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  2. Colin Pitchfork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Pitchfork

    Colin Pitchfork (born 23 March 1960) is an English child-murderer and child-rapist. He was the first person convicted of rape and murder using DNA profiling after he murdered two girls in neighbouring Leicestershire villages: Lynda Mann in Narborough in November 1983 and Dawn Ashworth in Enderby in July 1986.

  3. Code of a Killer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_of_a_Killer

    His discovery is first put to use in an immigration case, successfully proving the parentage of a young Ghanaian boy and preventing his deportation. The acceptance of Jeffreys’s findings in a court of law opens the door to DNA testing, and he and his university laboratory are swamped by paternity and immigration cases.

  4. Hawley Harvey Crippen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawley_Harvey_Crippen

    Hawley Harvey Crippen (11 September 1862 – 23 November 1910), colloquially known as Dr. Crippen, was an American homeopath, ear and eye specialist and medicine dispenser who was hanged in Pentonville Prison, London, for the murder of his wife, Cora Henrietta Crippen.

  5. History of virology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_virology

    The importance of tobacco mosaic virus in the history of viruses cannot be overstated. It was the first virus to be discovered, and the first to be crystallised and its structure shown in detail. The first X-ray diffraction pictures of the crystallised virus were obtained by Bernal and Fankuchen in 1941.

  6. Francisca Rojas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisca_Rojas

    Francisca Rojas is believed to be the first criminal found guilty through fingerprint evidence in the world. On 29 June 1892, [1] 27-year-old Rojas murdered her two children in Necochea, Buenos Aires Province, in Argentina. Her six-year-old son, Ponciano Carballo Rojas, and his four-year-old sister Feliza were found brutally murdered in their home.

  7. The Most Notorious Killers Who Were Never Caught - AOL

    www.aol.com/most-notorious-killers-were-never...

    Law enforcement is using DNA testing to track the murderer who laced bottles of Tylenol with cyanide in 1982, killing seven people. From notorious serial killers to murderers who committed heinous ...

  8. Timeline of computer viruses and worms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_computer...

    Appearance of Lehigh virus (discovered at its namesake university), [20] boot sector viruses such as Yale from the US, Stoned from New Zealand, Ping Pong from Italy, and appearance of the first self-encrypting file virus, Cascade. Lehigh was stopped on campus before it spread to the "wild" (to computers beyond the university), and as a result ...

  9. List of security hacking incidents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_security_hacking...

    Australian federal police tracking Realm members Phoenix, Electron and Nom are the first in the world to use a remote data intercept to gain evidence for a computer crime prosecution. [ 34 ] The Computer Misuse Act 1990 is passed in the United Kingdom, criminalising any unauthorised access to computer systems.