So, I know that the Day One post was really, really, really long, but I thought I'd give you a taste of what the day was like. Now that you all get the idea of the craziness, I'll dial it down a lot.
Day Two started at 8:00 am with this...
And ended roughly around midnight with this...
There was a bunch of other stuff in between, too.
Then I went to bed.
At the beginning of 2008, this blog would have been called "Just another shitty day..." a lot can change in a short period of time and I'm so thankful for it!
Showing posts with label Jeffery Deaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffery Deaver. Show all posts
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
WPA - Day One
Jeez, I don't know where to start. I was just going through my pictures, trying to pare it down to just a few for posting.
The day started with a little snafu with the shuttle busses; too many people, not enough butt space on the shuttle. The people who had cars started rounding up others who needed rides and in short order we were all delivered to GTCC (Guilford Technical Community College). What struck me was how nice everyone was - my friend H and I didn't know the people who we rode to GTCC with, but the commonality of the WPA drew us all together.
Though there were a couple hours dedicated to registration, it took no time at all. The volunteers from High Point Library had everything organized beautifully and it took less than five minutes to negotiate it, which gave H and I time to walk around. When registration closed, the free-for-all began. The sheriff's department graciously allowed its equipment and specialized units to set up and talk to us.
H and I wandered around looking at all the displays, asking a ton of questions and listening to the questions other writers had. I took pages and pages of notes that I'm sure I'll be able to use at some point.
After roasting ourselves on the blacktop, we headed inside to listen to Dr. Bill Lanning's lecture, "Why People Kill". Dr. Lanning is a charming gentleman who obviously enjoys his job. Again, I took pages and pages of notes. I'm not sure that it's right to have so much fun and laugh so much while learning why people kill. I followed most of his idioms, but one got me..."eat a six pack of biscuits and drink a Diet Pepsi." What? Bothered me for days until I asked my boss this morning. Apparently it means to "get over yourself". Who knew?
Following Dr. Lanning's presentation, H and I went back out to the demos and spent some time talking to a Technical Support Team member (code for Hostage Negotiator). We were told that we needed to check out the "Magic Bus" - the Mobile Command Center - which truly is magic. The things they can do from that bus is astounding. My head was spinning just looking around the bus. No way would I ever be smart enough to work even one of the components in the bus.
~~Y'all getting tired yet, 'cause we're just getting started on the afternoon festivities. No? Okay, we'll keep going. ~~
We opted not to do the EMS demo. Instead we tagged along with the fire recruits and poked around the burn house.
Done playing with the thermal imagers, we headed over to listen to Dr. Jonathan Hayes' Autopsy Seminar. Dr. Hayes is a delightful man who takes his job very seriously. He's Senior Medical Examiner in New York City, as well as being a well-known food critic and author. Anyone who has read Patricia Cornwell's Scarpetta series will understand how seriously he takes his job. He treats every body with respect and demands that everyone else does as well. He explained the difference between a Medical Examiner system and a Coroner system. There are a lot of differences, but the main one is that a Coroner is an elected politician who may or may not have forensic training, whereas a Medical Examiner is a highly trained medical professional who, in addition to completing medical school and residency, completes further forensic training.
The autopsy room is beautiful (if you can believe that - maybe it's just the lab geek in me). Each table has a negative airflow frame (for lack of a better word) surrounding it that draws potential airborn pathogens down into it and away from the staff. How cool is that?
~~Still with me? Good, because at this point we hitched a ride back to the hotel for dinner and a brief break.~~
Back at it for the Wine and Cheese reception, where they had the Silent Auction items set up for bidding and the raffle baskets set out. I did my part and pitched in my $5.00 worth of raffle tickets.
Jeffery Deaver was gracious enough to come and hang out with all of us. Very classy, even if I was tongue-tied and couldn't thing of a darn thing to say. Luckily (or not), not everyone was tongue-tied and he was often engaged in conversation with several groups of people.
Lee's presentation "A Wilted Rose: the Tina Mott Story" was almost unbelievable. All of the twists and turns were nothing compared to the associated ghost story. Having been raised with ghosts (go ahead, unfollow if me believing is ghosts is a deal-breaker. I'll wait. No? Still here? Okay.), I can fully believe that both Tina's house and the house across the street is haunted. The grossest thing about the whole presentation was that Tina's "landlord" moved into her apartment and didn't bother to clean up the blood in the bathroom. To this day, there is blood-stained grout surrounding the tub.
