| Mary Manhein is Director of the LSU
FACES LABORATORY. She is a forensic anthropologist and instructor at
Louisiana State University and has worked in the field of Forensic Anthropology
for 21 years.
She has an MA in Anthropology and is a Fellow in the Physical Anthropology
section of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. She is also a Deputy
Coroner for East Baton Rouge Parish, LA and is an expert witness in Forensic
Anthropology. She has handled more than 700 forensic cases, including retrieval
and identification of victims of industrial explosions and fires and is
the author of The Bone Lady: Life as a Forensic Anthropologist..
The Bone Lady :Life as a Forensic Anthropologist -
Mary Manhein
"On the first day of the search, I failed to find the body."
So writes forensic anthropologist and bioarchaelologist Mary H. Manhein—"the
bone lady," as law enforcement personnel call her. In this, one of dozens
of stories recollected in her powerful memoir, Manhein and the state police
eventually unearth a black plastic bag buried in the banks of the Mississippi
River containing the body of a man who has been missing for five years.
After the
painstaking process of examining the remains, confirming the victim's
identity, and preparing a formal report for the police, Manhein testifies
for the prosecution at the murder trial. The defendant is convicted (in
no small part because of Manhein), and "the bone lady" has helped solve
yet another mystery.
As director of the Forensic Anthropology and Computer
Enhancement Services (FACES) Laboratory at Louisiana State University,
Manhein unravels mysteries of life and death every day. In The Bone Lady,
she shares, with the compassion and humor of a born storyteller, many fascinating
cases that include the science underlying her analyses as well as the human
stories behind the remains.
Manhein, as an expert on the human skeleton, assists law enforcement
by providing profiles of remains that narrow the identification process
when the traditional means used by medical examiners or coroners to conduct
autopsies are no longer applicable—simply put, when bones are all that
are left to tell the story. She assesses age, sex, race, height, signs
of trauma, and time since death, and creates clay facial reconstructions.
Although Manhein enjoys solving high-profile cases, her
personal crusade is identifying the John and Jane Does who wait in her
lab. Manhein's own words perfectly characterize her mission: "Identifying
a victim can bring peace of mind to the family and can help them to go
on with their lives. Sometimes, peace of mind is the only gift that I can
give." |