Craig C. Moore, CBPA
Specialties
Bloodstain Pattern Analysis TFT Contract Courses Taught Basic Bloodstain Pattern Recognition |
About Craig C. Moore
Craig Moore is a 30 year police veteran from Ontario Canada with 16 years experience in the Forensic Services Unit of the Niagara Regional Police Service, Ontario Canada, where he retired in 2015.
He has studied Bloodstain Pattern Analysis (BPA) at a serious level since 1997 and continues to do so today. Early on in his BPA career he conceptualized and designed a 3D model of a blood drop in flight and its subsequent impact angle stain. This model received design patents in both Canada and the United States.
He recently finished his second DOJ grant-funded research project emanating from the Mechanical Engineering Dept., Iowa State University, Ames Campus. He has been published over ten times and given in excess of 175 presentations on the topic.
Since 2000 he has been certified as an IAI Bloodstain Pattern Examiner and is also a IAI Distinguished Member. He has sat for 12 years on either the IAI’s BPA Certification or BPA Educational Sub-Committee Boards, ending in 2014. In 2016 he once again was asked and now sits on the IAI educational sub-committee for BPA. His Basic or entry level BPA course has been reviewed and is approved by both the IAI and the IABPA. The ABMDI recognizes his basic BPA course for continuing education hours.
In 2006, he conducted his first one week course in BPA. To date he has been involved in over 30 such courses. He has a baccalaureate in Criminal Justice, Hilbert College, Hamburg, New York, where, once earned, he taught numerous courses as an Adjunct Instructor (2005-2011). Currently, he is POST certified as a (civilian) Police Instructor in Connecticut. His Basic and Intermediate BPA courses are also POST certified in Nevada. In July 2015, he instructed his first Advanced level BPA course at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department’s Crime Scene Unit with co-instructor Dr. D. Attinger of Iowa State University, Ames Campus.
He has testified and been accepted as an expert in Bloodstain Pattern Analysis at the General Division and Superior Court of Justice jurisdictional levels in Ontario and also the County Court level in New York State. He was also called before a Board of Inquiry with the Canadian Armed Forces to offer expert opinion on a bloodstain related shooting case.
Craig was an Adjunct Professor at Syracuse University where he taught his most recent course in May 2017. Craig considers himself first and foremost as an educator in the field of Bloodstain Pattern Analysis.
Craig Moore is a 30 year police veteran from Ontario Canada with 16 years experience in the Forensic Services Unit of the Niagara Regional Police Service, Ontario Canada, where he retired in 2015.
He has studied Bloodstain Pattern Analysis (BPA) at a serious level since 1997 and continues to do so today. Early on in his BPA career he conceptualized and designed a 3D model of a blood drop in flight and its subsequent impact angle stain. This model received design patents in both Canada and the United States.
He recently finished his second DOJ grant-funded research project emanating from the Mechanical Engineering Dept., Iowa State University, Ames Campus. He has been published over ten times and given in excess of 175 presentations on the topic.
Since 2000 he has been certified as an IAI Bloodstain Pattern Examiner and is also a IAI Distinguished Member. He has sat for 12 years on either the IAI’s BPA Certification or BPA Educational Sub-Committee Boards, ending in 2014. In 2016 he once again was asked and now sits on the IAI educational sub-committee for BPA. His Basic or entry level BPA course has been reviewed and is approved by both the IAI and the IABPA. The ABMDI recognizes his basic BPA course for continuing education hours.
In 2006, he conducted his first one week course in BPA. To date he has been involved in over 30 such courses. He has a baccalaureate in Criminal Justice, Hilbert College, Hamburg, New York, where, once earned, he taught numerous courses as an Adjunct Instructor (2005-2011). Currently, he is POST certified as a (civilian) Police Instructor in Connecticut. His Basic and Intermediate BPA courses are also POST certified in Nevada. In July 2015, he instructed his first Advanced level BPA course at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department’s Crime Scene Unit with co-instructor Dr. D. Attinger of Iowa State University, Ames Campus.
He has testified and been accepted as an expert in Bloodstain Pattern Analysis at the General Division and Superior Court of Justice jurisdictional levels in Ontario and also the County Court level in New York State. He was also called before a Board of Inquiry with the Canadian Armed Forces to offer expert opinion on a bloodstain related shooting case.
Craig was an Adjunct Professor at Syracuse University where he taught his most recent course in May 2017. Craig considers himself first and foremost as an educator in the field of Bloodstain Pattern Analysis.