The Los Angeles police officers closing in on a serial killer known as the Grim Sleeper needed just one last piece of evidence. To capture the man, who had eluded them for more than two decades while murdering more than a dozen women, a daring detective went undercover to obtain the final piece of the puzzle: a half-eaten pizza crust.
Dinner leftovers might not be the first thing that comes to mind when we think of smoking-gun murder evidence, but in the age of modern forensic science, a tiny drop of saliva on a discarded pizza slice can be just as convincing as a literal smoking gun. The crust ended up being a key to the Grim Sleeper's 2010 arrest and prosecution.
Forensics—the application of scientific and technological advances to crime investigation—has revolutionized law enforcement in the last several decades. High-tech tools now allow detectives to detect fingerprints that would have previously gone unnoticed, to analyze and compare fibers with unprecedented precision and to use massive databases to make instant connections between seemingly disparate pieces of evidence.
The most stunning advances have come in the field of DNA, which has helped police to crack cases that seemed unsolvable and attorneys to free prisoners who were wrongfully imprisoned.
When police first started using DNA analysis in the '70s and '80s, they would need an amount of blood the size of a quarter to get a good sample, says Peter Massey, a former Connecticut detective who's now head of the undergraduate program at the University of New Haven's Henry C. Lee College of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science. "Now it's down to less than a pinhead," he says.
With "touch DNA," police can now obtain a sample after a suspect simply has physical contact with a surface, and police have much greater ability to use "degraded samples," DNA evidence that could be months or even years old, says Massey.
Advances in DNA investigation also mean that analyses that once took three or five days are down to as little as 90 minutes, and can be done with a portable testing unit, says Massey. Police can even zero in on a suspect without a direct DNA match by making a connection through familial genetic resemblance. That was how police caught the so-called Grim Sleeper, as crime reporter Christine Pelisek detailed in her 2017 book of the same name.