Abstract
While fortunately relatively uncommon, law enforcement and death investigators may encounter decedents who have been deliberately concealed in some elaborate fashion. This may involve a body buried in a shallow grave, a body placed into a container such as a drum or suitcase (sometimes after dismemberment), or a body encased in concrete. Regarding the latter, while occasionally one may read about such cases in the media or fictional stories, there is a relative paucity of such cases reported in the forensic literature. This can be problematic when one encounters such a case, as there are several unique issues to navigate, including handling and examining what may be a large, heavy mass of concrete, accessing the body, obtaining appropriate radiological studies, and certifying the death (which may be challenging if extensive decomposition is present).
We present a case of a 2-year-old child who was killed and then entombed in concrete within a trash barrel for over a month before the body was discovered. This report includes a detailed description of our approach of the examination and handling of the remains and a literature review to identify similar cases with a focus on the most commonly reported causes and manners of death. We then conclude with a brief discussion of using the terminology “homicidal violence” or “homicide by unspecified means” in cases such as the one presented.
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