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James I. Ebert, Ph.D., is a Certified Photogrammetrist of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (No. 534R); Photogrammetrist, Medicolegal Investigation Unit, New York State Police; Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, Engineering Division; and serves as a forensic photogrammetric consultant for the US Army's Central Identification Laboratories. He has more than 25 year's experience in photointerpretation, Photogrammetry, and mapping techniques. Dr. Ebert has served as a photogrammetric consultant for the US Army Corps of Engineers, the National Park Service, the Department of Justice, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and many Indian tribes. Furthermore, Dr. Ebert is a court-qualified expert consultant in the fields of
He has an extensive background in preparing attorneys and their experts with the technical knowledge necessary to interpret and testify concerning photographic and mapped evidence. Between 1977 and the present, he has worked on more than 500 cases of bite marks, injury patterns, footprints, fingerprints, tires prints, tire defects, product liability photo analysis, arson evidence, bank/convenience store (with camera and ATM film), historical land claims and other litigation-related aerial terrestrial photographs, and other evidential photographs. He has worked on cases from all parts of the United States and Canada, including work on photographic evidence stemming from the New Mexico State Prison riots, the Theodore Bundy case in Florida, the Robert Chambers case in New York City, and the Bob Crane homicide case in Arizona. Dr. Ebert has over 130 scholarly publications including the chapter "Archaeology, Anthropology, and Cultural Resources" in the 2nd edition of the American Society of Photogrammetry's Manual of Remote Sensing, the chapter "Anthropological, Archaeological, and Cultural Resource Applications" in the 2nd edition of the Handbook of Aerial Photographic Interpretation, and the book Distributional Archaeology. A full resume is available upon request. |
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