Early forensics and crime-solving chemists - Deborah Blum

85,079 views ・ 2013-04-01

TED-Ed


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Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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So we live in what I think of as a CSI age
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where we take for granted
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that scientists are going to work together with the police,
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help them solve crimes,
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map fingerprints,
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analyze poisons,
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but in fact, this is really a very new idea.
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We only actually started training scientists and forensics
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in this country in the 1930s.
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So as a writer interested in chemistry,
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what I wondered was,
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"What was it like before scientists knew
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how to tease a poison out of a corpse,
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before you could actually catch a killer that way?"
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And it won't surprise you to learn
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that the answer is pretty dangerous.
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And in fact, in 1918, New York City issued a report
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admitting that smart poisoners could operate
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with impunity in the city.
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This is a 1918 crime scene photo from Brooklyn,
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and at this time, the coroner system was so corrupt
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that you could literally buy your cause of death.
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Often coroners didn't even show up at crime scenes.
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And if you go back and you look at the death certificates of the time,
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I found one that read,
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"Could be an auto accident or possibly diabetes."
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And another, which involved a man who shot himself in the head,
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said, "ruptured aneurysm".
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So you find, not surprisingly, the police saying,
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"We're going to look a lot smarter
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if we stay away from the science side of the story."
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But, in 1918 New York City appointed
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the first trained medical examiner it ever had.
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That's the gentleman sitting down there.
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And he hired the first forensic toxicologist ever
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attached to an American city.
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And together, these two men,
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Charles Norris, the medical examiner,
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and Alexander Gettler, the chemist sitting next to him,
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rewrote the rules of crime detection in this country.
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And that wasn't easy because poisons were everywhere.
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If we take this one, arsenic trioxide,
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arsenic trioxide's probably the most famous homicidal poison in history
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and it was in every home.
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Anyone could go to the grocery store or the pharmacy and buy it.
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It was in every kitchen because,
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believe it or not, it was used to color food.
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It was in medicines
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and it was in cosmetics
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in ways that prevented people from really understanding
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how dangerous these poisons were
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or how they worked.
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Now, scientists had in the 19th century
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begun developing tests to look for poisons in corpses.
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But as this cartoon shows you of the first test for arsenic,
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these were very primitive tests,
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so, that our heroes really have to figure this out
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as they go in the 1920s.
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Gettler, for instance, was the first person in the world
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to know how to tell if someone was drunk at time of death.
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He figured that out right about 1930
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and he said later it took him 6,000 brains from the morgue
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to get to the point that he could get to that answer.
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And to give you a sense of what this is like,
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I'm going to ask you for a moment
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to become 1920s forensic detectives.
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This is a case based on one solved by Alexander Gettler in 1923,
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and as you can probably tell,
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it's a case that begins in a tenement building.
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This particular one was on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
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And these buildings were very crowded
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with families who had very little money.
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And the rooms were very poor.
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This is actually an abandoned room
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at the Tenement House Museum
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that is in Lower Manhattan today.
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These rooms often had no electricity,
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they had no hot water,
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and people who lived this way
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depended on gas to fuel everything
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from their stove to their electric lights.
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And this gas was called illuminating gas,
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and it was both a toxic and explosive mixture
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of carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
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So you, the forensic scientist, are called
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to a crime scene in a tenement house.
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This is actually a police photo from the time in question,
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but the story that I'm going to tell you
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is a little more complicated than this.
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Nevertheless, you're going to go into this building,
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you're going to walk down this hall,
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you're going to go through the door,
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and you're going to find yourself
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in a very shabby apartment.
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The floors are splintered,
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the walls are peeling,
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there's only gas lighting,
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and in this case,
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you go into the back bedroom.
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There's clearly been a gas leak,
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there's a broken fitting on the wall.
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The police are opening the windows,
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and in the bed there's the body of young woman
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who's clearly been dead for some time
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because she's cold
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and she's stiff
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and she's pale.
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And you turn to the police and you say,
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"No, this is not an illuminating gas death
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because...."
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Because if you're killed by carbon monoxide,
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there is such a powerful chemical reaction in your blood
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as the oxygen is muscled out of the blood stream
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that the blood cells are turned a bright, cherry red.
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And this red is so strong that it flushes the skin
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of the corpse a cherry pink.
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In fact, people who see bodies
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after someone has died of a carbon monoxide death,
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they'll often talk about how healthy they look.
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So your poor, pale corpse could not have been killed by this gas.
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You take the body back to the morgue,
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you run more blood tests,
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and you find another gas at extremely high levels,
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carbon dioxide.
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And what does that tell you?
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If you think about the way we breath,
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we inhale oxygen,
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we exhale carbon dioxide,
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but what if you can't exhale?
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What if that gas can't get out?
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It backs up into your lungs,
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and the number one clue of a suffocation or a strangulation
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is elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the blood.
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And in fact, what they found
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when they took a closer look at the body
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were the bruise marks left by her husband's fingers
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as he had held her down and suffocated her.
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And it turned out that he had
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taken out an insurance policy on her life,
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suffocated her,
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broken the gas fitting to try to stage an accident scene,
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and it turned out that it was chemistry
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that sent him to prison.
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There are so many good poison and murder stories
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from this time period that I would love to tell you.
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It's one of my favorite subjects obviously.
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But I want to leave you with this thought.
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Two things.
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One is that case that I just described to you
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is one of my favorites
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because it's the beginning of a series of investigations
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that persuade the New York police
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that they do need to work with scientists
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and it lays the foundation for, in fact,
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our CSI-era age,
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and, because it's such a good story of two very determined people,
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in this case two city scientists,
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who were able to change the world around them.
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Thank you.
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