction. Here’s tomorrow’s technology that’s being used today – scene replication through virtual walk-thrus, autopsies without scalpels, and computerized facial recognition in crowds.

http://forensicoutreach.com/3-real-life-forensic-tools-straight-out-of-science-fiction/

Fifty incredible women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM). No doubt you’ve heard of Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg, but do you know who Ory Okolloh Mwangi, Dr. Sue Black, Caitlin Doughty, or DN Lee are?

http://forensicoutreach.com/2014s-50-most-incredible-women-in-stem-in-no-particular-order/

PrintTwenty-five eccentric, weird, and wonderful crime & science blogs. Check out Morbid Anatomy, Strange Remains, The Chick and the Dead, Bones Don’t Lie, or my favourite – Mortuary Report.

http://forensicoutreach.com/25-eccentric-weird-wonderful-science-blogs-we-love/

Three real-life scientists who are larger than their TV counterparts. Meet police criminologist Daniel Holstein, forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, and forensic biologist Dr. Neal Haskell.

http://forensicoutreach.com/3-more-real-life-scientists-way-cooler-than-their-tv-counterparts/

_DM30254 (2)Here’s the fifty best crime writers to watch for. Some knowns and lesser-knowns on the list are Lee Child, James Rollins, Jo Nesbo, Louise Penny, MJ McGrath, Max China, but unfortunately not Garry Rodgers. See who else made the list.

http://forensicoutreach.com/successors-to-the-greats-the-top-50-best-crime-writers-to-watch-in-2014/

Learn six methods of firearm & ballistic identification. Find out about striations, GSR, tissue damage, trajectory and impressions.

http://forensicoutreach.com/6-remarkable-ways-guns-can-be-linked-to-a-crime-scene/

This is only a sampling of the tremendous material that you’ll find on Forensic Outreach.

Case14Now, as part of their online public engagement activities, they’re assembling a team of talented writers, regular contributors, and podcasters to record and deploy their broadcasts. Forensic Outreach is now leaping beyond their original purpose and aims to reach a wider audience through online public engagement campaigns like CASE Academy.

The Kickstarter launch “army” includes hundreds of people just like you and me – STEM educators, science communicators, journalists, serial podcast addicts, crime writers, and more.

Case17I’m writing this post because I so strongly believe in the credibility and value that Forensic Outreach has. I know that CASE Academy is going to be a deadly success and I’m asking you to help make it an incredible virtual school. Please support this excellent venture by shouting out on social media, or if you feel even more generous, you can donate to the Kickstarter campaign as well.

Remember, Tuesday, February 17, 2015, is launch day for the CASE Academy Kickstarter campaign. It starts at 14:00 GMT.

Please join the Kickstarter army by signing onto the Quick Button on the CASE Academy website at http://case.forensicoutreach.com/

Case2Or visit the main Forensic Outreach website at http://forensicoutreach.com/

Help them out on Twitter – @ForensicFix  https://twitter.com/forensicfix using  #caseacademy .

Like & follow Forensic Outreach on Facebook  https://www.facebook.com/forensicoutreach

Check out their Goodreads page at http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/149154-case-academy-kickstarter—crime-mystery-readers-and-writers

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And help me boost traffic for my friends at Forensic Outreach and CASE Academy by passing this on through all of your social media connections.

 

GRIEFINK – HOW MEMORIAL TATTOOS EASE PAIN OF LOSS

So pleased to have Susan Salluce as a guest on DyingWords. Susan is a thanatologist, or grief counsellor, and author of the best selling novel Out Of Breath. 

A4 PoemAfter a loss, individuals can find comfort in creative expressions of grief: creating a memory stone for the garden or yard; planting a tree in memory of the deceased; incorporating ashes into a piece of jewellery; writing poetry, and song.

In the past decade, another creative expression of grief has grown exponentially: Memorial Tattoos

A13 911Tattoo artists in the United States observe that a large majority of those coming in for tattoos are doing so to honor the death of a loved one, a pet, the end of a relationship, to honor a fallen soldier, or commemorate a tragedy, such as the loss of lives in the terror attack on the World Trade Center.

As a grief specialist, I have long been at dis-ease with grief theories that stress stages, closure, and the need to “move forward” after a loss. As someone who has witnessed and shared in a great deal of loss, I’m drawn to theories that understand grief as a change, not end, in a relationship, and that recognize an enduring connection with our loved ones who have died.

As I held this belief and observed a number of powerful memorial tattoos in friends and clients, it got me thinking.

A11 Grief TearWhat if the boom of memorial tattoos is an outward expression of an inner process—a language of grief—that gives voice to loss, continued connection, and the undying attachment to those in our life who have died?

This language allows people to tell their grief stories, share the enduring bond that continues well after death, and offer comfort to the living.

After combing through professional papers and articles online about memorial tattoos, I felt inspired to write Griefink, a non-fiction book about the inner experience and outer expression to grief through tattoo.

A14 FamiliesThrough social media, friends, support groups, and professionals in the field of psychology, I put out the word about this project last spring. With my wonderful photographer, Matt Molinari, we interviewed and photographed over thirty individuals.

They invited us into their homes, their lives, and into their deepest pain. The loss of a child from leukemia; a son’s suicide; a young woman who had a heart attack; a surfer who drowned are just a few of the stories expressed through memorial tattoo and shared in Griefink.