And the most disturbing part of the story? That Tina's son is being raised by her in-laws, the same ones who raised her husband, who ultimately killed her and flushed most of her down the toilet. The poor boy's mother was viciously murdered and his father has been in prison for most of his life (but will probably be getting out soon - his sentence was only fourteen years). While I believe absolutely that there are some people who are just plain evil, as Tina's husband was, there are also things that parents and caregivers do that enable and nurture the skills needed to murder someone, chop them into pieces, flush parts of them down the toilet, cook them up on the grill and throw the remaining pieces near a waste treatment plant. What chance does Tina's son have when he's being raised in the same environment and being taught the same skills his father was? What chance do the future women in his life have?
~~And, on that note, it's bedtime. Only 11:30 pm, up and at 'em and at GTCC by 8:00 am. See you then.~~
The day started with a little snafu with the shuttle busses; too many people, not enough butt space on the shuttle. The people who had cars started rounding up others who needed rides and in short order we were all delivered to GTCC (Guilford Technical Community College). What struck me was how nice everyone was - my friend H and I didn't know the people who we rode to GTCC with, but the commonality of the WPA drew us all together.
Though there were a couple hours dedicated to registration, it took no time at all. The volunteers from High Point Library had everything organized beautifully and it took less than five minutes to negotiate it, which gave H and I time to walk around. When registration closed, the free-for-all began. The sheriff's department graciously allowed its equipment and specialized units to set up and talk to us.
The Hazardous Devices team brought out the "bomb robot" that they use to remotely handle devices. It has tracks to help it up inclines and is directed by the orange fiber-optic cable you see on the right side of the picture.
This device is commonly called a "water cannon" by the media and it is essentially the barrel of a Remington 870 shotgun that is filled with water which is forcefully propelled into the suspicious device.
The SERT (Sheriff's Emergency Response Team) team brought out the big guns - literally. That beautiful piece of machinery in the foreground is a Barrett .50 rifle and can reach out and touch someone a long, Long, LONG way away.
H and I wandered around looking at all the displays, asking a ton of questions and listening to the questions other writers had. I took pages and pages of notes that I'm sure I'll be able to use at some point.
After roasting ourselves on the blacktop, we headed inside to listen to Dr. Bill Lanning's lecture, "Why People Kill". Dr. Lanning is a charming gentleman who obviously enjoys his job. Again, I took pages and pages of notes. I'm not sure that it's right to have so much fun and laugh so much while learning why people kill. I followed most of his idioms, but one got me..."eat a six pack of biscuits and drink a Diet Pepsi." What? Bothered me for days until I asked my boss this morning. Apparently it means to "get over yourself". Who knew?
Following Dr. Lanning's presentation, H and I went back out to the demos and spent some time talking to a Technical Support Team member (code for Hostage Negotiator). We were told that we needed to check out the "Magic Bus" - the Mobile Command Center - which truly is magic. The things they can do from that bus is astounding. My head was spinning just looking around the bus. No way would I ever be smart enough to work even one of the components in the bus.
~~Y'all getting tired yet, 'cause we're just getting started on the afternoon festivities. No? Okay, we'll keep going. ~~
We opted not to do the EMS demo. Instead we tagged along with the fire recruits and poked around the burn house.
This is the bottom floor of the maze that recruits must negotiate. The beginning is fairly easy, it's just moving forward, but then they have to make that left-hand turn you see in the picture. Oh, and they have to do it in full gear and in full darkness. It's a good test for claustrophobia.
Yes, this picture is oriented correctly. It's the second level of the maze and is much more difficult. The recruits have to work their way back and forth between the walls and up an incline. There are escape hatches along the maze so that if a recruit loses it, the instructor can get them out safely. If there's a recruit who may be nervous in the pitch black, the instructors can add "play smoke" to up the ante a little bit. A claustrophobic firefighter is a dead firefighter.
In the classroom with the handheld thermal imaging devices.
View through the imager. I had placed my hand on the table for just a few seconds and then removed it; this is the ghost image left-over.
Not very clear, but you can see that I'd moved my hand around on the table and you can see overlapping heat signatures. Devices like this allow firefighters to "see" through the thick smoke of a fire and search for victims more efficiently.
