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Post by sue75 on Dec 7, 2009 20:22:43 GMT -5
www.neafs.org/forms/NEAF2009_MeetingBooklet.pdfSee pages 29 and page 30 (about Alan Lane) Notable New Jersey Cases Friday, November 6, 2009 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM Program Chair: Laura Tramontin, New Jersey State Police Office of Forensic Science Lindbergh Case Dubbed the Crime of the Century, the case of the Lindbergh baby remains a part of the American psyche long after it began in Hunterdon County in 1932. The kidnapping and murder of the son of world-famous aviator Charles Lindbergh and the subsequent trial was a worldwide sensation. The ladder was a key piece of evidence connecting Bruno Hauptmann to the crime. One of the boards used in the ladder had been sawn from a board in Hauptmann’s attic. Alan Lane Alan Lane began working in forensic science with the New Jersey State in 1971 and continued until his retirement in 2002. In 1977 the State Police began a reexamination of the evidence associated with the Lindbergh case. He was assigned to the trace evidence portion of the reexamination until its completion in 1979. Mr. Lane holds a BS from Rider College and a MEd from Trenton State College now the College of New Jersey, and currently resides in Mercer County New Jersey.
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Post by sue75 on Dec 7, 2009 20:23:43 GMT -5
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