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DNA Analyst

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For Tim French, being in the know about local crime is a rush. "Most of the stuff that goes on in the news has to do with what I do here," he says. "So, you're kind of on the cutting edge of most of the news that happens in whatever city you're in."

French has been working in forensic labs since he was in college. When he started, he thought he'd end up in the genetics field. Once in the lab, he found himself looking at blood instead of genes. It was an unexpected turn of events that worked out for the best.

"The college I was going to in New York actually had a criminal justice minor program and I thought, 'Well, what do I want to learn about criminals for?' I never even took any classes. And now I'm working in the field and I love it. It's great!"

French had just the right training for the job. "I took biology and I had a minor in chemistry. Most of the labs in the country will require either a chemistry degree or a natural science degree with a certain amount of hours in chemistry," he explains.

In high-crime areas, a lack of DNA analysts means that a lot of cases are left untouched. Samples sit untested, and criminal cases are put on hold.

French realized that there was a need for people who could look at these backlogged cases. "There was an opening in the lab where I was working, and they were short a few analysts. I happened to see an article in the paper about the backlog of cases that were going to happen because of that," recalls French.

Occasionally, French's work takes him out of the lab and onto the scene of a crime. "I was actually on the homicide team, and I used to go to every homicide," he says.

French says the details of a crime scene provide analysts with lots of important practical information. "It helps us to weed out which samples to test and which ones not to test," he says. "Because we've got such a large backlog of cases, we've got to pare them down. You need to know where contact took place between people. You want to know what was worn, what the carpet type was and where you should look. Concentrate your efforts."

Nicole McCullough is part of a new system in her workplace. In her lab, only the initial stage of sample processing takes place.

"It will be sent initially for extraction here, and then it moves along the system, because we're now working on a national DNA system in which all labs partake," she says. "It will leave this lab and go to another lab for analysis, and the facts will be sent back to us via computer."

Like French, McCullough needs to be familiar with the details of the criminal investigation. "What we basically do, in general terms, is greet the investigator to find out what's involved with the case," she says. "We'll screen exhibit material for the presence of body fluids. If those body fluids are found, they're basically cut out and sent along for DNA analysis."

DNA technology is big news for criminal investigators. Sometimes it will bring a case to an undeniable conclusion. McCullough says, however, that DNA technology does not necessarily make evidence stronger.

"It depends," she says. "If it's the only evidence, sometimes [DNA] is good evidence. But it's not the only evidence that could be found. For example, there could be fibers [or] paint, depending on what type of case we're dealing with."

When physical evidence first comes to the lab, nobody is sure what to expect. A piece of stained carpet could turn up all kinds of clues. Then again, it could reveal nothing more than cat hair and spilled wine. It is precisely this mystery that makes lab work so interesting for McCullough.

"You just never know what you're looking at sometimes," she says. "You have no way of knowing what type of exhibits [you'll look at]. There are various exhibits of interest."

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