PROFILE I One Price PR CE One Price Tooth Sleuth Continued from preceding page \ • # O You Won't need it at One PRICE Cleaners a) 0 All items are only $2.79* each and every day! Shirts 99" every day! Highest quality cleaning around (hangers only) *No household items or fancy garments, some restrictions apply. LIJ ix• Same day service. Price subject to advance payment. 2-piece minimum. 0 Same day service. 3 shirt minimum 31217 14 Mile Road 932.3222 at the Triangle at 14 Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. (next to Office Max) PRICE One Price AP/ One Price • 44'471 I 544-4500 vo`P 'IF iv Ant10 Berkley Flower Shop 11f 3071 W. Twelve Mile Since 1930 • Wedding Flowers • Bar/Bat Mitzvah Themes • Corporate Accounts Welcome •Flowers • Balloons • Free Consultations Ceil Stocker Larry Stocker Sandi Stocker Invitations • Accessories Personal • Commercial Stationery Everything to Enhance Any Occasion PERSONALIZED SERVICE mama IN THE DOWORT OF YOUR HOME c 3424 9iwitatioita ALL AT A 25% DISCOUNT (313) 569-6477 Edie Arbit When only the best will do... Detiva i4 1444/4AVO444 Seventeen Wonderful Years of Experience From the Traditional to the "Glitz" • Weddings • Showers • Sweet 16s •CALLIGRAPHY • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • HEBREW CALLIGRAPHY Goldfine Weisserman 25% OFF Debbie (313)569-97926 Tower 14, Southfield WITH THIS AD 88 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1991 Photos by Glen n Triest 4 #$ m Bite marks are especially valuable in child abuse cases because abusive parents often claim a young sibling made the teeth marks. the deceased's teeth atop X- rays of suspected victims. If it's the same person, the result appears to be just one set of teeth, Dr. Warnick says. Bone formation, pulp chambers and sinus patterns also help in identification. If a family has no dental records, Dr. Warnick re- quests a photo. Pictures of the mouth are then enlarg- ed, with each tooth appear- ing about 10 inches big. Dr. Warnick can then compare a certain groove on one of the teeth to the teeth of the deceased. The key in all these tests is accuracy. "When we go in for an identification, there's no question about it. We're sure that's the person," he says. "If there's even one miniscule inconsistency, we go in and look again." While the work is often difficult — especially when Dr. Warnick must view mangled corpses that bear no resemblance to a human being — it is rewarding, he says. Identification means the family can be certain of the fate of a loved one and bury his remains. "I think it's my Jewish background," Dr. Warnick says. "It really makes me want to help these families." Dr. Warnick is called in on every mass disaster in the state, usually leading a team of eight dentists, all of whom have some forensic background. He also travels throughout the country, helping set up teams to work on plane crashes and other emergencies. Another aspect of Dr. Warnick's work is identify- ing bite marks for the Mich- igan State Police. The Bun- dy case is the most famous in which bite marks were used to convict a suspect, but it was hardly the first. In 1954, a man walked into a convenience store in Texas. He locked the clerks in a closet, then opened the cash register and removed a wad of bills. Next, he helped himself to a piece of cheese. He took a bite of one slice, leaving the remains on the counter. A forensic dentist was able to match the im- prints left on the cheese with the thief's teeth. The man was convicted. Dr. Warnick has worked on many such cases. He picks up a photograph of hands covered with what appear to be ordinary scrat- ches. He leans back in his chair. "You see this?" he says, pointing to the scratches. "Bite marks." They were While much of the body may be destroyed in a fire or crash, it's likely at least some of the teeth will survive. Teeth, Dr. Warnick says, "are forever." made when the murderer, while cutting a man's throat, accidentally ran his hand across the victim's teeth. The evidence was later used to convict him. Matching bite marks to teeth is a science. Because both perpetrator and victim are generally moving, bite marks rarely appear as a clean set of top and bottom prints. Another case in which Dr. Warnick worked with the police involved a skull used in satanic worship. The skull was thought to be that of a certain young woman — a fact Dr. Warnick was even- tually able to prove from dental records. In his work, Dr. Warnick uses a scanning electron microscope, which rotates to different angles and can pro-