Hi,
I forwarded this to a friend and he is asking where to learn more about this
trial and Eastman's query site. I don't know anything about this Eastman
thing, but would appreciate if someone could email me particulars about
Eastman and also if this trial made any of the newspapers.
Thanks much,
Sue Silver, California
----- Original Message -----
From: "Debra Rookard" <d_rookard(a)adelphia.net>
To: <INPCRP-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 5:11 PM
Subject: [INPCRP] Scalpelli's Trial
This just arrived in Dick Eastman's Weekly Online Newsletter. The
second
article included here preceded it.
Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter
Plus Edition
A Weekly Summary of Events and Topics of Interest to Online Genealogists
Vol. 9 No. 13 - March 29, 2004
This newsletter relies solely upon "word of mouse" advertising. If you
enjoy
reading these articles, please tell others to go to
http://www.eogn.com.
**************
- Grave Markers Moved for Septic System
A Nashville, Indiana, man faces trial on charges that he moved grave
markers
at a historic cemetery to make room for a septic system for his home.
Daniel
B. Scalpelli, 48, was charged in December 2001 with disturbing
Fleetwood
Cemetery as he worked on the septic system for his new home near
Morgantown.
Scalpelli faces a felony charge of disturbing a cemetery without a permit
and misdemeanor charges of cemetery mischief and moving a grave memorial
without a recording. His bench trial, before Brown Circuit Judge Judith
Stewart, is scheduled to begin this week.
What Do You Think? Comments and discussion are available on this
newsletter's Discussion Board at:
http://www.eogn.com/discussionboard
**************
Modern Detective Finds Unmarked Graves
Elizabeth Wilson-Agin is a geophysicist who owns her own consulting
business
specializing in finding unmarked graves. "I'm the only one
in the United
States who does what I do that I know of," Wilson-Agin said.
"Surprisingly,
I get a lot of people that call me and want my help finding unmarked
graves."
The Kansas resident uses the latest technology to examine the soil.
Ground-penetrating radar has been used successfully in some locations.
While
Wilson-Agin has that technology available, she says that the radar
does
not
work well in the predominantly clay soil of Kansas. Her primary tool
is an
electro-magnetic conductivity meter, supplemented by a number of other
high-tech devices.
With an undergraduate degree from Kansas University in archaeology and a
master's in earth sciences/ geophysics from Emporia State, Wilson-Agin
does
not advertise at all. Almost all her clients find her via
word-of-mouth
referrals. "I've been hired by a funeral company, a cemetery board, and
the
county hired me at one location," she said. "There was the
potential for
land development near where they thought unmarked graves might exist, so
they needed to know for sure before they could proceed.
You can read more in an article by Tom Stoppel, published in the Hillsboro
Free Press. You can read that at
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=11166911&BRD=1163&PAG=4....
Wilson-Agin can be reached by e-mail at infinitygeo(a)yahoo.com
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