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Fred E. Inbau

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fred E. Inbau (1909 to 1998) was an American lawyer and criminologist who helped develop the Reid technique of interrogation. He was director of the Scientific Crime Detection Lab.[1] He coauthored the influential textbook Criminal Interrogation and Confessions.

Inbau was from New Orleans. After a law degree from Tulane University, he moved to Chicago. He studied at the Northwestern University School of Law and, after a few years as a trial lawyer, become a teacher there for 32 years.[2] He was president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. He founded Americans for Effective Law Enforcement.

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References

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  1. ^ Wolffram, Heather (March 2021). "Teaching Forensic Science to the American Police and Public: The Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory, 1929-1938". Academic Forensic Pathology. 11 (1): 52–67. doi:10.1177/19253621211002515. ISSN 1925-3621. PMC 8129488. PMID 34040685.
  2. ^ "Fred Inbau | Obituary | The Economist". web.archive.org. June 11, 1998. Retrieved 2024-09-15.