Done playing with the thermal imagers, we headed over to listen to Dr. Jonathan Hayes' Autopsy Seminar. Dr. Hayes is a delightful man who takes his job very seriously. He's Senior Medical Examiner in New York City, as well as being a well-known food critic and author. Anyone who has read Patricia Cornwell's Scarpetta series will understand how seriously he takes his job. He treats every body with respect and demands that everyone else does as well. He explained the difference between a Medical Examiner system and a Coroner system. There are a lot of differences, but the main one is that a Coroner is an elected politician who may or may not have forensic training, whereas a Medical Examiner is a highly trained medical professional who, in addition to completing medical school and residency, completes further forensic training.
The autopsy room is beautiful (if you can believe that - maybe it's just the lab geek in me). Each table has a negative airflow frame (for lack of a better word) surrounding it that draws potential airborn pathogens down into it and away from the staff. How cool is that?
~~Still with me? Good, because at this point we hitched a ride back to the hotel for dinner and a brief break.~~
Back at it for the Wine and Cheese reception, where they had the Silent Auction items set up for bidding and the raffle baskets set out. I did my part and pitched in my $5.00 worth of raffle tickets.
Jeffery Deaver was gracious enough to come and hang out with all of us. Very classy, even if I was tongue-tied and couldn't thing of a darn thing to say. Luckily (or not), not everyone was tongue-tied and he was often engaged in conversation with several groups of people.
Lee's presentation "A Wilted Rose: the Tina Mott Story" was almost unbelievable. All of the twists and turns were nothing compared to the associated ghost story. Having been raised with ghosts (go ahead, unfollow if me believing is ghosts is a deal-breaker. I'll wait. No? Still here? Okay.), I can fully believe that both Tina's house and the house across the street is haunted. The grossest thing about the whole presentation was that Tina's "landlord" moved into her apartment and didn't bother to clean up the blood in the bathroom. To this day, there is blood-stained grout surrounding the tub.
And the most disturbing part of the story? That Tina's son is being raised by her in-laws, the same ones who raised her husband, who ultimately killed her and flushed most of her down the toilet. The poor boy's mother was viciously murdered and his father has been in prison for most of his life (but will probably be getting out soon - his sentence was only fourteen years). While I believe absolutely that there are some people who are just plain evil, as Tina's husband was, there are also things that parents and caregivers do that enable and nurture the skills needed to murder someone, chop them into pieces, flush parts of them down the toilet, cook them up on the grill and throw the remaining pieces near a waste treatment plant. What chance does Tina's son have when he's being raised in the same environment and being taught the same skills his father was? What chance do the future women in his life have?
~~And, on that note, it's bedtime. Only 11:30 pm, up and at 'em and at GTCC by 8:00 am. See you then.~~
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
TST: Author Encounters
I told Rachel that I managed to not make a major fool of myself at Writers' Police Academy and that I didn't think I'd have a TST this week. However, I thought I'd share - instead of embarrassing myself - some of the cool people I got to meet.
I'm finally back from the Writers' Police Academy and ready to bore you all to death with stories, so I thought I'd start with my celebrity sightings.
Terry O'Dell, romance and mystery author, from the blog Terry's Place.

The ever-gorgeous Sophie Littlefield, who was kind enough to let me review A BAD DAY FOR PRETTY.
Jonathan Hayes, NYC Senior Medical Examiner, Food Critic and Author (and my friend H.)
Lee Lofland of The Graveyard Shift, Organizer Extraordinare, and Author of POLICE PROCEDURES AND INVESTIGATIONS.
H and Jeffery Deaver
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Saturday
8:00 a.m.
Assemble at Public Safety burn building for a real bang! A police pursuit ends in a standoff with a killer. Observe a real SWAT team as they do what it takes to bring in the bad guy. The team will be assisted by patrol officers, K-9's, firefighters, and EMS personnel.
Photography is encouraged. You'll want to remember this one!
