Attorney
General Mike DeWine
Unsolved
Homicide Training Begins
(WEST
CHESTER, Ohio) – Today Ohio
Attorney General Mike DeWine's Bureau of Criminal Investigation hosted
the
first of several training courses that will teach authorities
investigative
strategies for unsolved homicide cases.
The
Unsolved Homicide Investigative
Strategies and Resources training is happening today and tomorrow at
the West
Chester Police Department. Additional
courses are planned across the state this year.
"Cold
cases homicide
investigations are very difficult to investigate because many of the
crimes
were committed years or even decades ago," said Ohio Attorney General
Mike
DeWine. "The
officers here today
are determined to do everything they can to close some of these cases,
and we
want to help them do that."
Forty-four
law enforcement officers
from 21 police and sheriffs' departments registered to
attend
the two-day training course,
which is part of the Attorney General's Ohio Unsolved Homicide
Initiative.
The
training provides information
on unsolved homicide methodology, initial assessment, protocol, and
solvability. The course also explores DNA applications, investigative
resources, criminal analysis of unsolved homicides, and three case
studies of
open cold case homicide investigations.
According
to the FBI, there are
approximately 5,000 unsolved homicides in the state of Ohio.
The
Attorney General's Ohio
Unsolved Homicides Database, a voluntary database for Ohio's cold case
crimes,
has now reached more than 1,000 case submissions. Officers from 55
agencies in
35 counties have submitted cases spanning from 1943 - 2012.
For
more information on the
database, visit the Ohio Attorney General's website.
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