Archive for the ‘dna’ Tag
- The chemicals indole and skatole, which cause the foul smell of human feces, are also used as ingredients in perfume.
- Felons who are considered physically unattractive receive fifty percent longer jail sentences than those who are deemed attractive.
- The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is developing a soft drink made from the urine of cows.
- Misidentified eyewitness testimony was a factor in seventy-seven percent of DNA exoneration cases.
- When you pee, a small amount of urine enters your mouth through the saliva glands.
- By law, all citizens must take a bath at least once a year in Kentucky.
- Lightning strikes the earth 5,000 times every minute.
- In 2007, flooding on the banks of the Huai river displaced an estimated 2 billion rats in central China.
- Can you find Irag on a map? Approximately 14% of Americans between the ages of 18-24 cannot, and 18% can’t find Afghanistan either.
- Pigs can become alcoholics.
My Fav: George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew marijuana on their plantations.
JUST PLAIN WEIRD!
I’ve had a relationship for more than fifty years with the criminal justice system in this country. Starting as a cop, then a private investigator, a corporate Loss Prevention specialist, and eventually working for the State of Maine in the Judicial Branch. I’m fascinated with all aspects of the profession which includes collecting odd bits of trivia which I’ll share with you today.
- The world’s first police detective was Eugene Françoise Vidocq. The Frenchman founded the plainclothes civil police unit, the Brigade de la se Surete, in 1812.
- C. Auguste Dupin was the world’s first fictional police detective. Edgar Allen Poe used Eugene François Vidocq as a model for his character C. Auguste Dupin in the 1841 short story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” which is considered to be the world’s first detective story.
- The act of hanging, drawing, and quartering was not abolished in England until 1870.
- Sheraton Hope and Ormond Sacker were the original names of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous crime-fighting duo, Sherlock Homes and Dr. John Watson. They first appeared in a novel called “A Tangled Skein.” Doyle ultimately changed the novel’s title to “A Study in Scarlet” when it was officially published in 1887.
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has sold more books than J.K. Rowling and J.R.R. Tolkien combined.
- One in four convicts ultimately exonerated by DNA evidence confessed or pled guilty to crimes they did not commit.
- Until 1998 it was a valid defense against rape or sexual battery in Mississippi to claim that the female victim was not chaste in character.
- From the 11th to the 18th centuries criminals were executed in southeast Asia by being crushed by an elephant.
- A real-life member of Scotland Yard, Inspector Charles Frederick Field, was friends with author Charles Dickens and introduced Dickens to many of London’s criminal haunts. Dickens later featured the inspector in his 1851 short story “On Duty with Inspector Field.”
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