Big Ideas Lab

Forensic Science Center (Part 1)

23 min
Jul 1, 202510 months ago
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Summary

This episode explores the Forensic Science Center at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, tracing its founding by Brian Andreessen in 1991 and its evolution into a world-renowned facility. Through case studies including the Unabomber investigation, nuclear smuggling detection, and the Gloria Ramirez medical mystery, the episode demonstrates how advanced analytical chemistry techniques solve complex crimes and save lives.

Insights
  • Forensic science breakthroughs often stem from cross-disciplinary collaboration—combining gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, synthesis chemistry, and nuclear analysis enables solving cases that single-discipline approaches cannot
  • Modern forensic analysis operates at ultra-trace levels (picograms to femtograms), allowing investigators to extract actionable intelligence from evidence invisible to the human eye
  • Rigorous quality control and reproducibility are non-negotiable in forensics; evidence must withstand legal scrutiny and peer challenge, requiring multiple analyses and meticulous documentation
  • International law enforcement demand for forensic expertise has driven expansion from domestic crime-solving to chemical weapons analysis, nuclear material identification, and cross-border investigations
  • Team culture and camaraderie are critical retention factors; scientists are drawn to the FSC by the challenge, collaborative environment, and mission-driven work rather than prestige alone
Trends
Ultra-trace analysis capabilities advancing from micrograms to picogram/femtogram sensitivity, enabling detection of evidence previously undetectableForensic science expanding beyond traditional crime investigation into nuclear nonproliferation, chemical weapons detection, and international securityIncreasing international cooperation in forensic analysis, with law enforcement agencies worldwide outsourcing complex sample analysis to specialized centersIntegration of synthetic chemistry expertise with analytical chemistry to identify novel compounds and precursors in forensic investigationsProficiency testing and annual certification becoming standard practice to maintain credibility and ensure quality control in forensic laboratoriesForensic science gaining mainstream legitimacy and public awareness through media coverage, driving demand for specialized analytical servicesMultidisciplinary sample analysis becoming standard protocol, requiring coordination across nuclear, chemical, and biological expertiseChain-of-custody and documentation rigor becoming increasingly critical as forensic evidence faces legal challenges and cross-examination
Topics
Gas Chromatography and Mass SpectrometryUltra-Trace AnalysisNuclear Material DetectionChemical Weapons AnalysisExplosive Residue IdentificationForensic Quality Control and Proficiency TestingInternational Law Enforcement CooperationDrug and Toxin IdentificationEvidence Chain-of-CustodyAnalytical Chemistry TechniquesNuclear NonproliferationForensic Laboratory OperationsLiquid ChromatographyInfrared SpectroscopySynthetic Chemistry in Forensics
Companies
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Host institution of the Forensic Science Center; founded the FSC in 1991 and operates it as a world-leading forensic ...
Massachusetts General Hospital
Medical institution that contacted the FSC to identify an unknown drug overdose, leading to the discovery of d'arvon ...
MIT
Educational institution where Brian Andreessen studied gas chromatography and mass spectrometry in the 1960s, foundat...
People
Brian Andreessen
Founder and former director of the Forensic Science Center at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; pioneered foren...
Armando Alcariz
International Programs Lead at the FSC; joined at the center's founding with expertise in gas chromatography and mass...
Quotes
"How much can a particle of dust tell you?"
Episode narratorOpening question
"It's not just the threat chemical itself, but all the other forensic information. What's the purity of that compound? Maybe this is a unique chemical that can only be present in a certain type of manufacturing process."
Forensic analystNuclear material analysis discussion
"Forensic is still a people thing and you want to have them enthusiastic and supporting each other and being a team effort because again that's what we were really founded on being that team effort."
FSC team memberTeam culture discussion
"You always have to be on top of it because in the samples that they give us in these proficiency tests they try to make them as realistic as possible because when you think about it people who did this may want to cover it up."
FSC analystQuality control section
"It may not be exactly like television. You may not wear sunglasses inside the laboratory but you would solve crimes, prevent disasters and save lives."
