Veteran Investigator Examines 20 Crime Scene Cases From Movies and TV Shows
On an episode of WIRED‘s series, Technique Critique, NYPD detective and veteran crime scene investigator Matthew Steiner sat down to examine 20 crime scene cases from movies and television shows.
Related Posts

Crime Scene Coffin
The "Crime Scene Coffin" by artist Faustine Gau is a wooden coffin shaped like a crime scene body outline. Gau created the piece in 2009.

Geek Crime Scene Tape
Geek Crime Scene Tape by KlearGear Slap this intelligent barricade tape across your cubicle, desk, car, or bathroom -- anywhere you need to get your point across. That point: you're brilliant and you're busy. Too busy to respond to e-mail, answer the phone, or attend meetings.

Scientists Create Reconstructions of Crime Scenes in Virtual Reality Using 3D Scans and the Oculus Rift
Scientists at the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Zurich, Switzerland are working to create reconstructions of crime scenes in virtual reality using 3D scans and other information collected by forensic specialists. Currently, much of that information is tossed out when cases come to trial, but utilizing VR technologies like the…

Aging Investigator Tries to Recall the Details of His Biggest Case in ‘True Detective’ Season 3 Teaser
In the decade spanning teaser trailer for the third season of the HBO series True Detective, an aging Arkansas investigator named Wayne Hays (Mahershala Ali) tries to recall the details of the biggest case of his career despite the fact that his "whole brain's a bunch of missing pieces." Decades…

Mini Crime Scene Tape, For Life’s Little Crimes and Messes
Archie McPhee's roll of Mini Crime Scene Tape makes it easy to notify others that a teensy-weensy crime has occurred. It reads in wee letters: "Crime Scene Do Not Cross". You may remember in the past we posted about Aint Rocket Science's Tiny Crime Scene Tape. If there were a…

Panoramic Crime Scene Photos by the New York Police Department
Since 2009, the New York Police Department has been capturing 360 degree panoramic images of crime scenes using Panoscan cameras. The New York Times has posted a gallery of actual crime scene panoramas. via The New York Times images via New York Police Department
Justin Page
I'm a geeky artist/blogger who loves his life, wife, two identical twin girls, family, friends, and job.