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Scene Investigation, Identification, and Victim Examination Following the Accident of Galaxy 203: Disaster Preplanning Does Work
McCarty, VO Washoe county coroner, Reno, NV.
Sohn, AP Professor and chairman, assistant professor, and assistant professor, respectively, Department of Pathology, University of Nevada School of Medicine, Reno, NV.
Ritzlin, RS Professor and chairman, assistant professor, and assistant professor, respectively, Department of Pathology, University of Nevada School of Medicine, Reno, NV.
Gauthier, JH Professor and chairman, assistant professor, and assistant professor, respectively, Department of Pathology, University of Nevada School of Medicine, Reno, NV.
Abstract
Galaxy Airlines Flight 203 crashed following takeoff from Reno-Cannon International Airport on 21 Jan. 1985. Sixty-eight persons on board the aircraft perished in the initial crash and resultant fire which followed. Two victims expired as a result of crash injuries within subsequent days and one passenger survived. A community disaster response plan was in place and had been practiced by local government agencies before this incident. The successes of this preplanned response, as well as methods of actual recovery, identification, and examination of the victims is presented.
Keywords:
accidents, aircraft, aircraft crash, disaster management, forensic science, human identification, odontology
Paper ID: JFS324870983
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Author McCarty VO, Sohn AP, Ritzlin RS, Gauthier JH
Title Scene Investigation, Identification, and Victim Examination Following the Accident of Galaxy 203: Disaster Preplanning Does Work
Symposium ,
Committee on
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