Episode narratorClosing remarks
Full Transcript
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is hiring. If you're passionate about tackling real-world challenges in science, engineering, business, or skilled trades, there's a place for you at the lab. Right now, positions are open for a senior labor relations advocate, operations cybersecurity manager, and a senior database administrator. These are just a few of the more than 100 exciting roles available. At Lawrence Livermore, you'll work on projects that matter from national security to cutting-edge scientific advancements. Join a team that values innovation, collaboration, and professional growth. Explore opportunities at llnl.gov forward slash careers, where your next career move could make history. On a routine morning in 1978, a security guard was making his rounds at a college campus in the Midwest. The halls were quiet, mostly empty. Then he noticed a package. No return address on it, just sitting there. He opened it. Not long after, a phone rings at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Usually it's another scientist. A university may be someone from the US Department of Energy, but today it's law enforcement. Not about a bomb that might go off, but one that already did. Over the course of nearly two decades, bombs like these appeared in mail rooms, airplane cargo holds, campus offices. The bomb on the Yale campus today blew up in the computer science's building. They were crude, but somehow also meticulous. And nobody knew why. The bars I understand there has been no credit taking no motive that's been expressed. Shortly after the mail bomb exploded at Yale, a threatening phone call was made to the VA medical center in West Haven. About mid-morning, we received an anonymous telephone call saying, you are next. And in the absence of a suspect or a motive, investigators turned to the only clues they had left. Bits of exploded bomb residue. Dust reported by law enforcement as a unique type of aluminum powder. Materials barely visible to the human eye, along with traces of another explosive material. And the explosive material was perclery. You mixed the two together and a sealed container like a metal pipe. It can make quite an explosion. This was just one piece of the puzzle that led to the eventual arrest and conviction of the unibomber. And a single case in a library of dozens more that the forensic science center at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory played a key role in solving. Today, we're not chasing a killer. We're chasing a question. How much can a particle of dust tell you? Welcome to the Big Ideas Lab, your exploration inside Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Here untold stories meet boundary pushing pioneers and get unparalleled access inside the gates from national security challenges to computing revolutions. Discover the innovations that are shaping tomorrow today. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is hiring. If you're passionate about tackling real world challenges in science, engineering, business, or skilled trades, there's a place for you at the lab. Right now, positions are open for a senior labor relations advocate, operations cyber security manager, and a senior database administrator. These are just a few of the more than 100 exciting roles available. At Lawrence Livermore, you'll work on projects that matter from national security to cutting edge scientific advancements. Join a team that values innovation, collaboration, and professional growth. Explore opportunities at lll.gov forward slash careers where your next career move could make history. If you've watched television in the last 20 years, chances are you have a basic understanding of forensic science. TV shows like CSI have brought the concepts of fingerprinting, ballistics, and toxicology into the mainstream. But this wasn't always the case. Back in the 1960s, Forensics was a virtually unknown form of investigation. Thanks to Brian Andreessen, the founder and former director of the Forensic Science Center at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, that would soon change. It all goes back to graduate school when I was at MIT. We were working with a new technology back in the 60s called gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. Those are two different analytical chemistry techniques utilized to identify the components in a material or unknown substance. At the most basic level, it's kind of like using a calendar to figure out what vegetables were used in a soup. Except instead of potatoes and carrots, they're identifying different compounds in the material. And chromatography and mass spectrometry can analyze nearly any organic material. When astronauts went to the moon, they brought back moon samples and they were able to bring them to our lab. We analyzed the moon samples for any organic chemicals that were indicative of life, which we didn't find any. But we did find the smell of the o-ring that sublimeed under a vacuum onto the rocks. They brought this discovery to the public, explaining their findings via television broadcast in Boston. I said the technique called mass spectrometry so sensitive if I had a drop of blood, I could tell you all the chemicals in it. The publicity was massive. And it