Cold Cases, Etcetera

BLOG SEARCH TIPS

There are two ways to find the posts: archives and search box. 

ARCHIVES
The archive lets you browse posts by specific metadata: date, category and tag.  It’s a nice feature if you’re only interested in a certain topic like forensics, or you’re just curious. 

  • Filter posts by:

    • Date: Year, month
    • Category:  Broad topics like Forensics or Research.
    • Tag: Narrower topics (DNA, plants, forensic genealogy)

    Example #1: You’re looking for a post about a homicide you recall happened in the ’70s. Click the ‘1970s’ tag to limit cases to that decade.  

    Example #2.  You want cold cases that involved animal or pet hair.  Click the tag “animals” (or do a keyword search).

  • Meaning of certain tags:
    • time period  – for Cases originating during that period (e.g. 1980s)
    • academic: post is about a scholarly works (journals, peer-reviewed articles, etc.)
    • child (0-17), adult (18+) – victim’s age
    • Location (mostly used with specific cases) The blog uses USPS postal abbreviations so Maryland will be US-MD.  For other countries, the tag will be the full name, such as  Canada. The one exception is United Kingdom where the tag is UK
    • solved/unsolved:  status of a cold case

SEARCH BOX
If you don’t have time to rummage through posts, a keyword search may be the quickest way to find what you seek. 

  • This blog uses the “AND” Boolean operator (meaning the database will look for all terms). 
  • Searches aren’t case-sensitive:  Florida or florida are both ok
  • Stemming is allowed.  Typing gene will return words like gene(s), genetic(s), genealogy. If you only want “genealogy” then type the full word.  Convict finds its variations: convicted, conviction.  If you recall a place name but are unsure of the spelling, try typing in part of it. Bern will find “San Bernardino.”  
  • Quotation marks can be used to search a phrase but may eliminate useful hits. Example:  “dna extraction” will look for those words in that exact order. But dna extract (no quotes and stemmed) will find this:  a new technique to extract dna —or this:  …a new dna extraction technique.
  • For a focused search, type the most unique word you remember in the post. For a small blog like this one, that approach may be very effective.
    • For example, if you remember a Maryland case where a child was found in creek under a bridge, start by typing “creek.” Or type, “bridge.” 
    • If you recall a case about an identical twin, type: identical twin or twin.
  • Highlighting search terms:  When search results appear, use your browser’s “Find” feature to see where those  terms are on the page.  Generally, Ctrl-F is the the shortcut key for  Windows. On Macs, use Command+F. Researcher’s Tip: Google Chrome automatically highlights all search terms when you use the Find option. Other browsers like Mozilla Firefox may have a “Highlight All” button; click it to instantly see each occurrence of your keywords on the page–either as a yellow highlight or other hue you pick.   Check your browser’s HELP page for more info on the Find feature.