THE NO-BODY MURDERS……..

John Sinclair Robson


Regions:
Devon, Somerset, Dorset, Wiltshire, Bristol
Notice Period:
Short (maybe less than one month's notice)
Type:
professional
Fee:
Paid: £65.00 + travel expenses
Category:
Humanities
Updated:
20th November 2023
Tagged:
True Crime

Can a murder conviction be obtained when a body has not been found? What is the meaning of Corpus Delecti ? Dr Robson examines many murder cases where there is no body…… Including “The Killer Judge”, “the Muriel McKay kidnap”, “Murder in the Outback” “The Dingo Baby” and not least ”Murder through the Porthole…1947”!

Views: 277 | Enquiries: 0

About John Sinclair Robson

Dr John is a consultant forensic dentist and as such is one of the most experienced in the world - travelling widely both investigating and lecturing in forensic dentistry, forensic science and true crime. He has been part of the training program for post graduate forensic specialities and the police. He has written a book and chapters for various textbooks.

He also lectures to lay groups on forensic science and historical true crime and is also a regular speaker on cruise ships.

John was heavily involved with the investigations in the Asian tsunami and more recently the disasters at Grenfell Tower and the 737 disaster in Ethiopia. He received a police commendation for his work on the MH17 air crash which came down in Ukraine, and even appeared on the Crimewatch TV program.

His subject matter can be quite serious so his talks are interspersed with amusing anecdotes. Audiences find them very interesting and, indeed, fascinating.


Send a message to the speaker

If you are interested in this talk and wish to contact the speaker, please complete the following form:

 
Please provide your contact name
 
Please provide the name of your group
 
Your phone number so that the speaker can contact you
 
Your email address so that the speaker can contact you
 
Give details about the event, time of day and location
Prove you are human please.
Use the slider to drag the puzzle so that the top and bottom are aligned , or use an alternate text based challenge by clicking here.
Thirty six, ninety nine, 42, fifty three, eleven or four: the largest is?
 

Site Search

Search across all speakers, topics and tags. Put your search term in the box and press enter or hit search

Use quotes around exact multiple word searches, eg "winston churchill".