caught the attention of a doctor with a medical mystery on his hands. The physician at Mass General Hospital heard that presentation and then he said, you know, I have a woman who's overdosed on some unknown drug. And he called and he said, could you just take a look at her blood and tell us what it is that day. I got a tube of blood extracted it, analyzed it and it was d'arvon. She'd taken a massive amount of d'arvon. The medication, which was a narcotic pain reliever, could have killed her. But they identified the drug before that happened. So he was able to then give an antidote for the d'arvon and treat her and she was recovered and saved. That single analysis set off a huge chain reaction. Little did I know he went to the American Medical Association and gave a talk on the analysis of a blood sample from a patient. And he said it was done quickly and exactly. And he mentioned this to a international meeting. And within the next week, all of a sudden I started getting calls about forensics from around the world. It fueled Brian's work throughout the next two decades. And so that's launched me into doing forensics for identifying materials that people just didn't know what it was, a drug, a toxin, a poison, environmental sample. And I kept doing that in the medical community. By the early 90s, demand for a forensic analysis was through the roof. I was getting more and more sample requests from around the country from different intelligence as well as law enforcement organizations. And it just seemed reasonable to try to make a center where everything could be done in one area quickly and securely so that we could turn them results over quickly and not have to worry about going to another building or working with other people. So in 1991, Brian spearheaded the formation of the forensic science center or FSC at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. I came to the Lawrence Livermore lab, started doing analysis out there and then said, we need to have a forensic science center at the Livermore labs that have all this great equipment, great people. We can make a real mark in forensics around the world. I was fortunate enough to be able to meet Brian just when he was starting the forensic science center. He goes, hey, would you like to be part of this team to start building this forensic science center? And I said, absolutely. That's Armando Alcariz. He's the International Programs Lead at the FSC. My background is guest-comortography, mass spectrometry similar to what Brian did. But Brian and Armando had to expand beyond just blood and chemical analysis. They had to be ready for anything. Well, in many cases, you really don't know what kind of sample is going to be coming through the door. Sometimes they were nuclear material to look at. Sometimes they were drugs. Sometimes explosive residues. All of these different samples would come into the new facility, the center. We also have synthesis chemists on our teams. We may find something as an analytical chemist. I'll see the component. You know, this looks kind of strange. It looks kind of like an explosive. And so then I'll show that to our synthetic chemist. And he goes, oh, yeah, that's a second precursor to be able to make TNT. So having their knowledge in our team is extremely valuable. This array of specialists enabled the team to expand their work. We were doing all sorts of unique analyses. It was just to help domestic and foreign law enforcement to help EPA, OSHA. They were just helping people. And they liked it and appreciated it. The FSC started getting a reputation for doing great work in a timely manner and then having the people to back up their results. So we just kept growing this. We get more samples and more people knew about it. So the operation expanded. What started as a small squad of scientists quickly developed into a world-renowned crew of forensic experts. We got a call from the Polish police department asking, is pot exactly did you do the LC work? That's liquid chromatography. And so we explained it. Of course, we said, we don't know why what's going on. They said, well, we had some ambulance drivers that were going to critical automobile accidents where a person was right on the edge of not making it. Life-threatening car crashes happen every day. But the number of deaths was increasing at an alarming and abnormal rate. Were these accidents truly more severe than normal? Were the paramedics incompetent? Was it just bad luck? To find the answer, the FSC helped Poland's police department analyze samples taken from some of the deceased by providing them details on how the FSC analyzed for Pavillon in human tissue. What they found was haunting. The evidence led them back to the paramedics. They had an arrangement with one of the mortuaries where they would then get a kickback because they thought, this guy's not going to make it, so we'll do that. Paramedics were intentionally injecting critical patients with a muscle relaxer called Pavillon, the same drug used for euthanasia. In the end, authorities attributed numerous deaths to this scheme. But thanks to liquid chromatography, mass spectometry, the EMTs, doctors, and morticians involved were stopped and apprehended. And after that, the forensic science centers involvement with international cases continued