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CSI: Crime Scene Investigation is an American crime drama television series created by Anthony E. Zuiker and executive produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, Carol Mendelsohn, Ann Donahue, William Petersen, Cynthia Chvatal, Naren Shankar, and Don McGill, among others. It follows Las Vegas criminalists (identified as "Crime Scene Investigators") working ...
"Pilot" is the pilot episode and the first episode of the first season of the American crime drama television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. Written by series creator Anthony E. Zuiker and directed by Danny Cannon, it first aired on October 6, 2000, on the CBS network in the United States.
Grissom, Nick and Catherine handle a case in which the fingerprints of a victim in an old kidnapping case turn up at the scene of a man found dead at a gardening center in what they initially thought was a heist gone wrong; further investigation would not only prove the now-grown kidnapped child was still alive, but was also a suspect.
United States Army Air Service pilots of World War I (176 P) Pages in category "American World War I pilots" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total.
The "CSI effect" is the alleged phenomenon of CSI raising crime victims' and jury members' real-world expectations of forensic science, especially crime scene investigation and DNA testing. [79] This is said to have changed the way that many trials are presented today, in that prosecutors are pressured to deliver more forensic evidence in court ...
Austro-Hungarian World War I pilots (1 C, 8 P) B. British World War I pilots (1 C, 58 P) C. Canadian World War I pilots (1 C, 10 P) F. French World War I pilots (1 C ...
Catherine and Warrick travel to Miami to assist in the investigation as the trail leads there. On arrival, they meet their CSI: Miami counterparts. Catherine wants to take over the scene, and Horatio Caine politely lets her. Horatio finds the girl in a secluded plantation and the team discover some bullets, tire tracks and urine left behind by ...
[1] The Nieuport 17, a French biplane fighter aircraft of World War I. While "ace" status was most often won by fighter pilots, bomber and reconnaissance crews, and observers in two-seater aircraft such as the Bristol F.2b ("Bristol Fighter"), also destroyed enemy aircraft. If a two-seater aircraft destroyed an aircraft, both crew members were ...