Vol. I — No. 001The Archive Edition · Est. 2026Price: One Unexamined Assumption
✦ The Journal of Investigative Literacy ✦

The Evidence Review

✦ For Those Who Look Closer ✦
Scene No. 001
Status: Unresolved

"The scene speaks before the first witness opens their mouth — but only to those who know the language."

— Det. R. Harmon, Ret.

Lead Investigation

What the Scene Tells You Before Anyone Speaks

A structured course in the forensic arts — for civilians who suspect the answer was always in the evidence.

Every crime scene is a text. The broken glass tells you which direction the force came from. The position of a body suggests whether it moved after death. The absence of blood in a room where violence occurred is itself a clue — a redaction that demands explanation.

For decades, this language belonged exclusively to law enforcement. Investigators trained for years to read it. Forensic specialists spent careers decoding its grammar. The rest of us watched from behind yellow tape, receiving translated summaries and hoping they were accurate.

Casefile changes that. Built by retired homicide investigators and forensic consultants, this course teaches the actual methodology — not dramatized television procedure, not podcast speculation, but the structured analytical framework detectives use when they walk into an unknown scene.

You will learn to read blood spatter geometry. You will learn to detect inconsistencies between physical evidence and witness testimony. You will learn to reconstruct timelines from fragments, identify staging, and understand why certain cases that appear solved remain, in the eyes of those who know the method, still open.

Course Index
A1Scene Reading Fundamentals04
A2Blood Spatter Geometry12
A3Witness Statement Analysis21
B1Timeline Reconstruction34
B2Cold Case: The Practice Files48
Classified
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"Case File #001: A Practice Scene" — 12 pages of actual methodology.

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Current Enrollment
Active Students2,847
Cases Solved14,203
Avg. Completion89%
Scroll to begin the investigation
01
EXHIBIT A — SUBJECT DEMONSTRATES PATTERN RECOGNITION
01
The Premise

You already notice what others miss.

You rewound that podcast episode three times. Not because you didn't hear it — because something didn't line up. The timeline. The witness's phrasing. The detail that appeared in the police report but vanished from the trial transcript.

That instinct isn't morbid curiosity. It's the beginning of analytical thinking. You were doing investigative reasoning before anyone told you what to call it.

What you lack isn't intuition. It's framework.

Continue →The Method
02
EXHIBIT B — METHODOLOGY DOCUMENTATION
02
The Method

Crime analysis is a language with grammar.

Blood spatter doesn't lie — but it requires translation. A circular stain means the source was stationary. An elongated ellipse tells you angle and direction of travel. Satellite drops indicate secondary transfer. Cast-off patterns reveal the number of blows.

This isn't speculation. It's physics applied to investigation. The same geometric principles that govern projectile motion govern the arc of a droplet. The same logic that underlies any scientific inquiry underlies forensic analysis.

The method is learnable. We built the curriculum.

Continue →The Case
03
EXHIBIT C — CASE FILE FRAGMENT · SCENE RECONSTRUCTION
03
The Case

Here is a scene. What do you see?

A body is found in a second-floor study at 6:40 AM by a housekeeper. The window is broken from the inside. A glass of scotch sits on the desk — half full, no fingerprints. The victim's shoes show no soil from the garden path visible through the window.

The official ruling: accidental fall. Three details in this description contradict that conclusion. One of them, if noticed, changes everything about the case.

Scroll to the next panel. Try to name all three.

Continue →The Stakes
04
EXHIBIT D — CIVIC ARGUMENT · COURSE RATIONALE
04
The Stakes

Investigative literacy is civic literacy.

Wrongful convictions don't happen in a vacuum. They happen when juries can't evaluate forensic evidence. When communities can't interrogate official narratives. When the language of investigation belongs only to those with institutional authority.

Casefile exists because that asymmetry has consequences. Understanding how crime analysis works — really works — makes you a better juror, a more critical consumer of true crime media, and someone who can recognize when a case deserves another look.

This isn't entertainment. This is preparation.

Practice Exercise · Case File #001

Here is a scene. Three details contradict the official ruling.

Below are four evidence fragments from Case File #001. Click each to examine it. Identify which three contain contradictions to the "accidental fall" conclusion — and what each contradiction implies.

