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Post by vinnypunditsheros on Aug 3, 2006 14:26:33 GMT -5
www.tombevel.comTBI, LLC is a forensic education & consulting company specializing in Crime Scene Analysis & Reconstruction and Bloodstain Pattern Analysis. We have provided quality training for over 25 years by helping police departments, investigators, attorneys for both the state and defense, Medical Examiners and their field agents in furthering their knowledge in Bloodstain Pattern Analysis and Crime Scene Analysis & Reconstruction. Tom Bevel has qualified as an expert witness in both of the above disciplines in state and federal courts. Tom co-authored Bloodstain Pattern Analysis, With An Introduction to Crime Scene Reconstruction, CRC Press 1997, Second Edition.
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Post by vinnypunditsheros on Aug 3, 2006 14:28:23 GMT -5
Captain Tom Bevel (Ret.) is the owner of TBI, LLC, a forensic education and consulting company. He is also an associate professor in the Masters of Forensic Science program at the University of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, Oklahoma. He retired after 27 years with the Oklahoma City Police Department. His last assignment was the Commander of the Homicide, Robbery, Missing Persons, and the Unsolved Homicide units. He served a total of eighteen (18) years with the Forensic Science Services, serving as a Specialist, Sergeant, Lieutenant, Captain and Assistant Lab Director.
Bevel is a graduate of the Scenes of Crime Officer course, Hendon, England; the Technical Investigations course, Central U. S. Police Institute, Oklahoma State University at Oklahoma City; the FBI National Academy; and the Post-Graduate Medical Legal course, London Medical College, London, England; and completed two (2) weeks of OJT with the Lab Liaison at the London Metropolitan Police Laboratory. He has completed more than 160 hours on Bloodstain Pattern Analysis courses and more than 200 hours on scene analysis and reconstruction courses.
Captain Bevel is a Fellow of the Association for Crime Scene Reconstruction (ACSR); a Distinguished Member of the International Association of Bloodstain Analysts (IABPA); a Regional Representative for the International Association for Identification (IAI); a member of the Editorial Board for the Journal of Forensic Identification; and a member of the Southwestern Association of Forensic Scientists (SWAFS) and the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS). He is listed in the 1998-1999 Edition of Who’s Who in Science and Engineering.
Bevel has served as a crime scene consultant in more than forty-one (41) U. S. states and eight (8) foreign countries. He has been qualified as an expert in crime scene reconstruction and bloodstain pattern analysis in both state and federal courts.
To obtain a complete CV contact Tom Bevel at mailto:tbevel@tombevel.com
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Post by vinnypunditsheros on Aug 3, 2006 14:30:18 GMT -5
Tom Bevel is cooler than Jack Bauer, Chuck Norris, and $ymmetry.
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Post by CosmonautLaunchPad on Aug 3, 2006 14:50:36 GMT -5
Remember that post waaaaaaaaaaaay back that I think Sdotcarter posted? Might have even been on the old board. It was about a guy on CSI whose name was Tom Bevel. Maybe it was the real Tom Bevel playing himself. Who wants dibs on interviewing the real Tom Bevel?
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Post by bonafide on Aug 3, 2006 21:12:17 GMT -5
Maybe Tom Bevel could analyze this blood spatter: Aloha! edit: Sorry I had to edit that picture, unfortunately I don't think that would have even been able to stay on the old Bevel.
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Post by s dot carter on Aug 7, 2006 8:12:33 GMT -5
Sorry, I was out of town all weekend, but cosmo had it right, basically. Thomas Bevel was on Forensic Files, so it was him re-enacting himself discussing a case he helped solve. Long live Tom Bevel
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Post by vinnypunditsheros on Nov 14, 2006 15:33:58 GMT -5
I can't believe Tom Bevel murdered Phil Simms.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- A jury has recommended two death sentences for a man convicted in the 2004 shooting deaths of a Jacksonville man and his 13-year-old son. After two hours of deliberations, the jury unanimously recommended that Thomas Bevel, 24, be executed for killing Mayport Middle School student Phillip Sims. The jury voted 8-4 to recommend the death penalty for murdering the boy's father, Garrick Stringfield. The victims were fatally shot with an AK-47 assault rifle at Stringfield's home in February 2004. Bevel had been a boarder in Stringfield's home
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Post by bonafide on Nov 14, 2006 16:27:55 GMT -5
Shit happens.
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