23-04-2008, 16:47:41
(This post was last modified: 23-04-2008, 17:00:28 by morenohijazo.)
Prieto, durante su intervención en la Comisión, trató de presentar un artículo de dos forenses israelíes que explicaban que en los atentados con bombas que habían revisado en el periodo de estudio, 97 % de los cadáveres habían sido identificados en las primeras 24 horas, pero sin embargo todos (100%) de los terroristas de dichos atentados tenían sus cadáveres tan deshechos que no fue posible identificarlos hasta más tarde.
Castro, de muy malas maneras, impidió que pudiera presentar el artículo. Esta tarde/ noche, o mañana, presentaré esto en el foro.
Sin embargo, por constituir un cuerpo independiente, voy a poner aquí en post aparte los resúmenes que he encontrado de los artículos de los forenses J. Hiss y T Kahana, que son los dos forenses israelíes en cuestión, y otro que me sale al hacer la búsqueda
Las revistas son bajo suscripción, así que no tengo el texto completo, y la cifra que da Prieto no está en los resúmenes; por eso tengo que poner los cuatro artículos de Hiss y Kahana que pueden corresponder al que decía Prieto, y un quinto que me sale buscando a Kiss y Kahana, aunque ellos no aparecen entre los autores (vaya usted a saber, en muchas publicaciones sólo admiten seis autores, posiblemente estos dos sean el séptimo y octavo)
Lo importante es, además de lo que dice Prieto, que los autores opinan obligatoria la colaboración con Policía, Ley, y si es preciso, Ejército
En negrita la frase que lo indica:
Castro, de muy malas maneras, impidió que pudiera presentar el artículo. Esta tarde/ noche, o mañana, presentaré esto en el foro.
Sin embargo, por constituir un cuerpo independiente, voy a poner aquí en post aparte los resúmenes que he encontrado de los artículos de los forenses J. Hiss y T Kahana, que son los dos forenses israelíes en cuestión, y otro que me sale al hacer la búsqueda
Las revistas son bajo suscripción, así que no tengo el texto completo, y la cifra que da Prieto no está en los resúmenes; por eso tengo que poner los cuatro artículos de Hiss y Kahana que pueden corresponder al que decía Prieto, y un quinto que me sale buscando a Kiss y Kahana, aunque ellos no aparecen entre los autores (vaya usted a saber, en muchas publicaciones sólo admiten seis autores, posiblemente estos dos sean el séptimo y octavo)
Lo importante es, además de lo que dice Prieto, que los autores opinan obligatoria la colaboración con Policía, Ley, y si es preciso, Ejército
En negrita la frase que lo indica:
Quote:Suicide bombers in Israel.
Hiss J, Kahana T.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1998 Mar;19(1):63-6.
L. Greenberg Institute of Forensic Medicine, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Between 1993 and 1995, 14 suicidal terrorist bombings took place in Israel; 86 victims perished in these attacks, which were carried out by militant Palestinian organizations that oppose peace treaties between the state of Israel and the Palestinian people. The modus operandi of the perpetrators was detonating, in a public area, an explosive device carried on or in close proximity to the terrorist's body. We reviewed the postmortem examinations and identification procedures performed by the medical and law enforcement personnel involved in mass disaster management. The types of injuries sustained by the victims and perpetrators include body disruption, explosive injuries, flying missile injuries, and blast injuries. Blunt trauma directly produced by the explosion and flying missile injuries account for 80.1% of the wounds. The number of fatalities was more closely related to the type of the attack rather than to the amount and type of explosives used. Swift identification of all victims and perpetrators was obtained through collaboration between the different professional teams involved: forensic scientists, law enforcement agencies, and secret service investigators. Based on the analysis of the data obtained from the necroscopic examinations, we observed that most of the wounds sustained fall within the realm of blunt force injuries; emergency medical facilities that might be faced with similar situations should prepare accordingly. Collaboration between the various forensic and law enforcement teams results in swift resolution of disaster management. Prompt identification of the perpetrators allows the authorities to apprehend any accomplices and to prevent similar attacks.
PMID: 9539394 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Quote:Suicidal terrorist bombings in Israel--identification of human remains.
Kahana T, Freund M, Hiss J.
J Forensic Sci. 1997 Mar;42(2):260-4.
Division of Identification and Forensic Science, Israel National Police Headquarters, Jerusalem.