Unresolved
Scene Summary · Case #001 · Classified

A 58-year-old retired accountant is found dead in his second-floor study at 6:40 AM. The window is broken. A half-full glass of scotch sits on his desk. No fingerprints on the glass. Garden visible through the broken window. Official ruling: accidental fall. Case closed within 72 hours.

0 of 3 contradictions identified
Personnel File · Verified Credentials

Instructors cleared for
field-level instruction.

Not journalists. Not podcasters. Retired investigators and forensic scientists who worked the cases — and now teach the method.

Personnel FileCLEARED FOR INSTRUCTION
Portrait of Det. Raymond Harmon (Ret.), Homicide Division · 24 Years Service

Det. Raymond Harmon (Ret.)

Homicide Division · 24 Years Service

Chicago PD — Major Crimes Unit

Clearance Rate
94%
Cases / Testimony
312
Specialization

Crime Scene Reconstruction

Led investigation on the Lakeview Cold Case Review (2019) — 3 cases reopened.

Service Period1998–2022
Personnel FileCLEARED FOR INSTRUCTION
Portrait of Dr. Sylvia Okonkwo, Ph.D., Forensic Pathology · 18 Years Academic

Dr. Sylvia Okonkwo, Ph.D.

Forensic Pathology · 18 Years Academic

Northwestern University — Forensic Sciences

Clearance Rate
Cases / Testimony
89 Expert Testimonies
Specialization

Blood Pattern Analysis · Wound Interpretation

Published "Geometry of Violence" (2021) — used in 14 state forensics curricula.

Service Period2006–Present
Personnel FileCLEARED FOR INSTRUCTION
Portrait of Marcus Delacroix, Forensic Investigator · 15 Years Field

Marcus Delacroix

Forensic Investigator · 15 Years Field

FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit — Retired

Clearance Rate
88%
Cases / Testimony
204
Specialization

Witness Statement Analysis · Deception Detection

Developed the TRACE interview protocol now used in 7 federal field offices.

Service Period2007–2022
Student Notes · Margin Annotations

What students write in the margins.

The blood spatter module — show this to everyone
"I've listened to 400+ true crime episodes. This is the first time I've understood *why* the physical evidence matters more than the confession. Module 3 alone changed how I watch every documentary."
Priya Nair
Podcast producer · Austin, TX
Verified
★ TRACE protocol section is excellent
"I taught crime scene investigation for 22 years. I was skeptical. But the way they've structured the analytical framework — it's exactly how I'd teach it if I had to start over. Rigorous and accessible."
Sgt. Donna Marchetti (Ret.)
Former CSI Unit, Philadelphia PD
Verified
Reference for Ch. 14 rewrite
"Writing my third crime novel. The procedural accuracy I've gotten from this course has already saved me from three plot holes my editor would have caught. The timeline reconstruction module is invaluable."
James Oduya
Crime fiction author · London, UK
Verified
The staging indicators — read twice
"I always knew something was wrong with the official account of my uncle's case. This course gave me the framework to articulate exactly what. I'm not saying I solved it — but I know what questions to ask now."
Teresa Albright
Paralegal · Denver, CO
Verified
2,847 Active Students14,203 Cases Analyzed89% Completion RateTaught by Retired InvestigatorsEvidence-First MethodologyNo Speculation. No Dramatization.
2,847 Active Students14,203 Cases Analyzed89% Completion RateTaught by Retired InvestigatorsEvidence-First MethodologyNo Speculation. No Dramatization.
Enrollment · Primary Path

You already belong in this room.

The methodology is learnable. The cases are waiting. One question stands between you and your first file.

CF
Confidential · Casefile Enrollment

"Open Your First Case"

Break the seal to begin
Secondary Path · Free Access

Not ready to commit? Start with a practice scene.

Case File #001 is a 12-page PDF walk-through of an actual practice scene — the same exercise used in Module 1. No enrollment required.

PDF
Case File #001: A Practice Scene
12 pages · Methodology walk-through · Module 1 equivalent
Free
Contents:
Scene overview + photography analysis
Evidence fragment inventory
Three methodology exercises
Answer key with reasoning
2,847
Active Students
94%
Would Recommend
12 mo
Full Access