expanding. We were starting to get more and more involved, more and more international affairs, like looking at chemical weapons, developing techniques to analyze chemical weapons, inorganics for looking at nuclear materials. One of these cases took place in 1999, when Bulgarian border guards stopped a suspicious looking vehicle attempting to enter the country from Romania. When authorities searched the car, they found a glass vile filled with an unidentified powder stored inside a lead container. That was actually a multidisciplinary type of sample, so our nuclear folks were able to analyze the actual material and have an idea of what type it was. The substance turned out to be highly enriched uranium, which in large quantities is used to create nuclear weapons. But with something this dangerous, simply identifying the material isn't enough. It's not just the threat chemical itself, but all the other forensic information. What's the purity of that compound that was there? Maybe this is a unique chemical that can only be present in a certain type of manufacturing process. Why is it there? Was the sample reactor grade? Weapons grade? Where did it come from? To answer these questions, the FSC ran more forensic testing on a second substance associated with the sample. A mysterious yellow wax. Talking about how to characterize the sample and in what order you work up the sample is also important, because one technique might destroy it for another technique. There's some instrumentation where we maybe don't have to manipulate that sample very much, so one of the things we did with that sample was to look at it with infrared. Then you take more advanced approach and go, okay, well, let's now dissolve it. Disolving a sample is the first step in gas chromatography mass spectometry. A technique used to identify individual molecules contained within a sample. To run this test, Armando and his team first experimented with a number of solvents, like acetone or methanol, to see what effectively breaks down the sample. After that, it's about heat. It volatileizes all of those organics, and they go into a gas chromatographic column and separate. So now, instead of having a thousand chemicals all in one bunch, you get each one individually. So what secrets did that wax reveal? It turns out that it had a particular inorganic element that most countries don't use anymore. There's also paper in that, and that also pointed to a tree pulp that was in a certain region in Bulgaria. This information gathered from examination of everything associated with the sample was vital to authorities and their attempts to crack down on nuclear smuggling. And that was back in 1999. Forensic techniques have advanced so greatly in the last 25 years that now, a single fingerprint can change the course of an investigation. Looking for a career that challenges and inspires? Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is hiring for a nuclear facility engineer, systems design and testing engineer, and a senior scientific technologist, along with many other roles in science, technology, engineering, and beyond. At the lab, every role contributes to ground breaking projects in national security, advanced computing, and scientific research, all within a collaborative mission-driven environment. Discover open positions at llnl.gov-forward slash careers, where big ideas come to life. When I was early in the career, Trace Analysis was like a few hundred micrograms, which is like a few hundred grains of salt. Nowadays, we look at nanograms, which is a billionth of a gram. That's about the weight of the average single human cell. But the equipment at the FSC can run analysis on even smaller samples, down to picot or femtograms. That's one quadrillionth the weight of a paper clip. It's ultra-trace analysis. This precision is what allows for examination of such small amounts of evidence. You can almost take one fingerprint, take the oil off a fingerprint, and see all the chemicals that the person has in their body. Now you look for the other part of the fingerprint. Who's the culprit? Do they have things in their garage where they're making it? That trace evidence could be enough to narrow in on a suspect. If this was an episode of television, that might be the end of the story. The cops come in, arrest the bad guy, the end. But in real life, the evidence still has to hold up in court. That's a lot of detail that most people don't realize. They just think you take a sample, analyze it, and that's it. But no, you've got to be absolutely sure. Especially if you go to court and you get cross-examined, that's a really important thing to have all the data correct in your mind as well as on paper. It has to be written up, a judge looks at what you've written, and they may even give it to someone else and challenge your findings to make sure that what you put down is correct. It's not enough to only solve a mystery. The solution has to be airtight for a judge in jury. With our current quality control system, we won't generate a report unless we can verify it. So this way there's no doubt this evidence is solid. In sharing that accuracy highlights the difference between television and real life. They seem to come to a conclusion that it case in about 30 minutes minus commercials and it takes