Positive identification of human remains is one of the most important tasks in mass disaster investigations. Religious and jurisdictional demands in Israel, require the identification process to be completed in the shortest possible time. In the 18 suicidal terrorist bombings that took place in Israel between the years 1993-1996, 127 victims and 19 perpetrators were killed, and their severely fragmented bodies were identified within 24 h. The efficient completion of the identification endeavor was enabled by the implementation of a variety of techniques and the close collaboration in the investigation between the different emergency and forensic agencies. This paper presents the mass disaster identification policy and techniques currently used in Israel. The importance of an interdisciplinary approach for the identification of extremely fragmented human remains from mass disasters and the creation of a central data bank of fingerprints and genetic markers is emphasized.
PMID: 9068183 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Quote:Pathologic features of suicidal deaths caused by explosives.
Tsokos M, Türk EE, Madea B, Koops E, Longauer F, Szabo M, Huckenbeck W, Gabriel P, Barz J.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 2003 Mar;24(1):55-63.
Institute of Legal Medicine, University of Hamburg, Butenfeld 34, 22529 Hamburg, Germany. mtsokos@web.de
Suicidal explosions that lack a terrorist background are only rarely encountered in the field of forensic pathology. The investigation of explosion-related fatalities can be a substantial challenge in medicolegal casework. Determining whether the manner of death is suicide, homicide, or accident in such cases can present an especially difficult task to the forensic pathologist. This study considers the pathologic features of suicidal deaths caused by explosives without a terrorist background. The modus operandi of the decedents reflected familiarity and proficiency, or at least a degree of specialized knowledge, with the construction and use of explosive devices. All explosions were set off in confined spaces. The injury patterns consisted of a combination of primary blast injuries (e.g. decapitation, traumatic amputation of limbs, gross lacerations of the body surface, blast injuries of gas-containing and hollow organs), secondary blast injuries (e.g. splinter-induced penetrating trauma), tertiary blast injuries (e.g. abrasions and contusions), and burn injuries (mostly of the flash type). The previously described symmetric distribution pattern of injuries in suicidal explosions was apparent only to a certain degree in the present series. Our observation of superficially sharp-edged wound margins with bridging in the depths of the lesion in blast-induced lacerations of the skin should deserve further attention in forthcoming cases of explosion-related fatalities because this finding is a diagnostic possibility that may support the theory of an explosion-related fatality under special circumstances, e.g. when the body has been dumped away from the place of death. Because a terrorist attack may be initially suspected in each case of suicide involving explosives, the importance of a joint inquiry based on expertise from police investigators, bomb experts, and forensic pathologists is evident.
PMID: 12605000 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Quote:Radiographic identification of fragmentary human remains from a mass disaster.
Kahana T, Ravioli JA, Urroz CL, Hiss J.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1997 Mar;18(1):40-4.
Israel National Police, Jerusalem, Israel.
Positive identification of human remains is one of the most important tasks in mass disaster management. Here we report on the use of radiography for positive identification of fragmentary human remains recovered from the scene of a terrorist bombing in the Jewish-Argentine Mutual Association Center in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in July 1994. Radiographic examination of all human remains from mass disaster scenes is recommended for identification purposes. Establishing a computerized data bank of antemortem information on missing persons and postmortem findings in disaster victims greatly facilitates and expedites the identification process.
PMID: 9095299 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Quote:Trauma and identification of victims of suicidal terrorism in IsraelEvidentemente, no son los únicos autores que hablan de ésto. Hay cientos de artículos que lo indican. Si los peones lo deseasen, haría una selección.
Hiss J, Kahana T.
Mil Med. 2000 Nov;165(11):889-93.
Greenberg Institute of Forensic Medicine, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv 61490, Israel.
The postmortem examination and identification procedures performed by medical and law enforcement personnel involved in mass disaster management in Israel are reported. The Israel National Police, the Israel Defense Forces, and the L. Greenberg Institute of Forensic Medicine's experts examined 171 victims who died in 21 incidents of suicidal terrorism. The trauma sustained by the victims and perpetrators of suicidal bombings included complete body disruption and explosive, flying missile, and blast injuries. The modus operandi of the perpetrators, reconstructed from the distribution and type of injury of the victims, is discussed. Fifty-five victims perished in open space bombings and 91 inside buses. All perpetrators of these bombings died at the time of the incident regardless of their location. Identification of the victims was achieved using fingerprints, dental records, medical intervention signs, anatomic variation, genetic profile, and personal recognition. Prompt identification of the perpetrators allowed speedy apprehension of the accomplices and prevention of similar attacks. Collaboration between the different forensic, military, and law enforcement teams increased the efficiency of disaster management efforts.
PMID: 11143441 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
La mentira tiene las patas cortas, pero calza zancos al lado de las exclusivas conspiracionistas