9:00 - 10:15
FATS training - ongoing - Jerry Cooper
Crash Investigation - Eric Holloman
Pepperspray (O.C. spray) - Andy Russell
Handcuffing Techniques/Take Downs - Certified Police Defensive Tactics Instructor
Fingerprints and Impression Evidence (Crime Lab) - Susan Pons
ATF presentation TBA - ATF Special Agent Rick McMahan
Scenarios - ongoing - Andy Russell, Rick Brewer
10:15
GunDiva et al reports to FATS training
10:30 - 11:45
Toolmark and Trace Evidence (Crime lab)
Police Tools and Equipment
Jail Searches (In actual jail cells)
Arson Investigation
scenarios - ongoing
1:00 - 2:15
Crash Investigation
Pepperspray (O.C. spray)
Handcuffing Techniques/Take Downs
Fingerprints and Impression Evidence (Crime Lab)
ATF presentation
Scenarios - ongoing
2:30 - 3:45
Toolmark and Trace Evidence (Crime lab)
Police Tools and Equipment -
Jail Searches (In actual jail cells) - Deputy Catherine Netter
Arson Investigation- Jerry Coble, Guilford County Asst. Fire Marshall
scenarios - ongoing - Andy Russell, Rick Brewer
4:00 - 5:00
Ask The Pathologist
A one hour session with M.E. Jonathan Hayes. Bring your questions! Moderator - Lee Lofland
7:30
Banquet with Jeffery Deaver. Book signing immediately after banquet. We may even be able to convince Stacy to play and sing again.
Assemble at Public Safety burn building for a real bang! A police pursuit ends in a standoff with a killer. Observe a real SWAT team as they do what it takes to bring in the bad guy. The team will be assisted by patrol officers, K-9's, firefighters, and EMS personnel.
Photography is encouraged. You'll want to remember this one!
9:00 - 10:15
FATS training - ongoing - Jerry Cooper
Crash Investigation - Eric Holloman
Pepperspray (O.C. spray) - Andy Russell
Handcuffing Techniques/Take Downs - Certified Police Defensive Tactics Instructor
Fingerprints and Impression Evidence (Crime Lab) - Susan Pons
ATF presentation TBA - ATF Special Agent Rick McMahan
Scenarios - ongoing - Andy Russell, Rick Brewer
10:15
GunDiva et al reports to FATS training
10:30 - 11:45
Toolmark and Trace Evidence (Crime lab)
Police Tools and Equipment
Jail Searches (In actual jail cells)
Arson Investigation
scenarios - ongoing
1:00 - 2:15
Crash Investigation
Pepperspray (O.C. spray)
Handcuffing Techniques/Take Downs
Fingerprints and Impression Evidence (Crime Lab)
ATF presentation
Scenarios - ongoing
2:30 - 3:45
Toolmark and Trace Evidence (Crime lab)
Police Tools and Equipment -
Jail Searches (In actual jail cells) - Deputy Catherine Netter
Arson Investigation- Jerry Coble, Guilford County Asst. Fire Marshall
scenarios - ongoing - Andy Russell, Rick Brewer
4:00 - 5:00
Ask The Pathologist
A one hour session with M.E. Jonathan Hayes. Bring your questions! Moderator - Lee Lofland
7:30
Banquet with Jeffery Deaver. Book signing immediately after banquet. We may even be able to convince Stacy to play and sing again.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Friday
I thought I'd share my schedule for the next few days - it's going to be a ton of fun and I know I'll come home with a ton of blog fodder.
9:00 a.m.
- Registration begins at GTCC
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Police Department Demos
Local police and sheriff's departments demonstrate tools and equipment
*This is your chance to sit behind the wheel to see how things really work. Talk to the officers, firefighters, and paramedics. Have your questions answered.
10:30 - Noon
Why People Kill - Bill Lanning, Associate Professor of Criminology - GTCC faculty
- A fascinating workshop about why and how criminals justify their behavior, and how they choose their victims. Learn why the killers sometimes say:
1:00 - 2:15
EMS workshop - Randy Yow
A first responder's take on murder scenes. Learn what they do, and how they do it. Do they have to wait for a detective's okay to enter the scene? Find out who's in charge, the M.E., the paramedic, or the cops?
Yes, you will be loading a body into the vehicle.
Fire Station Tour
Visit a real working fire station. See how the firefighters prepare their life-saving equipment. Meet the instructors who train the recruits.
3:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Autopsy Seminar
Dr. Jonathan Hayes - Senior NYC Medical Examiner
Details TBA
7:00 - 9:00
Wine and cheese reception (cash bar)
Entertainment by Atlanta recording artist/author Stacy Allen. We may even talk Jeffery Deaver into bringing along his guitar to join in on the festivities!
9:00 until...
Night Owl Session with Lee Lofland
A Wilted Rose: The Tina Mott Story
A story of love, death, and dismemberment. A walk-through journey of a real crime scene. Meet all the players - the loving victim and her friends, the killer's family, the couple's child, the tireless investigator who never gave up, a psychic, and the killer who thought he was too smart for the authorities.
Bring plenty of tissue. This one's a tear-jerker. Oh, you might want to leave a light on in your hotel room, too, because you'll be viewing real crime scene images.
