6/30/2023 0 Comments Blood secrets rod englert![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() He is the author of Blood Secrets: Chronicles of a Crime Scene Reconstructionist and lives in Oregon. ![]() He has testified and is a qualified court expert in homicide in 26 states. He has consulted in over 500 criminal and civil death cases in the United States. Rod has conducted over 600 lectures and training seminars on managing criminal investigations, solving unresolved homicides, blood spatter interpretation and crime scene reconstruction to law enforcement personnel and district attorneys in 35 states as well as in Canada, Russia, England, France, and South America. Rod Englert recently filmed a segment of A&E’s The First 48 with Marcia Clark on the OJ Simpson case – he was the prosecution’s lead expert in the fateful trial. He is a member of the International Homicide Investigators Association a past president of the Association of Crime Scene Reconstructionists and a past president of the International Association of Bloodstain Pattern A nalysts. Rod Englert, a fifty-three-year veteran of law enforcement, is a graduate of the FBI National Academy, where he was president of the 159th Session. ![]()
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![]() ![]() Although the role of gender in the Church is a hot topic, the significant contributions and roles of women have influenced Church history since the beginning. (Photo courtesy Mormon Newsroom)Ĭonversations around dinner tables, water coolers and circular Relief Society tables have lately centered around women’s issues in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. ![]() Laura Hart and her daughters Taylor, Ashley and Madison (all from Cedar Hills, Utah) are representative of the women in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who have been influential throughout the history of the Church. ![]() ![]() ![]() I just found myself kind of bored with it and it laid on my nightstand untouched for several months. It was the middle of summer and I was riding my bike nearly every day, reading about people suffering and riding their bikes seemed almost mundane. It seemed like she was making things out to be much more dramatic then they really were, “big deal you feel off you’re bike,” was what I kept thinking. ![]() This is going to sound sexist but I think my biggest problem with the book is that its from a woman’s perspective. Then the book delves into a chronological travelogue of their journey and this is where I began to nod off. The first chapter chronicles how the idea to ride bikes comes to fruition inside the mind of Larry and Barbara Savage, it seems pretty likely that Larry was the real instigator but it didn’t sound like he had to work that hard to convince Barbara. I found that happening to me when I began Barbara Savage’s book, “Miles from Nowhere,” but luckily I stuck with it and enjoyed a great read. I enjoy riding bikes and I also like to read about riding bikes, but the time I tried to read about some folks riding across America in a book called, “Hey Mom can I Ride My Bike Across America,” I got so bored with it I never finished. ![]() |