As Police Chief Koivunen mentioned, another aspect of crime scene investigation is bloodstain pattern analysis, or the interpretation of bloodstains at a crime scene. The purpose of analyzing bloodstains is to recreate the actions that caused the bloodshed. Experts examine the size, shape, distribution, and location of the bloodstains to form opinions about what did or did not happen. What are some of the things that can be determined? Using geometry and the science of how blood behaves, detectives can discover where the blood came from, what caused the wounds, from what direction the victim was wounded, how the victim and perpetrator were positioned, the movements made after the bloodshed, and how many potential perpetrators were present. In theory, a bloodstain pattern analysis expert could see one of Chucky’s crime scenes and determine that the killer was approximately twenty-nine inches in height. They wouldn’t be able to tell how many cheeky one-liners Chucky used before the crime was committed, but maybe science in the future can help with that!
CHAPTER THREE
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET
Year of Release: 1984
Director: Wes Craven
Writer: Wes Craven
Starring: Heather Langenkamp, Robert Englund
Budget: $1.8 million
Box Office: $25.5 million
Amysterious syndrome is said to have been the inspiration for the movie
I’d read an article in the
Is there a medical explanation for what happened to the young man? Sudden Unexplained Nocturnal Death Syndrome (SUNDS) is a condition that strikes men of South Asian descent more prevalently than other demographics, as was described in the story Wes Craven read about. Specifically, there were a startling number of cases of SUNDS among Hmong immigrants in the early 1980s:
In 1981, the Centers for Disease Control began tracking a mysterious rash of sudden unexplained nocturnal deaths occurring in apparently healthy, male immigrants from Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. The problem, unknown in other ethnic groups, has now claimed more than one hundred and four men, averaging thirty-three years of age, and one woman, according to Dr. Gib Parrish, a CDC medical epidemiologist. Ninety-eight percent of the deaths occurred between ten p.m. and eight a.m. In 1981, the peak year of these deaths, twenty-six men, often Hmong refugees from the highlands of northern Laos, died in their sleep. Usually victims were simply found dead, but when medics arrived quickly, the men’s hearts were fibrillating or contracting wildly, a symptom Parrish said may result from numerous possible causes.2
What cultural beliefs could have contributed to this phenomenon? In the Hmong culture, the spiritual realm is highly influential and dictates what happens in the physical world. The spirits of deceased ancestors are thought to influence the welfare and health of the living. The Hmong immigrants may have been experiencing a sense of guilt in fleeing their homeland coupled with extreme stress. In