From Deseret News archives:
No clue is too small for lab
Newly created Sorenson Forensics is solving crimes
But a closer look reveals a darker secret saliva, semen, a blood stain.
At Sorenson Forensics, a team of nine people is now dedicating its efforts to solving society's worst crimes. The division was created in June after Salt Lake-based Myriad Genetics decided to discontinue its forensic services division.
Bill Hockett, a spokesman for Myriad, said the forensic team at Myriad included about 50 people and was initially started because of extra capacity at the company. However, as Myriad's genetic testing business boomed, few resources were left for forensics.
"We really don't have the capacity we once did," Hockett said. "We've decided that our energy is better spent on our core technology, developing and marketing cancer genetic tests."
Fortunately for Tim Kupferschmid, the former forensic technical director at Myriad, Utah billionaire James LeVoy Sorenson was interested in forensics.
Now, with the addition of Sorenson Forensics, the team is busy solving murders, rapes and burglaries.
The team operates at the Sorenson Cos. Salt Lake headquarters, 2511 S. West Temple, taking on cases from across the state, the nation and even from overseas.
"Every case is high priority to us, because in every case there is a victim behind it," said Kupferschmid, who now acts as forensic laboratory director at Sorenson Forensics. "We work every case the same, whether the national news is there or if it's just a house burglary."
The lab recently received accreditation from Forensic Quality Services International, allowing it to begin processing cases.
Jennifer Kibler, who graduated from Stanford University in 2004, was one of the eight people Kupferschmid decided to keep when the switch to Sorenson was made.
"I think it is a really exciting opportunity right now since we're basically ground zero of this forensic laboratory," Kibler said. "We get to make all the decisions. We get to set it up the way we think is the best way to set it up."
In the near future, Kupferschmid said the lab's workload could grow to roughly 100 cases per month because of the high demand for forensic work.
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