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Murder she solved

We’re all gripped by CSI and Silent Witness, but what is it really like to be a forensic scientist working on the worst imaginable crimes? One of the profession’s leading lights, Professor Angela Gallop, explains…

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Inside the world of a forensic scientist

“I am fortunate to be doing a job I feel passionate­ly about. I get up every day and feel excited”

As a young girl growing up in Oxford, Angela Gallop spent her time poring over crime reports in the Sunday papers her father brought home. Today she is Professor Angela Gallop, CBE

– a top forensic scientist, responsibl­e for helping to solve a slew of headlinegr­abbing murders, including Stephen Lawrence and Rachel Nickell. She’s called in to work on cold cases worldwide and sits on boards that advise foreign countries how to tackle unsolved crimes. Despite making her mark in what was a hugely maledomina­ted line of work, few people have ever heard of her.

That’s about to change as her new book, When the Dogs Don’t Bark, reveals the fascinatin­g journey she made to becoming one of the first female forensic scientists.

Professor Gallop fell into a career in forensic science by chance. After studying Botany at the University of Sheffield, she returned to Oxford to study a DPhil in Biochemist­ry, specialisi­ng in a project examining sea slugs on the Isle of Wight.

“I realised I wanted a more immediate audience for my efforts, and one day a friend of mine showed me an interestin­g advert in the paper for the Forensic Science Service – it was a job in Harrogate.”

Angela joined in 1974 aged 24, at a time when murder investigat­ions were not considered suitable for young women. “When I first started out, my boss kept on making allusions to me going home and doing the washing-up. He didn’t think forensic science was a job women should be doing. He soon changed his mind though,” she says, with a steely laugh.

Along the way, she married, divorced, married again and had a son who is not, she says, going to follow her into forensic science.

From an unlikely location, a converted barn near Abingdon in Oxfordshir­e, Angela Gallop now runs Axiom Internatio­nal – global specialist­s in integratin­g forensic science, police, criminal justice and national security services. It’s a tightly run outfit, bustling with a range of experts who are drafted in and out, depending on whether the job is examining cold cases or helping the criminal justice system.

“People come to us from around the world for help with their forensic services,” Angela says. She has recently worked in Somaliland and Kosovo. She’s keen to point out that forensic science isn’t a one-person job. “We can’t do anything alone,” she insists. “Solving crime scenes takes the work and expertise of many people, not just me.”

Angela has worked on just about every high-profile case you can think of – Damilola Taylor, the Cardiff

Three and the Coastal Path murders, among others. One of her notable successes in private practice was proving that Italian banker Roberto Calvi, famously found hanging beneath Blackfriar­s Bridge in London in 1982, had been murdered and hadn’t, as thought, taken his own life.

Gallop made a reconstruc­tion

– the scaffoldin­g that Calvi was hanged from was assembled again, and a man of Calvi’s height and weight climbed along it. Pressure from such weight would have left rust on Calvi’s shoes, but forensic research found no rust stuck to his footwear.

Gallop says her painstakin­g work on that case brought home the power of forensic science “to sort things out for people”. She explains: “It was his family who commission­ed the work because they couldn’t believe he would have committed suicide.”

But her very first notable case was when she was called to the murder of an 18-year-old woman in Huddersfie­ld on a bitterly cold night in February 1978.

“I hadn’t expected to be called out so I was wearing oversized clothes that belonged to my boss, walking through a muddy area with massive boots until we came to the murder >>

“I owe it to those people who have been killed to do the best job I can”

scene – the victim was a young woman, obviously beautiful and it was pretty horrific.

“I was worried that I’d faint or throw up but I had to be profession­al. I owe it to everyone else who works on a case, and to those people who have been killed, to do the best job I can.”

The girl turned out to be Helen Rytka, who had been killed by

Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper. “Although it was a horrible scene, Helen looked very serene,” she says. “In fact, all dead bodies look serene.”

The intervenin­g years and what she has seen have left their mark on her view of humanity. When asked if she is ever surprised at the lengths people go to in order to commit a crime, she says simply, “I don’t think anything surprises me now.”

Her book is a fascinatin­g read and inevitably grisly in parts. In it she details the hours spent analysing tiny specks of dried blood on an infinitesi­mal amount of cloth, which is how she nailed the Stephen Lawrence killers years after the murder had been committed. And she describes re-examining the swabs from Rachel Nickell’s body, which revealed previously missed DNA belonging to Robert Napper. He pleaded guilty to manslaught­er on the grounds of diminished responsibi­lity.

Yet despite the grim nature of her job, Angela Gallop laughs a lot. “I do find lots of things funny,” she says, “and I’m an optimist. I am really fortunate to be doing a job I feel absolutely passionate about. I think that is so important. I get up every day and feel excited. I don’t think you can do this job if you take it home with you. I know I see things that other people might find horrific, but I don’t do this job alone,” she explains.

“Everyone expects the world of forensic science to be something like a television drama, but it isn’t like that really. It’s very, very laborious and rather boring if you were to watch us work. But then you’ll find that little shred, that tiny little bit of something and…” Her face lights up. “That’s when I know I’m onto something. When I find that out – well, it’s that light-bulb moment and it feels like the most exciting thing to ever have happened. That’s why I do it.” When the Dogs Don’t Bark by Professor Angela Gallop, (Hodder), is out now in hardback, £20. w&h

 ??  ?? She also helped solve the case of Rachel Nickell’s death Angela, top left, and in the early days of her career Angela worked on the Stephen Lawrence murder case
She also helped solve the case of Rachel Nickell’s death Angela, top left, and in the early days of her career Angela worked on the Stephen Lawrence murder case
 ??  ?? The bus stop where Stephen Lawrence was murdered Some of Peter Sutcliffe’s 13 murder victims
The bus stop where Stephen Lawrence was murdered Some of Peter Sutcliffe’s 13 murder victims
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