The victim of a 1991 homicide has been identified as Toussaint Gonsalves using investigative genetic genealogy, police said.
Kentucky law enforcement agencies are increasingly using forensic genealogy to identify crime victims and suspects.
In a recent court hearing, Bryan Kohberger's defense team argued that the use of investigative genetic genealogy (IGG) by law ...
Kohberger’s attorneys say law enforcement violated his constitutional rights when they used a process called Investigative Genetic Genealogy, or IGG, to identify possible suspects.
Bryan Kohberger's team was back in court Thursday and argued against what they called 'false information' and the prosecution's use of DNA evidence.
The identities of two Detroit men, each found dead years ago, were resolved via DNA testing and genetic genealogy.
On Friday, the court will hear additional arguments from both the prosecution and defense regarding the use of DNA evidence ...
The criminal investigation tool is said to offer the potential to predict an individual's physical appearance based solely on ...
Police found the man on Dec. 4, 1991, in the Boston Harbor near Thompson Island. An autopsy performed by the at the time ruled his death a homicide. After 33 years, the victim was identified as ...
Forensic genealogy uses DNA evidence to build family trees and ... of a Louisville man — thanks to the use of a fairly new investigative tool among Kentucky police. William Dennis Matthews ...