AFI-LLC is offering our latest - and very detailed book (over 200 pages) - on Investigating Death & Serious Bodily Injuries for civil or criminal cases, "Death and Serious Bodily Injury Investigation for the Professional Investigator" by Dean & Karen Beers.
Regularly for $95 plus shipping, save 25% - order today and we'll ship your book tomorrow! Just $75 via PayPal.
The guide is over 200 pages and begins with the core of our distance learning course manual. It includes over 20 additional forensic, death and serious bodily injury based articles. You will learn how to conduct death and SBI investigations to better advise your client, and prepare the case for expert consultation - and we are prepared to be your affiliated experts!
Contact us now - associates@deathexperts.com to learn more about how this guide can give you the fundamentals to increase your clientele outreach and earning potential!
This guide is also ideal for the coroner and medical examiner offices, attorneys, investigators, and insurance companies who find themselves learning the nuances and protocols of effective death and serious bodily injury investigations.
Associates in Forensic Investigations, LLC
Expert Consultants and Legal Investigators of Personal Injury, Negligence and Death in Civil, Criminal and Probate Deaths and Serious Bodily Injury Investigations.
It is important to understand that proper death investigation serves an important public health and safety purpose, as well as for the family – both closure and benefits. Some deaths may result in criminal charges, civil litigation, worker compensation claims, or life insurance benefits. There are two components to death investigation – Manner of Death and Cause of Death. The former is one of five classifications: Natural, Accident, Suicide, Homicide and Undetermined. The latter is specific to what disease process or injury and chain of events caused the death – such as cancer, asphyxiation, or drug overdose. Proper death investigation includes a scene investigation, scene assessment of the decedent, collection of evidence, review of medical and social history, and any additional background of the decedent and circumstances. A forensic autopsy is not performed for all deaths, only equivocal deaths in which clear and current medical history by an attending physician is not available.
Thank You, Dean and Karen
Regularly for $95 plus shipping, save 25% - order today and we'll ship your book tomorrow! Just $75 via PayPal.
The guide is over 200 pages and begins with the core of our distance learning course manual. It includes over 20 additional forensic, death and serious bodily injury based articles. You will learn how to conduct death and SBI investigations to better advise your client, and prepare the case for expert consultation - and we are prepared to be your affiliated experts!
Contact us now - associates@deathexperts.com to learn more about how this guide can give you the fundamentals to increase your clientele outreach and earning potential!
This guide is also ideal for the coroner and medical examiner offices, attorneys, investigators, and insurance companies who find themselves learning the nuances and protocols of effective death and serious bodily injury investigations.
Associates in Forensic Investigations, LLC
Expert Consultants and Legal Investigators of Personal Injury, Negligence and Death in Civil, Criminal and Probate Deaths and Serious Bodily Injury Investigations.
It is important to understand that proper death investigation serves an important public health and safety purpose, as well as for the family – both closure and benefits. Some deaths may result in criminal charges, civil litigation, worker compensation claims, or life insurance benefits. There are two components to death investigation – Manner of Death and Cause of Death. The former is one of five classifications: Natural, Accident, Suicide, Homicide and Undetermined. The latter is specific to what disease process or injury and chain of events caused the death – such as cancer, asphyxiation, or drug overdose. Proper death investigation includes a scene investigation, scene assessment of the decedent, collection of evidence, review of medical and social history, and any additional background of the decedent and circumstances. A forensic autopsy is not performed for all deaths, only equivocal deaths in which clear and current medical history by an attending physician is not available.
Thank You, Dean and Karen