1.The Deceased's Body Destroyed in Exhumation of Clandestine Graves: Case Reports and Literature Review.
Jeounghyun LEE ; Hongil HA ; Han Young LEE ; Sohyung PARK
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2011;35(1):62-65
Exhumation in clandestine graves has to be done very carefully, since it is considered as a crime scene. Most such cases are related to a suspicious death and it is very important to search for human remains carefully. Before excavation, all operational procedures have to be planned in advance. Missing evidence or human errors can be avoided if each investigative team member works together with archaeological assistance and forensic pathologists. But in practice, it may be difficult to work according to established standard operational procedures because, in many cases, the clandestinely buried victims appear in unexpected areas or it is hard to locate the exact location of the site. Therefore, we present the following cases and hope that the general principles for exhuming a clandestine grave will be established so that they can be helpful in similar investigations in the future.
Crime
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Exhumation
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Humans
2.Medicolegal Reconstruction of the Jeju 4.3 massacre.
So Hyung KIM ; Dong Jin HUH ; Hyun Sik KANG ; Sung Tae KIM ; Jung Hoon LEE ; Hyun Wook KANG
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2007;31(1):10-15
Sixty years after the massacre took place at Jeju, authors carried out a series of exhumations. The exhumation based on anthropological and archaeological method allowed for the interpretation of events occurring during the burial of the body and provided data for crime scene investigation, the evidence.
Burial
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Crime
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Exhumation
3.Individual Identification of Human Remains from the Korean War.
Kyoung Jin SHIN ; Yun Seok YANG ; Jong Hoon CHOI ; Chong Youl KIM
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2001;25(2):31-37
During the exhumation of victims of Korean War, among the memorial activities of Korean War, we found a dead body in a tomb in Kyung-Ju city. With the testimony of natives we could find the family related with the body. Using bone and teeth of it we determined that it was male and about 20 years old or more and the result was unite with the insistence of the bereaved family. With the photography offered by the family and the skull we did the photographic superimposition and according to the result we could not exclude that it was the same person with him. We performed mitochondrial DNA(mtDNA) sequencing and it reveals that the dead body and the family have same maternal inherited mtDNA. Finally, We could identify the dead body. At present it is very difficult thing to collect much data of victims of Korean War because it passed over 50 years. But if we find the bereaved family of them we can identify them more accurate and more objective with the forensic identification method like sex determination, age estimation, superimposition and mtDNA sequencing and so on.
DNA, Mitochondrial
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Exhumation
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Gyeongsangbuk-do
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Humans*
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Korean War*
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Male
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Photography
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Population Groups
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Skull
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Tooth
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Young Adult