15PBJA22GG03623COVE
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
This grant request is to improve the coroner services provided by the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner in Clark County, NV. By implementation and utilization of new technologies and processes to preserve case files, evidence for identified and unidentified persons. This will enable the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner to ensure it adheres to evidence-based methodologies and relevant best practices; as well as compliance with responsibilities created by federal, state and county statute and policy.
The funding will improve quality, timeliness, recall capabilities and ensuring permanence of records and documents for the future in Clark County Office of the Coroner Medical Examiner.
Technological advances are developed with stunning regularity; resulting in familial and offender DNA collected/stored and more readily available for comparison. From these comparisons, cold cases can be solved decades later because of new technologies and preserved evidence.
Working with community and law enforcement partners, perpetrators will be identified because of newly collected DNA and relationships with direct-to-consumer genetic genealogy services such as 23 and Me or subsequent to a recent arrest then compared to old evidence. This can and has led to successful prosecutions for offenders who were not previously held accountable for their actions. Even more importantly, families receive closure because unidentified remains become identified. In order for this to occur, it is imperative to have the ability to preserve and recall information and evidence from old case files.
Currently, the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner possesses approximately 300 cases of unidentified remains, the oldest of these cases dates to 1969. Additionally, the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner retains approximately 2500 documents and records that have yet to be transferred to a permanent digital format with reproducible capabilities. The project proposes to review and assess aged and cold case files. Create high resolution copies of documents to preserve readability, scan documents and photos and upload to electronic case management system as considered best practice in a landscape study of electronic case management systems for medical examiners and coroners February 2022, National Institute of Justice’s Forensic Technology Center of Excellence (FTCOE).
The funding will improve quality, timeliness, recall capabilities and ensuring permanence of records and documents for the future in Clark County Office of the Coroner Medical Examiner.
Technological advances are developed with stunning regularity; resulting in familial and offender DNA collected/stored and more readily available for comparison. From these comparisons, cold cases can be solved decades later because of new technologies and preserved evidence.
Working with community and law enforcement partners, perpetrators will be identified because of newly collected DNA and relationships with direct-to-consumer genetic genealogy services such as 23 and Me or subsequent to a recent arrest then compared to old evidence. This can and has led to successful prosecutions for offenders who were not previously held accountable for their actions. Even more importantly, families receive closure because unidentified remains become identified. In order for this to occur, it is imperative to have the ability to preserve and recall information and evidence from old case files.
Currently, the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner possesses approximately 300 cases of unidentified remains, the oldest of these cases dates to 1969. Additionally, the Clark County Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner retains approximately 2500 documents and records that have yet to be transferred to a permanent digital format with reproducible capabilities. The project proposes to review and assess aged and cold case files. Create high resolution copies of documents to preserve readability, scan documents and photos and upload to electronic case management system as considered best practice in a landscape study of electronic case management systems for medical examiners and coroners February 2022, National Institute of Justice’s Forensic Technology Center of Excellence (FTCOE).
Awardee
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Las Vegas,
Nevada
89106-4102
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Clark County Coroner was awarded
Project Grant 15PBJA22GG03623COVE
worth $247,992
from the Bureau of Justice Assistance in October 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Las Vegas Nevada United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years and
was awarded through assistance program 16.742 Paul Coverdell Forensic Sciences Improvement Grant Program.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity BJA FY 22 Paul Coverdell Forensic Science Improvement Grants Program - Competitive.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 11/17/22
Period of Performance
10/1/22
Start Date
9/30/25
End Date
Funding Split
$248.0K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$248.0K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
15PBJA22GG03623COVE
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI NOT AVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
County Government
Awarding Office
15PBJA OJP BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE
Funding Office
15PBJA OJP BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE
Awardee UEI
JTQBLLAE9J35
Awardee CAGE
5A1D2
Performance District
01
Senators
Catherine Cortez Masto
Jacky Rosen
Jacky Rosen
Representative
Dina Titus
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, Justice (015-0404) | Criminal justice assistance | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $247,992 | 100% |
Modified: 11/17/22