Monthly Archives: May 2014

DNA, Cell Phone Led Hartford Police To Murder Suspect

Posted: May 13, 2014 at 1:47 am

HARTFORD DNA evidence recovered from the body of a murder victim and cell phone records helped Hartford detectives track down the man they say is responsible for the murder of Sonia Rivera, whose body was found a year and a half ago in a trash-strewn lot behind 216 Washington St.

Rivera, 48, was found suffering from severe head trauma about 7:30 p.m. Sept. 27, 2012. Her pants had been pulled down. A brick recovered nearby is believed to be the murder weapon.

Staff at Hartford Hospital used a rape kit to recover evidence from Rivera's body and turned it over to Hartford police. It was sent to the state crime lab and entered into a database. Less than two months later there was a match: Denzil Nurse, a 42-year-old man from Hartford, according to the warrant for his arrest.

Detectives interviewed Nurse and he allowed them to take a mouth swab so that the DNA match could be double-checked, according to the warrant. They also interviewed Nurse, who admitted to having been in the area at the time of the crime, and admitted he knew Rivera, but denied having sexual contact with her.

Police obtained a search warrant for Nurse's cell phone records and determined he was near Washington Street at the time of the crime and that his phone was silent when police think the crime occurred.

When detectives went to talk to Nurse again, they told him they'd found his DNA in Rivera's body. He again insisted he was innocent of killing her, but said she'd performed a sex act on him.

Police, in the warrant, said his explanations of how the DNA got into Rivera's body did not make sense.

He remains jailed in lieu of $2 million bail on a charge of murder. He is due back in court May 29.

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Xie planned bizarre DNA alibi: court

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Lian Bin "Robert" Xie and his wife Kathy Lin in a file picture. Photo: Danielle Smith

The man accused of murdering five members of the Lin family allegedly had "numerous" conversations about the crime with a fellow prison inmate who gained his trust, telling him where he bought the hammer and rope used in the attack and where they were hidden, a court has heard.

The accused murderer and his fellow inmate allegedly referred to the scheme as Plan B a bold strategy that was only to be pursued if "things go really bad".

But the NSW Supreme Court heard on Monday that one of the men was playing a very different game.

Lian Bin Robert Xie is on trial for the murder of Min "Norman" Lin, 45; Mr Lins wife, Yun "Lily" Li Lin, 44; their sons Henry, 12, and Terry, 9; and Ms Lin's sister, Yun Bin "Irene" Yin, 39, in Boundary Road, Epping, in the early hours of July 18, 2009.

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The court heard on Monday that, after being arrested, the 50-year-old was caught in a carefully planned police sting designed to flush out vital information about his involvement in the crime.

Crown prosecutor Mark Tedeschi, QC, told the jury that a prisoninmate, known as "Witness A",would give evidence about 21 separate conversations he had with Mr Xie over the course of 18 months they spent in neighbouring cells inLongBayjail from mid-2011.

These allegedly included discussions about two plots - both known as 'Plan B' - by which Mr Xie would allegedlyframe dead people for the murdersby planting theirDNAat the crime scene or on amurder weapon.

The court heard that Witness A told the accused killer that he had a contact inside a funeral parlour called "Harry" who could find a body whoseDNAcould be put on the murder weapon, the location of which would then be leaked to police.

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Types of Viral Genome Virology Course Virus Lecture #03 – Video

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Types of Viral Genome Virology Course Virus Lecture #03
The Types of Viral Genome, Genomes and genetics. This is what you will learn in this virology lesson. Also have a look at the other parts of the virology course, and thanks for watching. This...

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Types of Viral Genome Virology Course Virus Lecture #03 - Video

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Unusual Infectious Agents Virology Course Virus Lecture #23 – Video

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Unusual Infectious Agents Virology Course Virus Lecture #23
Today learn more about the minimal genome size for an infectious agent. Could an infectious agent have no genome? We consider these questions with a discussion of viroids, which encode no proteins,...

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Unusual Infectious Agents Virology Course Virus Lecture #23 - Video

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Tolerance Lessons From A Dead Sea Fungus

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May 12, 2014

DOE/Joint Genome Institute

Despite its name, the Dead Sea does support life, and not just in the sense of helping visitors float in its waters. Algae, bacteria, and fungi make up the limited number of species that can tolerate the extremely salty environment at the lowest point on Earth.