us a lot longer to do that kind of activity. It takes sometimes days and days to do these analyses. And most people don't realize that a lot of it is just being very thorough and analyzing samples correctly and doing it not just once, but doing it multiple times to make sure that the samples are just perfectly characterized. When you write it up and report it, it's very accurate. So is the forensic science work at the FSC? Anything like TV? One, we don't have sunglasses on during, and we're in the laboratory. And we don't wear all the fancy clothes either. But Brian Armando and the rest of the crew share one thing in common with their fictional counterparts, the satisfaction of solving a crime that puts away a criminal. And sometimes there's an adrenaline rush that comes from cracking cases that are just plain bizarre. People like the fact that it's a challenge. It's a puzzle. You're trying to solve these unknown cases you're looking for that needle. One such puzzle revolved around what started as a simple hospital visit. A woman named Gloria Ramirez was battling late stage cervical cancer when she checked into the emergency room. Shortly after her arrival, a number of hospital staff began experiencing strange symptoms. Some just had shortness of breath. Others developed muscle spasms. A few even fainted and five required serious intensive care. What was it about this woman? The nurses and doctors treating her said her skin seemed oily and that her breath smelled like garlic. Did she have a virus or a strange alien disease that was infecting others? Was there a curse following her? So we got some of the samples brought it back to the lab and analyzed and saw what was going on. The answer was not science fiction or magic. It was a treatment she had used to lessen the pain of her metastasized cancer. She was taking DMSO, Dimefil Sulfoxide. You rub it on your skin and the DMSO immediately dissolves into the skin but it carries anything that's mixed with it through the skin also then into the bloodstream. She was also taking coating in narcotic pain killer. What happens again when the body sees things like Dimefil Sulfoxide, it immediately wants to detoxify it. It would then add an oxygen to it and make Dimefil Sulfone and then it can oxidize it again and make Dimefil Sulfate which is a very volatile toxic chemical. It can cause all sorts of nausea, eye watering just in general to toxin and it came into the emergency room of the hospital. So it wasn't a case of mass hysteria among the hospital staff like some people thought. It was a simple drug interaction. Thankfully none of the hospital staff died from the exposure. The FSC's dedication and impressive level of analysis in this case is a great example of what makes their team a world leader in forensics but they don't simply rest on their laurels. They maintain their reputation by yearly evaluations and a constant dedication to quality work. We're currently going through testing every year to verify we are qualified to do this and these tests that they provide us are complex. They could be anything from a soil sample to even a piece of metal that has these chemicals on there and we have to identify them all to be able to get an A grade. The folks who prepare these samples they all think of things that they've come across to make things tricky and they'll put them in the tests. You always have to be on top of it because in the samples that they give us in these proficiency tests they try to make them as realistic as possible because when you think about it people who did this may want to cover it up and they're going to put diesel fuel on top of it bleach but there's always a smoking gun. You only have 15 days to analyze a set of six samples and so we're here day and night analyzing these samples to make sure we got the answer right and if you put an answer that's incorrect you lose your designation. That's a lot of pressure but the challenge and the difficulty is exactly what makes it thrilling and when you're working alongside other passionate committed scientists that energy just compounds. Forensic is still a people thing and you want to have them enthusiastic and supporting each other and being a team effort because again that's what we were really founded on being that team effort. It's really that camaraderie that secret sauce that's been keeping the Forensic Science Center going for years now. In the future what I think you'll keep it going is the best equipment and the best people in the world. That's the beauty that you're part of a bigger team and the people who join the Forensic Science Center see this and they go you know what I want to be part of this. I'm hoping that the new generation of scientists come on board that they carry that through and continue to work together well and achieve things. It may not be exactly like television. You may not wear sunglasses inside the laboratory but you would solve crimes, prevent disasters and save lives. The Forensic Science Center is waiting. Will you answer the call? Thank you for tuning in to Big Ideas Lab. If you loved what you heard please let us know by leaving a rating and a review. And if you haven't already don't forget to hit the follow or subscribe button in your podcast app to keep up with our latest episode. Thanks for listening.