- D.U.I. monitoring/alcosensor demo ongoing throughout the evening.
9:00 a.m.
- Registration begins at GTCC
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Police Department Demos
Local police and sheriff's departments demonstrate tools and equipment
- K-9 demonstrations
- Police vehicles on display
- Fire equipment, trucks on display
- Ambulance and other EMS equipment on display
- Motorcycles
- Dive team
- SWAT
- Emergency Response Team
*This is your chance to sit behind the wheel to see how things really work. Talk to the officers, firefighters, and paramedics. Have your questions answered.
10:30 - Noon
Why People Kill - Bill Lanning, Associate Professor of Criminology - GTCC faculty
- A fascinating workshop about why and how criminals justify their behavior, and how they choose their victims. Learn why the killers sometimes say:
The devil made me do it.
I can't help it, I was made that way.
I come from a broken home.
Everything I do, I learned from you.
If you call it a duck enough times it will quack.
Why me, Lord?
1:00 - 2:15
EMS workshop - Randy Yow
A first responder's take on murder scenes. Learn what they do, and how they do it. Do they have to wait for a detective's okay to enter the scene? Find out who's in charge, the M.E., the paramedic, or the cops?
Yes, you will be loading a body into the vehicle.
Fire Station Tour
Visit a real working fire station. See how the firefighters prepare their life-saving equipment. Meet the instructors who train the recruits.
3:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Autopsy Seminar
Dr. Jonathan Hayes - Senior NYC Medical Examiner
Details TBA
7:00 - 9:00
Wine and cheese reception (cash bar)
Entertainment by Atlanta recording artist/author Stacy Allen. We may even talk Jeffery Deaver into bringing along his guitar to join in on the festivities!
9:00 until...
Night Owl Session with Lee Lofland
A Wilted Rose: The Tina Mott Story
A story of love, death, and dismemberment. A walk-through journey of a real crime scene. Meet all the players - the loving victim and her friends, the killer's family, the couple's child, the tireless investigator who never gave up, a psychic, and the killer who thought he was too smart for the authorities.
Bring plenty of tissue. This one's a tear-jerker. Oh, you might want to leave a light on in your hotel room, too, because you'll be viewing real crime scene images.
- D.U.I. monitoring/alcosensor demo ongoing throughout the evening.
Friday, January 29, 2010
I Can't Believe I Just Did It...
I finally bit the bullet and registered for the Writer's Police Academy in September. Terry Odell, mystery writer extraordinaire, over at Terry's Place "introduced" me to Lee Lofland of The Graveyard Shift, author and font of knowledge regarding police procedure.
From the moment I found out about WPA, I've been dying to go. It's three full days of instruction in police procedure; everything from shooting to driving to crime scene procedure. The keynote speaker is Jeffrey Deaver, who first whetted my appetite for a well-written forensic novel. I fell in love with "The Bone Collector" and quicky ate up the whole series. Shortly thereafter, I found Patricia Cornwell, who cemented my love for forensic novels.
I've been kicking around the idea for a month or more, trying to justify the expense of both the conference and the travel. I'm pretty sure that my work family is tired of me debating back and forth, so they'll be thrilled to find out that I finally registered for it. I saved a good bit by registering early and I love a good deal, so I was able to pay for the registration for the conference and pay for the FATS (Firearms Training Simulator) training for less than if I'd waited another week.
Now I've just got to stave off the nervous breakdown brought on by spending that money. By God, I had better learn a TON in those three semi-expensive days.
From the moment I found out about WPA, I've been dying to go. It's three full days of instruction in police procedure; everything from shooting to driving to crime scene procedure. The keynote speaker is Jeffrey Deaver, who first whetted my appetite for a well-written forensic novel. I fell in love with "The Bone Collector" and quicky ate up the whole series. Shortly thereafter, I found Patricia Cornwell, who cemented my love for forensic novels.
I've been kicking around the idea for a month or more, trying to justify the expense of both the conference and the travel. I'm pretty sure that my work family is tired of me debating back and forth, so they'll be thrilled to find out that I finally registered for it. I saved a good bit by registering early and I love a good deal, so I was able to pay for the registration for the conference and pay for the FATS (Firearms Training Simulator) training for less than if I'd waited another week.
Now I've just got to stave off the nervous breakdown brought on by spending that money. By God, I had better learn a TON in those three semi-expensive days.
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