A9 TattooWith no expectations, I listened to each individual and learned more about grief, continued connection, and the relationship with lost loved ones than any book had taught me. Each person offered emotional, and often, beautiful descriptions of loss. They outlined the decision to get the memorial tattoo, how they found a tattoo artist, the way in which the tattoo was designed, and the process afterward. They confirmed that their tattoos leave the door open for people to ask about their loss; that the ink invites conversation, bringing the deceased into the living world.

Although all of these individuals feel a part of my life because of their vulnerability and transparency, a few left me breathless. One such story is Mia and Cade. Siblings only two years apart, Mia was a second mother to her brother Cade, who had autistic tendencies and received special education.

A2 - Prints“We went everywhere together. Cade taught you to not judge. He was an awesome, bright, and happy kid who taught you to love life,” Cade’s sister, Mia, said. “He loved to give people high fives and hugs.” Cade experienced a seizure in March of 2014. An MRI revealed a tumor in his skull. In an attempt to remove the tumor, Cade died.

Both Mia and her father, Chris, received a memorial tattoo of Cade’s handprint—Mia’s on her back, and Chris’s on the top of his hand—with Cade’s signature underneath.

Mia shared, “A lot of my friends remember that Cade would ask for a high five when he saw them, so when friends see me now, they high five his hand on my back. That feels good. Knowing I have his handprint with me wherever I go, I know Cade will always be with me.”

A1 HandprintsGriefink shows that grief reactions, which are etched in each tattoo, become the foundation for one’s loss narrative. Through tattoo, our bonds with those we have lost are strengthened through the permanency of ink. Additionally, the language of memorial tattoo blows apart the belief that there’s a time limit to mourning, thereby alleviating the notion that one must “get over” his or her loss. Through the tattoo, the invitation is open to continue talking about our loved one, the meaning that he or she had in our life, and how this individual continues to impact us.

*   *   *

A3 Susan SalluceSusan Salluce holds many things dear: family, friends, the beach, writing, and helping the bereaved. As a thanatologist, or grief specialist, she looks for stories that have many of those common elements. Her transition from being a therapist to a writer began with the question, “What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?” Susan quickly answered, “I’d write a book.”

A16Susan is the author of Out of Breath, a psychological suspense novel about child loss, addiction, recovery, and the surf culture. It’s available on all e-readers and from Amazon at http://www.amazon.ca/Out-Breath-Susan-Salluce-ebook/dp/B005KV26MY

Griefink is her second book, and will be released in fall of 2015. In addition, Susan will have a Griefink blog devoted to memorial tattoos in the spring of 2015.

If you have a memorial tattoo and you would like to share your story, images of the tattoo, and how this has impacted your grief, please email Susan at susansalluce@yahoo.com

Visit Susan’s website  www.susansalluce.com

Follower her on Twitter @SSalluce

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT – IS IT JUSTICE OR MURDER?

aa1aState execution of convicted criminals is a hotly-debated, life-and-death social issue. The subject of capital punishment pushes more emotional buttons than practical ones.

There’s a host of heated arguments to back up each camp’s position.

aa3The Pros put forward justice, retribution, deterrence, cost-saving, and closure to victims as reasons to carry out the death penalty. The Cons defer to moral, religious, legal, unfair application, and danger of mistake as grounds not to kill condemned prisoners.

So who’s right?

Both, if you listen to the emotional pleas.

But set aside all the teeth-gnashing and hair-tearing and look at the practical benefits of having death penalty legislation.

aa4It goes without saying that punishment must fit the crime and execution must be reserved for the most despicable of criminals such as child-rapists, serial-killers, and mass-murderers. Some jurisdictions retain the right to execute lesser felons like mutineers, traitors, and spies, however it’s sensible that only exceptionally dangerous people, for whom there’s no chance of rehabilitation, or that their crimes are so horrific that there’s no other just punishment, be executed. Serial killer Theodore (Ted) Bundy is a prime example as well as the terrorists behind the 911 bombings.

There are only two unshakable reasons for the state having and enforcing the power to execute a convicted murderer.

First, it’s an indisputable fact that execution guarantees that person will never re-offend.

aa5Yes, the counter argument suggests that locking an inmate up for life with no possibility of parole achieves the same end, but it’s not the same thing. There are many cases where a dangerous criminal has escaped or found a legal means to roam free and kill again.Once a killer is dead, that’s the end of their threat to society. Period.

There’s a second practical application of death penalty legislation that few people in the general public think about, but which police officers and prosecutors know to be valid.

aa6Capital punishment is an effective, persuasive tool in forcing caught killers to co-operate with authorities. Plea-bargains are done with accused murderers where the death penalty is waived in exchange for information. This leads to solving other homicides, recovering bodies, giving closure to victimized families, and studying the minds of these monsters in order to understand and prevent future miscreants. The save-his-life deal with Seattle’s Green River Killer, Gary Ridgeway, paid off big.

There’ll never be unanimous support for and against capital punishment, let alone on the method on how it should be carried out.

Moral. Practical. Economic. Vengeance. Justice. Retribution. Deterrence. Cost-saving. Closure. Moral, Religious. Legal. Unfair application. Danger of Mistake.

Lethal injection. Firing squad. Noose. Gas chamber. Electric chair. Beheading, stoning, and burning at the stake.

What are your thoughts? Is capital punishment justice or murder? And is there a humane method in carrying it out?

I’m dying to hear your words.