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Criminal investigations on a very small scale were carried out by the laboratory division. In 1959, an 11,350-square-foot (1,054 m 2 ) structure was erected in front of London Prison Farm. At the same time, the Investigations Division was formally added, investigative field agents were hired [ 2 ] and the name was changed from Bureau of ...
The Henry A. Wallace Police Crime Public Database is an Internet database open to public queries. The database, built by criminologist and former police officer Philip Stinson of Bowling Green State University , contains more than 10,000 instances in which local police officers in the United States were arrested between 2005 and 2014.
Richard Edwin Fox (February 3, 1956 – February 12, 2003) was an American murderer who was executed by the state of Ohio for the kidnapping and murder of an 18-year-old college student whom he lured to her death with the fake promise of a job interview. He was also suspected of killing his wife in Oregon in 1983.
Sep. 14—The Ohio Chamber of Commerce is surveying its membership to identify crime issues affecting businesses to determine ways to improve public safety across the state. "The safety of our ...
On Tuesday, the crime lab announced that it has suspended forensic work that helps police detectives make connections between bullets, bullet casings and guns, saying that such analysis in "a ...
Bowling Green is a city in and the county seat of Wood County, Ohio, United States, [9] located 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Toledo. The population was 30,808 at the 2020 census . It is part of the Toledo metropolitan area and a member of the Toledo Metropolitan Area Council of Governments . [ 10 ]
Wood County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio.As of the 2020 census, the population was 132,248. [2] Its county seat is Bowling Green. [3] The county was named for Captain Eleazer D. Wood, the engineer for General William Henry Harrison's army, who built Fort Meigs during the War of 1812. [4]
The Wood County Courthouse and Jail, located in Bowling Green, Ohio, United States, is Wood County's third courthouse. It was built after citizens decided to move the county seat from Perrysburg to Bowling Green. Ground was broken on November 28, 1893, and the cornerstone was laid on July 4, 1894.