Some organisms thrive in salty environments by lying dormant when salt concentrations are very high. Other organisms need salt to grow. To learn which survival strategy the filamentous fungus Eurotium rubrum uses, a team of researchers led by Eviatar Nevo from the University of Haifa in Israel, Igor Grigoriev of the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI), and Gerhard Rambold, University of Bayreuth, Germany and their colleagues studied its genome. They described their findings in the May 9, 2014 issue of Nature Communications.

Understanding the long-term adaptation of cells and organisms to high salinity is of great importance in a world with increasing desertification and salinity, the team wrote. The observed functional and structural adaptations provide new insight into the mechanisms that help organisms to survive under such extreme environmental conditions, but also point to new targets like the biotechnological improvement of salt tolerance in crops. In principle this discovery could revolutionize saline agriculture worldwide by laying the groundwork of understanding necessary to appropriately using salt resistance genes and gene networks in crops to enable them to grow in desert and saline environments.

The DOE JGI team first sequenced, assembled and annotated the 26.2-million base genome of E. rubrum. The team found that the genome contained just over 10,000 predicted genes. They also found that the E. rubrum proteins had higher aspartic and glutamic acid amino acid levels than expected. When the team compared E. rubrums gene families against those in two other halophilic species (Wallemia ichthyophaga and Hortaea werneckii), they found that high acidic residues were common in all three species, a general trait all salt-tolerant microbes share.

To learn more about the fungus tolerance for salt, Tami Kis Papo at the University of Haifa grew samples in liquid and solid media at salinities from zero up to 90 percent of Dead Sea water. The researchers found that it had viable spores when grown in 70 percent diluted Dead Sea water, conditions equivalent to an algal bloom in the Dead Sea 20 years ago. A study conducted by Alfons R. Weig at the University of Bayreuth of E. rubrums transcriptome, that small fraction of the genome that encodes the RNA molecules in order to carry out instructions to build and maintain cells, showed that in high salinity conditions, the fungal cells need to keep cell membrane transport under tight control. This clearly indicates that the fungus tries to cope actively with its extreme environment and does not simply fall into dormancy, the team noted, as might be expected by the greatly reduced growth rates.

In addition to contributing to a better understanding of salt tolerance mechanisms for agriculture, this work may also have applicability to the DOEs interests in developing new strategies to improve biofuels production. For instance, the DOE JGI and its partners are sourcing microbial and fungal enzymes for more effective biomass pretreatment with ionic liquids, environmentally benign organic salts often used as green chemistry substitutes for volatile organic solvents.

Source: DOE/Joint Genome Institute

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The Future Is Bright For Psoriasis Treatment And Eczema Treatment Methods – Video

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The Future Is Bright For Psoriasis Treatment And Eczema Treatment Methods
http://www.VanishEczema.net If you have eczema, you know how itchy and painful it is. But simple lifestyle changes can go a long way toward treating the cond...

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Stop Eczema – Find Your Trigger Factor With Trial and Error – Video

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Stop Eczema - Find Your Trigger Factor With Trial and Error
http://www.VanishEczema.net If you have eczema, you know how itchy and painful it is. But simple lifestyle changes can go a long way toward treating the cond...

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Eczema Nutrition – Your Weapon of Choice in the Fight Against Eczema – Video

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Eczema Nutrition - Your Weapon of Choice in the Fight Against Eczema
http://www.VanishEczema.net If you have eczema, you know how itchy and painful it is. But simple lifestyle changes can go a long way toward treating the cond...

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What Causes Eczema? – A Few Tips to Know – Video

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What Causes Eczema? - A Few Tips to Know
http://www.VanishEczema.net If you have eczema, you know how itchy and painful it is. But simple lifestyle changes can go a long way toward treating the condition. Try these 10 tips. http://www.Van...

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Cures For Baby Eczema – Do They Actually Exist? What All Parents Should Know – Video

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Cures For Baby Eczema - Do They Actually Exist? What All Parents Should Know
http://www.VanishEczema.net If you have eczema, you know how itchy and painful it is. But simple lifestyle changes can go a long way toward treating the condition. Try these 10 tips. http://www.Van...

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