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- <text id=92TT2014>
- <title>
- Sep. 14, 1992: Tales from the Crypt
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 14, 1992 The Hillary Factor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 64
- Tales from the Crypt
- </hdr><body>
- <p>To solve history's mysteries, graveyard sleuths are unearthing
- the dead and famous
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Riley/The Natchez Trace--With reporting by Anastasia
- Toufexis/New York
- </p>
- <p> With sweat sliding down his brow, scientific sleuth James
- Starrs shoves a long steel probe down through the dirt around
- the grave of American explorer Meriwether Lewis. A few moments
- later, his team drags a radar sled across the same neatly
- clipped grass and around the weathered limestone monument. Their
- mission: to learn the truth of Lewis' mysterious death by
- gunshot here on a Tennessee stretch of the Natchez Trace, the
- old road between Natchez, Mississippi, and Nashville, Tennessee,
- nearly 183 years ago. Did this pioneer, whose trek to the
- Pacific Northwest with William Clark has been a staple of
- grade-school quizzes for generations, take his own life that
- night at Grinder's Stand? Or was he murdered? "If Lewis had a
- chance to speak," muses Starrs, "what would he say? The only way
- he can speak is through his bones."
- </p>
- <p> Starrs, a professor of forensic sciences at George
- Washington University, is one of a growing--and controversial--group of graveyard detectives. Listening with the ears of
- high-tech equipment, they try to hear the tales that dead men
- tell--stories that could settle age-old mysteries and even
- solve crimes. In a rush to rewrite history, these bone buffs are
- going after the skeletons of everyone from Presidents and Czars
- to assassins and the victims of cannibals.
- </p>
- <p> And last month it was Lewis' turn: Starrs was using his
- radar probe to locate the explorer's remains. If the data show
- anything worth digging up, the scientist would have to obtain
- permission from the U.S. Department of the Interior and
- Tennessee authorities to do so. Lewis' descendants already
- support the project. Once the explorer is out of the ground,
- Starrs could use several technological tools that can coax
- secrets from the dead. Modern lab tests can detect the tiniest
- traces of poison or gunpowder residue, DNA analysis can help
- make identifications and scrutiny with scanning electron
- microscopes can reveal other telltale marks.
- </p>
- <p> Such methods gained notoriety over the past year as
- scientists sought to answer lingering questions about two U.S.
- Presidents. Researchers dug up the remains of Zachary Taylor to
- see whether he was poisoned; they determined that he wasn't.
- Another investigator wanted to study DNA from the autopsy
- remains of Abraham Lincoln to find out whether he had Marfan
- syndrome, an inherited disease that causes victims to be taller
- than average and have long arms, fingers and toes. After a
- lengthy debate, an expert panel concluded that the study should
- be postponed until researchers know more about the gene that
- causes the syndrome.
- </p>
- <p> For sheer energy and curiosity, few historical sleuths can
- match Starrs, who even as a young boy was fascinated by Sherlock
- Holmes mysteries. So far, Starrs has unearthed the victims of
- Alfred Packer, America's most infamous cannibal, to discover
- whether Packer was a murderer as well. (Yes, he was.) He also
- exhumed Carl Weiss, the alleged assassin of Louisiana Governor
- Huey Long; Weiss, in turn, had been shot by Long's bodyguards.
- Based on discrepancies between the bodyguards' testimony and
- bullet marks found on Weiss's bones, among other clues, Starrs
- concluded that it is more likely that the bodyguards themselves
- murdered their boss. Now Starrs wants to dig up the father and
- stepmother of Lizzie Borden, or at least their skulls, to find
- out whether Borden really did them in with a hatchet.
- </p>
- <p> But digging up the past, even in the name of science,
- angers people who view tombs as inviolate resting places.
- University of Minnesota bioethicist Arthur Caplan is worried
- that the "Peeping Toms of forensics" are out of control. "If we
- don't want to devalue the past," he says, "then we're going to
- have to restrict the access of those who can rummage through
- it." Rather than banning such explorations, however, Caplan
- favors using blue-ribbon panels to establish guidelines for
- exhumations and testing. Even medical examiner Michael Baden,
- co-director of the New York State Police forensic-sciences unit,
- admits the need for caution. "We have to be careful that we're
- not succumbing to the public desire for gossip," he says. "The
- remains of the dead should be treated as sacrosanct and
- re-examined only for reasons of great importance."
- </p>
- <p> Baden's exhumation last June of slain civil rights leader
- Medgar Evers appears to meet that test. Although white
- supremacist Byron de la Beckwith was charged with the 1963
- murder of Evers outside his Jackson, Mississippi, home, two
- juries deadlocked, and Beckwith, who denies the charge, went
- free. Last year prosecutors reopened the case, but the original
- autopsy report was missing. So Baden was called in to dig up the
- surprisingly well-preserved body and do another autopsy. If
- Beckwith is retried, Baden will probably testify, and a
- conviction could lead to the reopening of other unsolved cases.
- "There's no statute of limitations on murder," Baden explains.
- "The Evers case shows that after 29 years you can have an active
- murder investigation."
- </p>
- <p> That precedent causes some to clamor for the exhumation of
- John F. Kennedy. Most forensic scientists, however, agree that
- digging up Kennedy could shed light on only a few minor
- mysteries, such as the fate of the President's brain. It was
- removed during the autopsy, but it may have been buried later
- at Kennedy's grave site. Enough documentation exists from the
- autopsy report, X-rays and photos to reconstruct the bullets'
- paths. Starrs, a longtime Kennedy admirer, balks at the thought
- of unearthing the slain President. Says he: "That's like
- exhuming my father."
- </p>
- <p> Even without J.F.K., there are enough famous bodies to
- keep Starrs and others shoveling indefinitely. Clyde Snow, a
- forensic anthropologist who helped identify the remains of Nazi
- war criminal Josef Mengele, recently uncovered a pair of bodies
- in Bolivia. He and his team hope to prove they are the remains
- of none other than American outlaws Butch Cassidy and the
- Sundance Kid.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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