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Fitzpatrick Family Chiropractic fitzpatrickfamilychiro.co... | Skin phototype (Fitzpatrick skin type). DermNet NZ dermnetnz.org | Kinesphère_nfbody_Natalie Fitzpatrick centrekinesphere.com |
Colleen Fitzpatrick (b. April 25, 1955, New Orleans, LA) is a forensic genealogist for major military and civilian organizations. Fitzpatrick received her BA in physics (1976) from Rice University, and her MA (1983) and PhD in nuclear physics (1983) from Duke University, and has 25 years experience working in the field of high resolution optical measurement techniques. She is a Fellow of the Society of Photoinstrumentation Engineers (SPIE) optical society. She is the group administrator for the Fitzpatrick DNA study, which she founded in 2000.
[edit] Recent activitiesFitzpatrick has been a key member of the AFDIL team on the identification of the remains found in the wreckage of Northwest Flight 4422 that crashed in Alaska in 1948; the identification was featured worldwide in the print media and on MSNBC. Fitzpatrick was the key member of the team who identified the remains of the Unknown Child of the Titanic. She also worked with Sharon Sergeant on the Misha Defonseca case, in which the author of the international bestseller Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years (known in Europe as Surviving with Wolves) was exposed as a hoax. She also worked with Sergeant on the Herman Rosenblat, Angel at the Fence fraud. The possibility that the story that had been circulating as a chain email letter for several years was implausible was initially aired by Deborah Lipstadt on her Holocaust studies blog. Holocaust expert Kenneth Waltzer,director of Jewish studies at Michigan State University also later joined the informal team of experts that Fitzpatrick had assembled. Initial suspicion had been raised by Professor Deborah Lipstadt on a December 2, 2007, blog post. Fitzpatrick was the only person to locate a family member who could serve as a DNA reference for Fred Noonan, Amelia Earhart's navigator who vanished with her over the Pacific Ocean in 1937. A DNA sample from this relative could be compared against DNA extracted from any remains suspected of being those of Noonan, to solve the mystery of what happened to Earhart and Noonan. She is multi-lingual, with extensive international travel experience, and consults with county medical examiners and investment companies, with an emphasis on international searches. [edit] Case histories
After the medical examiner exhausted all avenues of research, located family members of deceased individual in Germany to determine disposition of remains. Deceased had not had contact with her family in over 50 years.
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