Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Crime Scene Processing v. 2.0

There's a lot of pressure on you when you're investigating a crime scene. After all, two people's lives are at stake: the one who's dead, and the one who's facing the death penalty. It's not something to take lightly. When you have that kind of responsibility on your shoulders, it's nice to know that you have help. Oh, it would be great to have Henry Lee standing next to you, but that's not likely to happen. Ok, if not him, then who? Someone with over 42 years of law enforcement experience? Someone who's investigated over 1,200 death scenes? Someone who has processed more than 14,000 crime scenes?

Ok, that could get expensive if you had to pay someone with that kind of experience. So what other option do you have? How about getting all of that experience, training, and knowledge on one little DVD for your computer? Sound like a pipe-dream? Well, it's not!

Eagle Crime Scenes, Inc., has released its newest product, Crime Scene Processing - Version 2.0, a multimedia ebook for your PC. Written by two experienced crime scene investigators who between them have investigated hundreds of death scenes, this ebook is designed to give you step-by-step assistance in processing whatever crime scene you encounter. This is not a book that is full of theory and short on answers; this is a book that will tell you what you need to do to get the job done! Period! Nothing else like this exists.

In this ebook, you will not only find 23 lesson on such topics as crime scene photography, bloodstain pattern analysis, and surface skeleton cases, you get over 120 instructional videos and over 700 color photographs to show you just what you have to do to process your crime scene. The videos in this program are not long, drawn-out, boring videos; these are short clips that get to the meat and potatoes of each particular topic in just a few minutes.

Crime Scene Processing - Version 2.0 also provides you with a 70-page crime scene checklist, a bloodstain pattern calculator for determining the area of origin of bloodstain patterns, a bullet trajectory calculator for pinpointing the location from which a shot was fired, and a 600-question test that can be used to hone your skills or train your people.

To find out more about Crime Scene Processing - Version 2.0, visit our website:

http://www.eaglecsi.com/


Remember, when someone's life is riding on your work, you need help!